The Middle Power Paradox: Material Capabilities and the Crisis of Multilateralism
Hakan Mehmetcik
The contemporary literature on middle powers is deeply divided between a liberal functionalist view of “Traditional” powers (e.g., Canada and Norway) as systemic stabilizers and a realist view of “Emerging” powers (e.g., Turkey and Brazil) as reformist actors. This paper empirically interrogates the “Power Paradox” hypothesis—the neorealist expectation that as a state’s material capabilities increase, its reliance on multilateral institutions will decrease—across these two distinct geopolitical clusters. Employing an explicitly exploratory quantitative framework, this study constructs a Material Power Index (MPI), aggregating global shares of GDP and military expenditure, and correlates it against a Multilateral Engagement Score (MES): a composite metric synthesizing UN voting alignment, peacekeeping burden-sharing, and development aid. Drawing on a purposive sample of 15 pivotal middle powers, the analysis yields patterns consistent with—though not confirmatory of—a structural divergence between clusters. The MPI-MES relationship in the Traditional (Global North) cluster exhibits a large negative correlation (r = −0.600, p = 0.208,