Alliances
versus Federations: An Extension of Riker's Analysis of Federal Formation
Emerson M.S. Niou and Peter Ordeshook
Abstract
This essay explores the distinction between federations and alliances and
asks the question: When will states choose to federate rather than ally?
William Riker (1964) argues that a necessary condition for a federal state’s
formation is that those offering the federal bargain must seek to "expand
their territorial control, usually either to meet an external military
or diplomatic threat or to prepare for military or diplomatic aggression
and aggrandizement." This argument, though, does not tell us why states
sometimes respond to threats by forming federations and at other times
by forming alliances. Here we address this issue directly and use a formal
model of alliance formation to illustrate our argument. Briefly, that model
assumes that states have initial endowments of military and economic resources,
where economic resources enter utility functions directly and are what
states maximize and military capability influences preference only insofar
as it determines a state’s ability to counter threats. State can divert
economic resources to military spending, and alliances, in turn, are self-enforcing
coalitions designed to augment a state’s offensive or defensive capabilities.
Federations, which serve the same ends as alliances, are coalitions that
need to be enforced by the "higher authority" established when the federation
is formed. Our operating assumption is that states seek to form a federation
in lieu of an alliance if and only if (1) a stable alliance partition does
not exist or, if one exists, it is dominated by an unstable partition and
(2) if the cost of the loss of sovereignty to each state in the federation
is offset by the gains from joining it, relative to what that state secures
as its security value.