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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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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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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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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Economy, WTO Beth Baltzan Economy, WTO Beth Baltzan

Tariffs, Wine, and Shoe Salesmen

On December 12, the United States Trade Representative announced plans to hike the tariffs on imports of certain European products as a result of the seemingly endless Boeing/Airbus dispute. Capitol Hill was immediately inundated with the usual panoply of hyperbolic claims that tariffs spell doom for {fill in the blank} industry on the target list.…

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China, competition, Environment, NAFTA, Rules of Origin, WTO Beth Baltzan China, competition, Environment, NAFTA, Rules of Origin, WTO Beth Baltzan

Connecting the Dots: The Appellate Body, NAFTA, and Labor

The House Ways and Means Committee held a hearing last Tuesday with two trade topics: the WTO Appellate Body and NAFTA 2.0.  The first half of the hearing was devoted to the Appellate Body, including both support for the U.S. government’s longstanding concerns over the flaws with the dispute settlement system, as well as a…

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WTO Beth Baltzan WTO Beth Baltzan

RIP AB

As of today, the WTO Appellate Body will be, at least temporarily, no more. The Trump Administration has strangled it by refusing to agree to appoint new members. This can be seen as an extension, albeit an extreme one, of positions taken in prior Administrations, including the Obama Administration.  This blog explains various ways the…

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WTO Beth Baltzan WTO Beth Baltzan

The WTO faces gridlock. What’s at stake?

The World Trade Organization’s dispute system was once lauded as an important advancement in trade law enforcement. Now it appears that the system’s legal backbone has been broken. If the dispute system cannot be salvaged from the current crisis, it’s worth asking: what do we lose? Answering that question means putting politics aside an taking…

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

The De Minimis Loophole

We’ve talked about one loophole in NAFTA called “de minimis.”  In addition to rules of origin that already allow a certain amount of content originating from outside the region, the original NAFTA contains a loophole that allows an extra 7% on top of it.  The Trump Administration, in a position completely at odds with its China…

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Economy, WTO Beth Baltzan Economy, WTO Beth Baltzan

Restoring FDR's Vision for Global Trade

The following is an executive summary of a paper submitted to the Institute for Corporate Governance and Finance Conference A New Deal for a New Century: Making Our Economy Work for All.  Papers for the conference, including the full version of the summary below, can be found here.   Too often, the debate over trade devolves into tribalist…

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Labor and Environment Arbitrage Quiz

Who said the following: many . . . have focused in particular on enforcement of labor and environmental provisions    . . . .   I am pleased that we obtained strong provisions in those areas, and I agree that they should be fully and effectively enforced so that our companies can compete based on…

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

The Myth of the Global "Free" Market

According to Politico, a “coalition of free-market advocacy, business and nonprofit groups is urging the leaders of the Senate Finance Committee to press forward on new legislation curbing the president’s tariff authority.” Ah, the siren song of the free market.  But does anyone really think the global trading system is characterized by “free” markets?  A…

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China, Economy, NAFTA, WTO Beth Baltzan China, Economy, NAFTA, WTO Beth Baltzan

Eight Takeaways from "Pivotal Decade"

To situate the ongoing debate over trade, let’s take a look at some of the key takeaways from Judith Stein’s book Pivotal Decade: How the United States Traded Factories for Finance in the Seventies. Stein traces the evolution of American trade policy from Nixon to Clinton, and in particular she identifies choices that were made, across successive…

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

The Pain-Free Solution to the Trade Crisis

There isn’t one. Contrary to the prevailing narrative, the pain didn’t start when the United States imposed tariffs on our trading partners.  The pain started much earlier.  When, exactly, doesn’t necessarily matter, though we can focus on China’s accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO), its subsequent skirting of the rules, the WTO’s insistence on…

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Economy, WTO Beth Baltzan Economy, WTO Beth Baltzan

Atlas Shrugged

A previous blog explained that: the U.S. willingness to be the market of last resort has been a component critical to the functioning of the global trading system; the U.S. ability to serve as the market of last resort has been compromised by WTO overreach; and no other WTO Member seems to be willing to shoulder…

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