Economy, Environment Beth Baltzan Economy, Environment Beth Baltzan

Jump-Starting Europe

Europeans are scrambling to adjust after the United States by all accounts withdrew the security guarantee it had provided since World War II. Well before then, Europe was already facing headwinds, with slow growth and deindustrialization amidst a lurch to the right. Mario Draghi produced a now-famous report and on February 18, 2025 addressed the European Parliament, insisting that…

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China, Economy Beth Baltzan China, Economy Beth Baltzan

Assume a Democracy

Through our educational system, a sort of tyranny of introductory economics has permeated elite discourse for decades now. Economics deems itself a “value-free science.” Economist Robert Heilbroner tackled this issue, pointing out that “science exists to explain or clarify things that exist independently of the values of the observer. It is the study of…

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competition, Economy Beth Baltzan competition, Economy Beth Baltzan

Tariffs and Taxes, Democracy and Oligarchy

Once upon a time in America, tariff revenue funded the government. As the country industrialized, a laissez-faire economic model gave rise to concentrated economic power, concentrated political power, and the Gilded Age. It was an era of extreme inequality, of the Homestead Steel Strike, of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire. Robber barons like Andrew Carnegie…

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competition, Economy, Environment, WTO Beth Baltzan competition, Economy, Environment, WTO Beth Baltzan

The Wisdom of the 1945 State Department: Progressive Trade Policy is Good for American Foreign Policy

For decades now, the conventional wisdom has led us to believe there is a tension between a progressive trade policy – one that focuses on values beyond returns to capital – and American foreign policy. This is a false tension, however. Far from impeding American foreign policy goals, a progressive trade policy advances them. FDR’s…

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The Modern Agreement of Amity and Commerce: Toward a New Model for Trade Agreements

The Open Society Foundation has published a white paper on a new model for trade agreements. As OSF explains: Around the world, the process of economic globalization is under fire for serving the needs of corporate elites rather than ordinary citizens. But it is important to recall that trade does not have to aggravate inequality.…

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China, Economy, Rules of Origin Beth Baltzan China, Economy, Rules of Origin Beth Baltzan

FTA Fever: Taiwan Edition

Geopolitical strife? Let’s do a trade agreement! The latest version of this strategy involves Taiwan. China is a geopolitical concern; Taiwan is an ally; ergo, the United States should do a trade agreement with Taiwan, because it will reinforce economic relations between the two. Which two, though, is the question. Taiwan and the United States? Nope.…

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Economy, Environment, Rules of Origin Beth Baltzan Economy, Environment, Rules of Origin Beth Baltzan

U.S. Trade and Development Policy

The House Ways and Means Trade Subcommittee had a hearing on September 10, 2020 to discuss U.S. trade preference programs, including the Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act, which expires at the end of the month. My testimony focused on ways to reform these preference programs so that they more directly address the goal of promoting…

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competition, Economy, WTO Beth Baltzan competition, Economy, WTO Beth Baltzan

Elitism and the Rules-Based Global Trading System

In Globalists, Quinn Slobodian examines the relationship between the Austrian School of economics, influential in the first half of the 20th century, and the rules for the global economy. Members of the School opposed the Havana Charter. The Austrian School was not monolithic. Its members variously supported pure laissez-faire, government intervention in the marketplace, and support…

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Economy, Environment Beth Baltzan Economy, Environment Beth Baltzan

Kamala Harris, the Environment, and Trade

As the Beltway sorts out the implications of Joe Biden’s VP pick, the trade world enjoys the benefit of having Kamala Harris’ views on the new NAFTA. While traditional critics of trade deals such as Senators Sherrod Brown, Jeff Merkley, and Elizabeth Warren voted for the agreement on the strength of its new labor provisions,…

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competition, Economy, NAFTA, Rules of Origin, WTO Beth Baltzan competition, Economy, NAFTA, Rules of Origin, WTO Beth Baltzan

How to Make Trade Work for Workers At Home and Abroad

As the Trump Administration has recognized, trade involves a larger question consuming most countries: what kind of policy can make “it possible for most citizens, including those without college educations, to access the middle class through stable, well-paying jobs”? Trickle-Down Trade The Administration, however, can’t achieve this goal, because its trade policy is but an…

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China, competition, Economy, WTO Beth Baltzan China, competition, Economy, WTO Beth Baltzan

Joe Biden Wants to Be One of the Most Progressive Presidents Since FDR. Here’s What That Means for Trade.

Vice President Biden announced his intention to be one of the most progressive Presidents since FDR. What was FDR’s approach in the aftermath of the Depression? As the eponymous Roosevelt Institute has explained, “to restore the nation’s economic health FDR understood that he must do two things. First, re-establish the bond between the American people…

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China, competition, Economy, WTO Beth Baltzan China, competition, Economy, WTO Beth Baltzan

The Usual Trade Playbook Isn't Going to Work

The trade establishment is looking for comfort as supply chain shocks upend confidence in the rules of the global trading system. They’re turning to the same playbook they used in the 1990s, arguing that tariffs, regulations, and export bans are the problem.   The supply chain shocks aren’t due to tariffs or regulations or export…

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China, competition, Economy Beth Baltzan China, competition, Economy Beth Baltzan

Forced Labor, Tariffs, and Buybacks

We remember the Tariff Act of 1930 because it included the infamous Smoot-Hawley tariffs. But we should remember it for something much more important: it prohibited imports made with forced labor.  Back in the day, slave labor was seen principally as unfair competition, rather than as a matter of human rights. So the law included a “consumptive…

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The Uncertainty of Certainty

Trade agreements are supposed to be permanent because certainty promotes stability. Or so the thinking has been for the past few decades. The reaction when a sunset clause was included in the new NAFTA was almost uniformly one of horror: the instability of such a thing! The effects on investment! Trade flows! Peace! Prosperity! It’s…

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China, Economy, Uncategorized Beth Baltzan China, Economy, Uncategorized Beth Baltzan

COVID-19, Supply Chains, and the Threat of State Capitalism

COVID-19 has revealed something many of us already knew: our supply chains reflect a precarious dependence on the People’s Republic of China.  We don’t have enough testing kits; we don’t have enough masks; we don’t have enough ventilators. And as Congress is well aware, we are dependent on the PRC for all sorts of essential…

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