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Recession prompts a return to protectionism

Geoff Riley

28th July 2009

Here is an important article by Phil Thornton from Clarity Economics which flags up attempts by a group of trade economists to monitor the growing scale of explicit and hidden forms of protectionism in global trade. International trade in goods and services is forecast to contract by nearly ten per cent in 2009 and across the world, countries are either considering or have already introduced a raft of distortionary import controls. Protectionism is spreading from the purely economic (i.e. changes in import duties, subsidies and quotas) to the financial (linking financial bail outs to national economic objectives) and also affecting the labour market (e.g. changes to immigration policies / points systems) - the rise of ‘new protectionism’ threatens to cause further de-globalisation and increase the risks of beggar-thy-neighbour retaliation that could stall a trade-based recovery.

“Global Trade Alert (GTA), which was launched in June, had identified 67 discriminatory measures by July 8, of which 47 had been implemented with 20 waiting in the wings. Discriminatory measures include rises in tariffs that importers must pay or bans on products. Examples include a ban by Saudi Arabia on imports of cars older than five years and a 39 per cent increase in tariffs on Russian oil exports to Belarus.”

Phil’s Times article is here

Global Trade Alert (GTA)

Geoff Riley

Geoff Riley FRSA has been teaching Economics for over thirty years. He has over twenty years experience as Head of Economics at leading schools. He writes extensively and is a contributor and presenter on CPD conferences in the UK and overseas.

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