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The Oxford Handbook of International Commercial Policy (Hardcover)
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The Oxford Handbook of International Commercial Policy (Hardcover)
Series: Oxford Handbooks
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As we enter the 2010s, the global economy is becoming increasingly
integrated. International trade has been growing rapidly, an
ostensibly irresistible trend that was only temporarily disrupted
by the 2008-09 global recession. Globalization has become
associated with a country's economic success while failure to open
up markets is often viewed as a cause of economic stagnation. This
is predicted by economic theory and verified by empirical
investigations. One reason for the growth of trade is the
impressive reduction of trade barriers over the past 60 years;
namely the pursuit of liberal commercial policy by many countries,
led by the United States. Yet, particularly with the economic
malaise that has persisted since the Great Recession, the role of
commercial policy has become increasingly controversial in the
media and other public fora. The relationship between trade and
employment, as well as the implications of trade for income
distribution, are examples of profound influences on national
economies that have provoked intensive debate in the public realm.
These domestic effects go a long way towards explaining the
widespread backlash against globalization that we have observed in
recent years.
This volume of contributions from some of the best-known
international trade economists explores and analyzes the various
aspects of commercial policy--theoretical, empirical, and
institutional--in a way that standard texts in international
economics do not. It does this via two sets of chapters: the first
part covers general approaches to commercial policy, including
theoretical, institutional, historical, and empirical
contributions. Topics addressed include a general analysis of free
trade compared to its alternatives, the future of the international
trading system (including the regional trade agreement zeitgeist),
trade's effects on employment, and the "special" case of
agriculture. The second part is comprised of country-specific and
regional applications, including case studies of key players in the
international trading system (United States, the European Union,
and Japan); small, open markets (Australia and Israel); large
emerging markets (China and India); and a South-South regional
grouping (the Association of Southeast Asian Nations).
General
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