黑料社

Finley Bodnar | 2025 I.S. Symposium

Finley Bodnar head shot

狈补尘别:听Finley Bodnar
罢颈迟濒别:听The Needle and the Damage Done: How does Chinese state participation in illicit global economies affect domestic security
惭补箩辞谤蝉:听Political Science; Chinese Studies
Pathway: Comparative Politics
础诲惫颈蝉辞谤蝉:听Matthew Krain; Rujie Wang

The literature broadly asserts that illicit global markets鈥攑articularly drug markets鈥攗ndermine state security and sovereignty. However, in China, where both central and provincial authorities incentivize domestic companies to manufacture fentanyl and other new psychoactive substances (NPS), there is little evidence that drug use or trafficking poses a significant threat to domestic state security. This thesis explores how Chinese state participation in illicit global markets affects domestic security. To investigate this, I identified three key state responses to illicit global markets found in existing literature and employed them as causal mechanisms within an outcome-based process tracing methodology. Two critical outcomes emerged: (1) chemical manufacturers in China are more likely to ship fentanyl abroad than to domestic buyers, and (2) there is a notable absence of fentanyl-related deaths or security disruptions within mainland China. These outcomes are best explained by China鈥檚 dual strategy of cooption and repression. On one hand, the state coopts fentanyl production by offering export incentives, such as VAT rebates, encouraging manufacturers to target foreign markets. On the other hand, it strictly represses domestic drug use, creating conditions that effectively force producers to export their goods rather than distribute them locally. Furthermore, by incentivizing the production of fentanyl and NPS, the Chinese government has fostered a parallel industry that supports national economic and security interests. Thus, I argue that China has managed to pacify the traditionally negative relationship between illicit drugs and state power by coopting the international market while repressing domestic consumption.

Posted in Symposium 2025 on May 1, 2025.