Trading on America's Future
From the Archives
Posted on July 27, 2007
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| Support for US farm subsidies threatens further trade liberalization. Photo Credit: Flickr |
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With seventeen months left for the Bush administration, many experts say the president's once-ambitious trade agenda is now derailed. Analysts say US trade policy is at a critical juncture.
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Notwithstanding the tough month for trade advocates, CFR's Jagdish N. Bhagwati argues in the Wall Street Journal that the outlook, at least with respect to Doha, might not be quite so gloomy. Bhagwati notes the "good news"—that the Doha negotiations, even if they ultimately fail to produce a deal, pushed through several contentious issues and narrowed discussions to a core group of participants.
The Doha round aside, however, American attitudes toward trade are turning grim. For a slew of reasons, including declining relative earnings for U.S. workers and high income inequality, U.S. protectionist sentiments seem to be on the rise. Fears of globalization remain particularly pointed within the agriculture and automobile industries, which potentially stand to suffer heavy job losses. The influence of Detroit's big automakers, for instance, might bury the South Korea deal. Meanwhile, U.S. farm subsidies threaten to undermine broader multilateral agreements. Bhagwati, in a recent interview, says Americans are "minimalists" on concessions but "maximalists in making demands on others in terms of agriculture."
Subsidies propping up U.S. farmers remain popular and deep cuts may not be politically viable. The U.S. Farm Bill expires in September, and while some signs indicate rising momentum in Congress to overhaul its subsidies, change will not come easily. Reform is particularly challenging in an election year—trade liberalization, for all its benefits, fails to electrify the electorate like job-loss fears.
Analysts say U.S. trade policy is at a critical juncture. An IHT editorial argues congressional meddling in bipartisan agreements "may actually hinder the cause of global free trade, entangling the world in a web of incompatible rules." Nor is it at all clear, in the long run, that protectionism is the best way to "protect" U.S. jobs. A report by New York's Federal Reserve Bank concludes the threat of job loss due to trade liberalization is relatively small .
Contributed by Lee Hudson Teslik, the Assistant Editor for CFR.org. Reprinted with permission from Council on Foreign Relations.
To read another Global Envision article about the United States' trade policy, see The New Shape of America's Trade Policy.
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