The Age of Geoeconomics
How the Logic of International Economics and Politics is Changing
The Age of Geoeconomics
How the Logic of International Economics and Politics is Changing
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Description
Since the 1970s, market economics - which is concerned with opening markets for international trade and finance - has been guiding policymaking in many states, with the focus being on giving market actors a free reign in deciding where economic activity takes place. As a result, corporations have been globalizing their supply chains to take advantage of specialization and maximize efficiency, giving rise to a deepening economic interdependence across the globe.
Governments and policymakers took a benign view of this deepening interdependence for both economic and political reasons. Economically, interdependence was assumed to foster synergies and economies of scale, maximising gains for states by increasing efficiency within and across their economies. Politically, interdependence was assumed to incentivise cooperation and constrain conflicts between states.
Western governments and policymakers, in particular, believed that growing interdependence would encourage states to abandon power politics in favour of cooperation and integration into the liberal world order and global marketplace, benefitting the countries involved proportionally to their participation. However, The Age of Geoeconomics argues that this prevailing view has now been broken.
It powerfully explains how market economics is being supplanted by geoeconomics. Geoeconomics refers to the way in which countries use economic tools-trade, investments, financial policies and penalties, such as tariffs and sanctions-to achieve political or strategic goals. Instead of using military power, countries compete and influence each other through economic means.
The Age of Geoeconomics skilfully outlines ways in which governments may choose to impose trade restrictions such as tariffs to pressure other governments, invest in infrastructure projects to gain influence, or use control over key resources (like oil or rare minerals) as leverage in international negotiations.
This very timely book assesses the re-shaping of the economic world-order following the US election, including an analysis of 'MAGAnomics'.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1. How the economy became too important to be left to economists
Part I. From balancing power to balancing dependence: The changing logic of international politics
Chapter 2. The rise of geoeconomics in the Second Cold War
Chapter 3. Geoeconomic statecraft
Chapter 4. The new geoeconomic order
Part II. From market to strategic capitalism: The changing logic of international economics
Chapter 5. The digitalization of the economy
Chapter 6. The decarbonization of the economy
Chapter 7. The weaponization of the economy
Chapter 8. The securitization of the economy
Chapter 9. The balkanization of the economy
Chapter 10. The emergence of strategic capitalism
Product details
| Published | Nov 12 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Hardback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 376 |
| ISBN | 9781350583023 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Dimensions | 10 x 7 inches |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |

























