

The Rise of the Economic Security State
28 snips Aug 28, 2025
Henry Farrell and Abraham Newman, political scientists and co-authors of 'The Rise of the Economic Security State,' dissect the shift from U.S. dominance in global financial networks to the emergence of rivals like China wielding their own economic leverage. They explore the implications of 'weaponized interdependence,' how this transformation blurs lines between national security and economic power, and the evolving dynamics of sanctions and technology. Their insights reveal a critical turning point in geopolitics and the need for new strategies to navigate these challenges.
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Centralized Networks Create Choke Points
- Centralized infrastructure creates strategic choke points states can exploit.
- Financial systems, information networks, and manufacturing stacks enable coercion at scale.
From Legal Aims To Great-Power Tech Warfare
- The U.S. shifted from legal objectives to great-power tech competition using economic tools.
- Targeting firms like ZTE and Huawei marked a new national-security usage of interdependence.
Coercion Replaces Predictable Rules
- Weaponized interdependence is now used arbitrarily as a dominant squeeze tactic.
- Policy processes that once created predictable rules have eroded into ad hoc coercion.