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CEO FOCUS: Help is Here for Firms Seeking State Pandemic Small Business Recovery Grants
We have heard directly from so many businesses, about the multitude of challenges they face, having been hit hard by the pandemic, including gaps in critical grant funding. [On June 3], along with New York State Assemblyman Al Stirpe, and the South Side Innovation Center, we announced opportunities are available for assisting companies in accessing the state’s […]
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We have heard directly from so many businesses, about the multitude of challenges they face, having been hit hard by the pandemic, including gaps in critical grant funding. [On June 3], along with New York State Assemblyman Al Stirpe, and the South Side Innovation Center, we announced opportunities are available for assisting companies in accessing the state’s COVID-19 Pandemic Small Business Recovery Grant Program.
The $800 million program targets funding to small and micro businesses and small for-profit independent arts and cultural organizations to help them recover from the economic impact of the pandemic. Flexible grants up to $50,000 can be used for operating expenses, including payroll, rent or mortgage payments, taxes, utilities, personal protective equipment, or other business expenses incurred during the pandemic. The program prioritizes socially and economically disadvantaged business owners, including minority- and women-owned business enterprises, service-disabled veteran-owned businesses and veteran-owned businesses, and businesses located in economically distressed communities. By focusing on businesses with annual gross receipts of between $25,000 and $500,000, it ensures that small New York state businesses are not competing with substantially larger companies for relief. And it provides relief for smaller businesses that may not have been able to access adequate funding from other government stimulus programs.
The program is administered by Empire State Development Corporation (ESDC) and began accepting applications on June 10. CenterState CEO, the South Side Innovation Center, Onondaga Small Business Development Center, and the Cortland Chamber of Commerce have been designated by ESDC to provide technical assistance.
This means CenterState CEO will work with prospective applicants to understand requirements of the program, ensure that this opportunity is right for them and that their questions are answered quickly and efficiently so that they are well positioned to submit competitive applications. This is work our staff at CenterState CEO does daily, using our network of in-house expertise, agency staff, membership, and service providers to respond to business needs of all kinds. We will also work alongside our partners at the Upstate Minority Economic Alliance to reach out to minority-owned small businesses, whom we know have suffered disproportionately from the economic fallout of the pandemic. Look for webinars in the coming weeks to spread the word about the program’s requirements and benefits.
Finally, I’d like to thank and recognize Assemblyman Al Stirpe for his advocacy efforts in support of this funding and of our region’s small businesses. As chair of the Assembly Small Business Committee and co-chair of an Assembly Working Group focused on New York’s economic recovery from COVID-19, he led the effort to create the COVID Small Business Recovery Grant Program and advocate for its inclusion in the final state budget.
To learn more about this program and its eligibility requirements, you can visit Empire State Development’s website, or contact CenterState CEO Director of Community Investment Andrew Obernesser at aobernesser@centerstateceo.com.
Robert M. Simpson is president and CEO of CenterState CEO, the primary economic-development organization for Central New York. This article is drawn and edited from the “CEO Focus” email newsletter that the organization sent to members on June 3.

Small firms in Oswego awarded $225K in COVID-19 grants
OSWEGO, N.Y. — More than 30 small businesses in the city of Oswego will use funding from the city’s COVID-19 REVIVAL grant program. Oswego Mayor Billy Barlow on May 25 announced the recipients of the grant program, which is funded through the federal government’s American Rescue Plan, per a news release on the City of
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OSWEGO, N.Y. — More than 30 small businesses in the city of Oswego will use funding from the city’s COVID-19 REVIVAL grant program.
Oswego Mayor Billy Barlow on May 25 announced the recipients of the grant program, which is funded through the federal government’s American Rescue Plan, per a news release on the City of Oswego website.
Barlow in April announced the creation of the grant program to help local businesses with reopening and recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic.
Originally, Oswego had allocated $150,000 from the $1.89 million the city received from the American Rescue Plan. After getting about 50 applications totaling more than $750,000 in funding requests, the city increased the available funding from $150,000 to $225,000.
To be eligible, businesses had to demonstrate a hardship created by the COVID-19 pandemic that prevented the business from reopening or propose a project in reaction to the pandemic. New businesses, businesses looking to relocate, expansions, or improvement projects were also eligible for funding.
“We received a great deal of interest in the program, further demonstrating the need and continued assistance our local, small business owners need during this difficult time,” said Barlow. “Our REVIVAL grant funding will help businesses fully recover from the pandemic while allowing for businesses to tackle additional improvement projects and enhancements to safely serve customers moving forward,” Barlow said.
The grant recipients included Vona’s Restaurant, which indicated that it’s “humbled and thankful” for its $10,000 grant.
“With this grant we will be able to complete our outdoor dining project,” David Haight, of Vona’s Restaurant, said.
If they haven’t done so already, businesses awarded REVIVAL funding should contact the City of Oswego Office of Economic Development, located at 44 East Bridge St., at (315) 343-3795 to get started on the grant-allocation process.
Projects awarded funding must be completed by July 2022, the City of Oswego said.
Recipients and funding amounts
• Murdock’s Bike Shop – $3,000
• Riverside Artisans – $3,000
• Sensibility Outfitters – $3,000
• Gaslight Pub – $3,000
• Oswego Comic Shop – $3,000
• Karpinski’s Dry Cleaning – $3,000
• Zamp’s Apparel- $5,000
• AlleyCat – $5,000
• Garafolo’s Imports – $5,000
• Spencer’s Ali – $5,000
• Sherry’s Diner – $5,000
• Khepara Coffee – $5,000
• Valti Graphics – $5,000
• Convergence Gaming – $5,000
• Eastside Nutrition – $5,000
• Oswego Tea Company – $5,000
• Coffee Connection – $5,000
• Dynamic Impressions – $5,000
• Connection Point – $5,000
• John & John’s Bike Shop – $5,000
• Duffy’s Design – $5,000
• LaParilla – $7,000
• Infinity Fitness – $10,000
• En-Vogue – $10,000
• Curtis Manor – $10,000
• Vona’s Restaurant – $10,000
• A&J Music – $10,000
• Wade’s Diner – $10,000
• The Sting – $10,000
• Little Luke’s Daycare- $10,000
• Creative Development (1850 House) – $15,000
• Rooftop Lounge @ LITATRO – $15,000
• Camelot Lodge (former Stone’s Building) – $15,000

ARPA LLC buys downtown Syracuse building next door to previous purchase
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — ARPA LLC, a partnership that last year bought the property at 430 E. Genesee St. in downtown Syracuse, has recently purchased the neighboring property at 420 E. Genesee St. from AccessCNY Inc. Matt Funiciello of JF Real Estate represented AccessCNY in its building sale and also represents ARPA LLC in the leasing
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — ARPA LLC, a partnership that last year bought the property at 430 E. Genesee St. in downtown Syracuse, has recently purchased the neighboring property at 420 E. Genesee St. from AccessCNY Inc.
Matt Funiciello of JF Real Estate represented AccessCNY in its building sale and also represents ARPA LLC in the leasing of the vacant commercial space, according to a news release from the real-estate firm. The release did not disclose a sales price. The 420 E. Genesee St. property is assessed at $529,400 for 2021 and has a listed full market value of $710,604, according to Onondaga County’s online real-estate records.
At 430 E. Genesee St., ARPA plans to redevelop the building into condominiums and ground-floor commercial space, JF Real Estate said. ARPA bought that property for $550,000 from Adirondack Bank in a transaction that closed on June 16 of last year, per Onondaga County records.
With the acquisition of the neighboring property at 420 E. Genesee St., ARPA now controls about 52 parking spaces and about 16,000 square feet of office space, according to JF Real Estate.
Poll of unemployed Americans reveals return-to-work barriers
One in eight expect to never work again Thirty percent of Americans who lost their jobs during the pandemic to not expect to return to work any time this year, and 13 percent say they never expect to return to work. That’s according to poll results released by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce on June 4. The
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One in eight expect to never work again
Thirty percent of Americans who lost their jobs during the pandemic to not expect to return to work any time this year, and 13 percent say they never expect to return to work.
That’s according to poll results released by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce on June 4.
The poll also found that 16 percent of those who lost jobs during the pandemic believe it’s “not worth” searching for a job because of the money they currently earn from unemployment benefits and are not actively seeking work.
Some other poll findings include:
• Almost half (49 percent) of respondents report they are “not active” at all or “not very active” in searching for a job. Less than one-third (32 percent) say they are “strongly active” in their job search.
• Six in 10 respondents (61 percent) say they are in no hurry to return to work.
• One in eight (13 percent) have turned down at least one job offer in the past year.
• Over one-quarter (28 percent) of respondents agree that “there are a lot of people who are not looking for work because they can do almost or just as well collecting unemployment benefits.”
• Some additional common factors cited for not seeking employment include childcare and other family-care needs (24 percent), lack of available jobs in sectors that are still suffering (28 percent), and COVID-19 concerns (26 percent).
• Almost one in four survey respondents (23 percent) say they lack the skills or experience necessary for most of the jobs available right now.
The poll was conducted among 506 Americans who lost jobs during the pandemic and have not returned to full-time employment. Data was collected May 17-20, 2021. The poll has an overall survey margin of error +/-4.4 points at the 95 percent confidence level. A full report of the poll results can be accessed at https://www.uschamber.com/report/poll-the-covid-19-unemployed.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group, founded in 1912, that describes itself as “the world’s largest business organization representing companies of all sizes across every sector of the economy.”

Lake Placid to host 2022 U.S. Biathlon National Championships
LAKE PLACID, N.Y. — Mt. Van Hoevenberg in Lake Placid has been selected to host the 2022 U.S. Biathlon National Championships. The championships will take place at the revamped facility from March 23-27, 2022, the Olympic Regional Development Authority (ORDA) and U.S. Biathlon announced on June 7. The U.S. Biathlon National Championships were last held
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LAKE PLACID, N.Y. — Mt. Van Hoevenberg in Lake Placid has been selected to host the 2022 U.S. Biathlon National Championships.
The championships will take place at the revamped facility from March 23-27, 2022, the Olympic Regional Development Authority (ORDA) and U.S. Biathlon announced on June 7.
The U.S. Biathlon National Championships were last held in Lake Placid in 1996. The national championships will bring together the best junior and senior biathlon athletes in the United States, with more than 100 competitors expected, according to an ORDA news release.
Mt. Van Hoevenberg’s upgrades include a new biathlon stadium featuring a 30-point shooting range with Kuruvinen targets, a high-efficiency snowmaking system with reservoir, an additional 5 kilometers of competition trails certified to international standards, the recently constructed three-story Mountain Pass Lodge, and a competition layout with enhanced spectator viewing and access.
“U.S. Biathlon is thrilled with the new world-class venue at Mt. Van Hoevenberg,” Max Cobb, U.S. Biathlon, CEO & president, said in the release. “We are very excited to award the 2022 National Championships and bring our biathlon community together in Lake Placid. Thank you to everyone who worked so hard on Mt. Van Hoevenberg’s impressive modernizations.”
Several local athletes are expected to be participating in the championship event. “I am so excited that Lake Placid will be hosting the 2022 U.S. Biathlon National Championships — it’s a game changer,” said Maddie Phaneuf, a 2018 Winter Olympics biathlete for the U.S. and an ORDA ambassador. “Being able to have Olympians skiing our venue alongside our local kids is an amazing and unique opportunity.”
The U.S. Biathlon National Championships will be hosted by ORDA, the New York Ski Educational Foundation (NYSEF), and the Adirondack Sports Council, which is the local organizing committee of the World University Winter Games. The Winter Games, which include competitions among 12 winter sports including biathlon, are estimated to be twice the size of the 1980 Winter Olympics. They will be held in the Lake Placid region in January 2023.
VIEWPOINT: Including More Voices in Decisions May Bring Discomfort & Results
When companies struggle, whether because of a bad economy, poor decisions, or other factors, top management’s reaction is often to become tight-lipped about the turbulent situation. Employees are shut out from strategy discussions, and any ideas they might have for fixing the problem go unheard. But in many if not most cases, such secretiveness is the wrong
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When companies struggle, whether because of a bad economy, poor decisions, or other factors, top management’s reaction is often to become tight-lipped about the turbulent situation.
Employees are shut out from strategy discussions, and any ideas they might have for fixing the problem go unheard.
But in many if not most cases, such secretiveness is the wrong approach and can even make things worse.
For organizations with tens of thousands of employees, it might make sense to limit who participates in strategy. But for smaller organizations, where every person contributes to a thriving culture and facilitates effective operations, there’s a lot of value in involving everyone.
As my book title suggests, I call this all-inclusive way of dealing with things “uncomfortable inclusion.” I put this philosophy into action when I came to the Nevada Donor Network in 2012 at a time when the organization was dysfunctional and on the verge of losing its membership in the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network/United Network for Organ Sharing. That would have shut down the organization for good. Over time, with a few fits and starts along the way, the organization rose from floundering to soaring as a current world leader in the industry.
I acknowledge that uncomfortable inclusion is an approach that can be messy and difficult, but I believe that involving the entire organization in strategy and problem solving can reinforce synergy, cooperation, and unity while cultivating better ideas and innovation. And that’s true whether uncomfortable inclusion is put into action at a failing company, or simply activated at a place where leaders believe their teams and organization could be performing better.
It is critical to include everyone because ultimately the frontline staff knows best what their environment is going to look like tomorrow and likely a few years down the line, and they are best positioned to be innovators. Why wouldn’t we have them as part of the planning process?
Some of the traits needed to embrace this inclusion approach include:
• Transparent. This one may be especially important because Gallup reports that millennials especially say they want leaders who are open and transparent. Uncomfortable inclusion means being transparent to the point of discomfort If it is not uncomfortable, you are not being inclusive enough. When you’re transparent with team members and include them in decision-making, you create a network of stakeholders who participate even in small decisions. When it comes time to make more impactful decisions, a leader can tap into that banked brain trust to make the best decision possible based on feedback from a proven set of deciders.
• Accountable. People within an organization need to be accountable for their actions and to each other. I talk about how we’re serious about our values, and we hold people accountable. It isn’t enough to be technically competent. Each member of our organization, regardless of title, role, or results, must adhere to our values. We maintain our commitment to quality and excellence, and we are supremely, publicly accountable when we fail.
• Committed. Adopting a more inclusive approach requires commitment, possibly a commitment to changing the organization’s very culture. But the goal may be more attainable than it first seems. Achieving success in a seemingly hopeless situation requires hard work and a committed mindset, but it does not require the reinvention of the wheel. It does not even require luck. All it requires is willingness and a mind open to learning and implementing actions that can facilitate transformative success.
Make no mistake, doing this is messy and hard. It might seem unnecessarily difficult, complicated, and yes, uncomfortable. But keep chipping away and remember this: Success is achievable, even from the bleakest and most dysfunctional starting points.
Joe Ferreira (www.joeferreira.com), author of “Uncomfortable Inclusion: How to Build a Culture of High Performance in Life and Work,” is CEO and president of the Nevada Donor Network. Ferreira speaks and consults worldwide about establishing and improving organ donation and transplantation systems he’s helped pioneer in the United States.
VIEWPOINT: 5 Tips to Make Entrepreneurs Resilient When Challenges Threaten their Business
Many entrepreneurs discover that building a business brings difficult challenges, which in turn require resilience to overcome. But simply having the capacity to recover and keep going doesn’t always lead to better results. Resilience in the context of long-term business success also means learning from past difficulties and, as a result, changing direction to the right path.
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Many entrepreneurs discover that building a business brings difficult challenges, which in turn require resilience to overcome.
But simply having the capacity to recover and keep going doesn’t always lead to better results. Resilience in the context of long-term business success also means learning from past difficulties and, as a result, changing direction to the right path.
“Pivot” has become the preferred word among business owners while trying to survive the COVID-19 pandemic. For many companies now, it’s pivot-or-die.
Resilience and the ability to pivot go hand-in-hand. Resilience is the key ingredient of success and the thing that will never let you down. And it is also about looking at different paths and taking one, acknowledging you were wrong, learning how to fix it, and doing so.
Here are five tips to help entrepreneurs be resilient and pivot in these challenging times:
• Hope for the upside, but plan for the downside. In business, it’s easy to let a vision of great things ahead trick you into ignoring the real possibility of failure. Every entrepreneur does it. Every great business has more than one plan. COVID has weeded out those businesses that never planned for the downside.
• Let go when your gut tells you to. Today’s business world moves too fast and leaves too many behind for a struggling entrepreneur to stay stuck in their ineffective ways for long. You have to trust your instincts and learn when to step away, and to find another path. Rather than beat your head against a stone wall, find a way around, over, or under that wall, and continue on the new path of your choosing.
• Give in the deep end — even if you’re not fully ready. I have met many people in business and in life who trust the philosophy that your next move should be the one for which you’re already prepared. I disagree. Pursue your next path regardless of your level of preparation. Be decisive. Be confident in the fact that if you’re smart and focused, you’ll learn faster when you’re in over your head or out of your depth.
• Learn the powers of contingency management. Entrepreneurs sometimes get overwhelmed by adversity because they are too controlling by nature. Empowering people as a regular practice and overseeing a collaborative work culture leads to calm and problem-solving when difficulties surface. Manage the situation, but don’t rule it. Care for your people, but don’t set them up for failure by micromanaging them. Hold them accountable but don’t be a dictator. Being resilient as a company and pivoting the right way can only happen if there is mutual trust and a comfort level between the business owner and his workforce.
• See every closing door as a new one opening. When things aren’t working as they once did, entrepreneurs need a mindset that embraces a challenge and is excited by finding a new way to make things better. I have found that the most important lessons in life are the ones you don’t see coming, and they bring opportunities you hadn’t considered. When a new opportunity presents itself as a better way, take the risk.
Resilience doesn’t just get back up. Resilience finds a way.
James Webb (www.jamesharoldwebb.com) is the author of “Redneck Resilience: A Country Boy’s Journey To Prosperity.” His career in radiology saw him rise from a technologist to becoming a leader in the industry as the entrepreneur of several companies. After over 40 years in the medical field, Webb focused on the fitness sector, owning and overseeing the management of 33 Orangetheory Fitness franchises
VIEWPOINT: The Path to Business Success? Treat Employees as Assets, Not Expenses
Any number of factors can cause businesses to struggle. A lack of working capital. Poor planning. Ineffective management. But one factor that always affects business performance is employee engagement and the degree to which employees feel valued by their company. Your company’s profitability depends on its people — and you want your team to be composed of
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Any number of factors can cause businesses to struggle. A lack of working capital. Poor planning. Ineffective management.
But one factor that always affects business performance is employee engagement and the degree to which employees feel valued by their company.
Your company’s profitability depends on its people — and you want your team to be composed of the brightest and the best. In this labor market, to recruit and retain the best people you must first make your company a desirable and compelling place to work.
That means offering attractive wage and benefit packages, along with a healthy workplace culture that keeps employees engaged and productive.
Instead of seeing employees as an expense, businesses need to view them as assets that help improve the bottom line.
In my work, I have learned that there are four pillars of profitability that are critical to business success, and all four in some way impact employees. Those pillars are:
• Payroll. Employees expect the correct amount of money to arrive in their bank accounts on time and they want their information easily accessible online. That sounds basic, but businesses sometimes fail to make payroll, or they commit errors when deducting for things like taxes and benefits withholdings. Employees’ paychecks are what enables them to meet life’s responsibilities, so payroll errors and omissions are not things that can be tolerated.
• Employee benefits. If businesses don’t offer such benefits as health insurance or a retirement plan, the better employees will look elsewhere. But smaller businesses usually are at a disadvantage when compared to larger competitors. For example, in 2018, about 85 percent of employees at businesses with 100 or more employees were offered a retirement plan. In contrast, just 53 percent of workers at businesses with fewer than 100 employees had such plans, according to a U.S. Department of Labor report. The report said cost and regulatory complexities are factors discouraging small businesses from offering retirement plans.
• Risk management. Many small businesses have a certain level of risk baked into their business models. They may rely on heavy equipment, vehicles, machinery, or other factors that can potentially threaten the safety of the workplace. The question is: How effective is your risk management program? Often small businesses that have a clear exposure to employee injuries do not have any formalized risk management program in place. It’s important to prioritize and clearly communicate this risk-management program so employees know the company views their safety as paramount.
• HR compliance. A myriad of employment laws and regulations have been passed through the years and businesses need to make sure they are in compliance. The workplace is a melting pot of liability for employers. Are your hiring practices lawful? What about your compensation plan: is it discriminatory? What about terminations: do you have all the bases covered? How do you determine when an employee deserves a promotion or a raise? It’s important to have an updated employee handbook that addresses all these issues along with current job descriptions that are compliant. This makes things clearer, for both management and employees, who like to know where they stand.
To truly drive employee performance, you also need to drive employee engagement — the emotional commitment that each individual team member has to their organization and its goals. Healthy employee engagement means people truly care about their work and their company. It’s up to owners and managers to create an environment where everyone is allowed and encouraged to consistently produce their best work.
Bill Lyons, the ForbesBooks author of “We Are HR: The Business Owner’s Definitive Guide to Professional Employer Organizations,” is the CEO of Lyons HR (www.lyonshr.com), one of the largest privately held professional-employer organizations in the country.
OPINION: Time to end national economic-emergency measures
May’s drop in unemployment makes clear the economic emergency is over. As states continue to reopen their economies, it is having the obvious anticipated impact of lowering the unemployment rate. [The U.S. Department of Labor’s May report showed a drop in unemployment from 6.1 percent to 5.8 percent.] The number of people on temporary layoff declined by
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May’s drop in unemployment makes clear the economic emergency is over.
As states continue to reopen their economies, it is having the obvious anticipated impact of lowering the unemployment rate. [The U.S. Department of Labor’s May report showed a drop in unemployment from 6.1 percent to 5.8 percent.] The number of people on temporary layoff declined by 291,000 people in May, accounting for about 60 percent of the drop in the number of people unemployed.
However, the fact that more than a million additional people remain on temporary layoff status when compared to February 2020 — prior to the pandemic — continues to prove that big, blue-state governors’ economic-shutdown policies have been a disaster for American workers. The 10 states with the highest unemployment rates are all run by Democrat governors.
We can anticipate that positive employment numbers will keep growing through the summer as blue states continue to open up. Another positive impact this summer will be the decision by almost half of the states to drop the federal-government-extended unemployment benefit which has discouraged workers in these recovered states from coming off the sidelines and taking a job. Next month’s unemployment report should reflect this important policy shift by increasing labor participation.
It is clear that the economic emergency is over. Congress should take immediate steps to end economic measures that no longer make sense. The job-market challenges that remain are largely due to the actions of state governments governing by fear rather than science. These challenges no longer require a one-size-fits-all, federal-government response. It is time to end national economic-emergency measures.
Rick Manning is president of Americans for Limited Government (ALG). The organization says it is a “non-partisan, nationwide network committed to advancing free-market reforms, private property rights, and core American liberties.” This op-ed is drawn from a news release the ALG issued on June 4.
OPINION: Can the U.S. Sustain the International Order?
We don’t often think that how the United States conducts itself at home has much impact on how we face the world, but it does. You’d be amazed at how closely people in countries all over the globe follow events here and count on the U.S. to lead the way. When it’s messy at home, it’s hard
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We don’t often think that how the United States conducts itself at home has much impact on how we face the world, but it does. You’d be amazed at how closely people in countries all over the globe follow events here and count on the U.S. to lead the way. When it’s messy at home, it’s hard to sustain the strength and readiness to turn our attention outward.
Doing so is especially important right now because what we’ve come to term “the international order” is under stress. It’s not collapsing by any means, but U.S. leadership faces challenges and if we’re divided and unsettled at home, it will be much more difficult to respond appropriately.
What is the international order? It’s essentially the set of structures and values that evolved during the 20th century to resolve disputes, promote commerce and free trade, undergird economic development and investment, further contacts and exchanges between nations and their citizens, and protect human rights. It’s based on mutually negotiated rules and initiatives that, in a well-functioning world, are promoted by institutions such as the United Nations, the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, the World Trade Organization, the World Health Organization, and others.
These days, though, it’s fair to say that there’s no aspect of the order we once took for granted that isn’t at least facing questions. This is in part because now, both China and Russia are asserting their interests and, often, working actively to undermine ours. At the same time, the U.S. role is less prominent than it once was. Our allies, especially after the four years of the Trump administration, are uncertain of our commitment to global leadership given that we questioned longtime alliances, withdrew from institutions, pulled out of international accords, and in general pulled back from the web of alliances and agreements that we had helped shape in earlier years. Understandably, our friends and allies wonder how much they can count on us, and our adversaries are eager to test us.
At the same time, forces beyond the control of any government are reshaping the global picture. Nationalism is stronger, conflicts between countries seem to be ratcheting up, and many societies are struggling with growing diversity, declining tolerance, and a turn toward authoritarianism. On the whole, international power is less concentrated and more widely distributed, which presents challenges to global institutions and makes it more difficult to pursue much-needed reforms within them.
In this situation, it’s crucial that democracies such as the U.S., Europe, Japan, and Canada recognize the importance of the role they play in sustaining and revitalizing the international order. It’s by no means a given that it can endure, but the democracies have an advantage: for many people around the world, the more authoritarian alternatives are not especially appealing.
Even so, the work of strengthening the world order will require a concerted effort that blends both cooperation and firmness. We must strengthen our alliances of course, as well as shore up and broaden arms-control efforts. Countering authoritarianism in all its facets will be an ongoing challenge. And we need constantly to gauge how best to be a benign world power, helping to resolve conflicts and slow to use force — not ruling it out, but relying on it wisely and only when necessary.
Finally, as I suggested at the beginning, our strength on all these fronts will come from making sure that we are strong at home: that our economy is robust, our finances and debt are manageable, our elections are fair and well run, our infrastructure is revitalized, we invest in the future of our businesses through research and development, and we invest in the future of the American people by focusing attention on education and skills development. If we can do all that, then we will have earned the right to lead the world in navigating the challenges facing the international order.
Lee Hamilton, 90, is a senior advisor for the Indiana University (IU) Center on Representative Government, distinguished scholar at IU Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies, and professor of practice at the IU O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Hamilton, a Democrat, was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives for 34 years (1965-1999), representing a district in south central Indiana.
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