Does "Free Trade" Really Exist?
Critics Say Mishandled Trade Pacts Mean Protectionism Continue To Hamper Competition
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A tugboat passes a container ship at Port Newark, N.J., on Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2008. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)
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There are growing signs that developing countries will erect protectionist barriers to weather the crisis, partly because they have seen that time after time, "free trade" agreements have focused chiefly on beating rivals to market.
Even free-trade disciples say many trade deals have been mishandled, limiting their ability to spread wealth and level the competitive playing field.
"These are not free trade agreements in any sense of the term," said Joseph Stiglitz, the Nobel Prize-winning economist. "They're really advantage-trade agreements. They're worse than NAFTA, which Obama says he wants to re-negotiate."
President-elect Barack Obama voiced distaste during his campaign for "unfair government subsidies to foreign exporters," said he'd cap subsidies to U.S. agribusinesses and promised treaties that would promote "trade that is free and fair for all." But he also sounded protectionist, saying he would "fix NAFTA so it works for American workers."
Economists generally concur that truly free trade erases inefficiencies and inequalities, rewarding innovation and benefiting everyone with cheaper goods and services. President George W. Bush and other leaders unanimously endorsed it at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation conference this past weekend.
But many say that what the APEC leaders tout as "free trade" devalues and distorts that admirable goal.
Since the early 1990s, nearly 400 free trade agreements have been reached, covering about a third of global trade. The latest deal, between Colombia and the four-country bloc of Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland was signed Tuesday.
Most such agreements have been nation-to-nation and, invariably, carry exemptions that protect domestic industries that politicians decided were vital.
All Canadian pacts, for example, protect Canada's milk, poultry and egg industries. The Peru-China pact signed last week exempts 10 percent of the Andean nation's industries, including clothing and shoes.
Even the 15-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement doesn't promote truly free trade. Among its protectionist provisions: 62.5 percent of an automobile's total parts must be made within the three member states - Canada, the United States and Mexico - in order for the car to cross a border.
President Felipe Calderon of Mexico has treated Obama's vow to renegotiate NAFTA like a sack of rotten fish, warning in Lima that if Obama is crazy enough to do it, it would set loose a tide of job-starved Mexicans that no U.S. border fence could possibly hold back.
Still, the agricultural subsidies by the United States and European nations represent huge infidelities to the free trade religion, and have paralyzed global trade talks since 2001.
"We are violating the rules all over the place with the subsidies that we're giving," said Stiglitz.
People now look at the financial crisis and the lesson they learn is, 'See, globalization doesn't work.' It's an unfortunate lesson but that's how they see it.
Vinod Aggarwal, APEC Study CenterThe United Nations predicts 130 million more people will join the chronically hungry population of 850 million by year's end.
"Full-scale trade liberalization with insufficient safeguards is the last thing these countries should be signing up for," Oxfam advocacy officer Romain Benicchio said of countries where subsistence farmers struggle to compete with subsidized food imports.
Since the global financial crisis struck in September, a few protectionist measures have been announced: India imposed a 20 percent duty on crude soybean oil last week and Ecuador announced new but unspecified tariffs on 800 "luxury goods" it did not name.
Indonesia's trade minister, Mari Pangestu, told The Associated Press that she expects her country - the world's fourth most populous - will need to put up some trade barriers, at least temporarily, to weather the downturn.
"You will have to end up protecting particular groups," she said. Three in five Indonesians are farmers and food price riots sparked the overthrow of the Suharto regime more than a decade ago.

President Bush proudly spoke in Lima of having more than quadrupled (to 14) the number of U.S. trade agreements. But they include no major economies - Bahrain, Jordan and Israel are the typical size - and the Democratic-controlled U.S. Congress has resisted passing agreements with Colombia, Panama and South Korea.
Korea agreed during the summit to open talks on a pact with Peru, but has had less luck lately getting FTAs with bigger countries with domestic auto industries to worry about. Seoul's trade pact with Washington is moribund - the Democrats were against it even before they began trying to fashion a rescue package for the axle-busted U.S. auto industry. The biggest fear at the APEC summit was of a return to the huge trade barriers of the Great Depression, when some U.S. import duties reached 70 percent, and world trade contracted by some 66 percent between 1929 and 1934.
Free-trade disciples wish the world had managed these treaties better.
"People now look at the financial crisis and the lesson they learn is, 'See, globalization doesn't work,'" Aggarwal said. "It's an unfortunate lesson but that's how they see it."
By Associated Press Writer Frank Bajak
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- Free trade for the U.S. is a one way street, everything that comes in no tariff, everything that goes out to other countries big tariff. Japan is like the U.S. Air force and their $400 toilet seats'' imports have so many specifactions & restrictions that it raises the price so high nobody can afford them.
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- In short, I could not buy electronics through the Internet for shipment to the Czech Republic.
Free trade? Ha! What a joke. The international Mafia decides who sells what and where.
--------Posted by anon00
Each country has a list of items that you cannot import. For example, you cannot import playing cards into Italy or Spain, but you can into the rest of Europe. Trading cards is perfectly fine, but playing cards is not. Now, why is that? - Reply to this comment
- The article mentions the US and Europe farm subsidies which inhibit other countries from growing food. But it doesn''t mention that its cheaper to manufacture in other countries because they have lower ecological standards - not just a lower standard of living.
Free trade agreements need to be written better to handle inequities, that''s true. But how can they handle the loss of jobs and livelihood when industries move to cheaper places to produce? There has to be some thought for the people and communities which are discarded by commerce. - Reply to this comment
- NO!!!!!
NOW PUT THE PRIVATE BANKRUPT FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM INTO RECEIVERSHIP NOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
NO MORE F*CKIN'' BAILOUTS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
SHUT DOWN THE PRIVATE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM AND CANCEL ALL DERIVATIVES NOW!!!!!!!!!1 - Reply to this comment
- no free trade does not exist
- Reply to this comment
- Everybody knows that free trade was a Bill Clinton wet dream.
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- There is no such thing as "FREE TRADE" in the rest of the world.
According to the neocon Fascist Socialist Nazi Republicans, "free trade" means that goods IMPORTED into this country get in almost-duty-free.
However, finished goods IMPORTED into countries like Japan, China, and everywhere else, are charged a hefty tarriff, which protects THEIR MARKETS from being flooded by foreign goods like our markets are.
After all, when is the last time you saw someone in Japan driving a Chevy, or somebody in China having a bowl of Campbell''s soup? And why do you think so many companies are relocating to the Orient? They manufacture the stuff using poisons and slave labor, then send it here duty free so Corporate America can sell it to us, make a profit, and kill us at the same time!
So, there ain''t such a thing as "free trade" except in the dreams of the neocon Fascist Socialist Nazi Republicans. Their "free trade" works like "trickle-down Reganomics" has!!!
SIG HEIL, THE BEST WAY TO MAKE A PROFIT IS TO "CON" EVERYONE!!!, BUSH!!!! - Reply to this comment
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