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home > by publication type > books > Termites in the Trading System
| Author: | Jagdish N. Bhagwati, Senior Fellow for International Economics |
|---|
July 2008
144 pages
ISBN 978-0-19-533165-3
$24.95
Jagdish Bhagwati, the internationally renowned economist who uniquely combines a reputation as the leading scholar of international trade with a substantial presence in public policy on the important issues of the day, shines here a critical light on preferential trade agreements (PTAs), revealing how the rapid spread of PTAs endangers the world trading system.
Numbering by now well over three hundred, and rapidly increasing, these preferential trade agreements, many taking the form of free trade agreements, have re-created the unhappy situation of the 1930s, when world trade was undermined by discriminatory practices. Whereas this was the result of protectionism in those days, ironically it is a result of misdirected pursuit of free trade via PTAs today. The world trading system is at risk again, the author argues, and the danger is palpable.
Writing with his customary wit, panache, and elegance, Bhagwati documents the growth of these PTAs, the reasons for their proliferation, and their deplorable consequences, which include the near-destruction of the nondiscrimination that was at the heart of the postwar trade architecture and its replacement by what he has called the spaghetti bowl of a maze of preferences. Bhagwati also documents how PTAs have undermined the prospects for multilateral freeing of trade, serving as stumbling blocks, instead of building blocks, for the objective of reaching multilateral free trade. In short, Bhagwati cogently demonstrates why PTAs are Termites in the Trading System.
Read the mention in BusinessWeek.
“The founding fathers of the postwar trading system wisely chose nondiscrimination as its central principle. But the last fifteen years have witnessed its erosion due to the proliferation of preferential trading agreements. Jagdish Bhagwati, the leading trade economist of our time, rang first the alarm bells about the resulting spaghetti bowl of discriminatory rules and regulations. Now, with his usual blend of brilliance, wit, and bluntness, he describes the rise of PTAs and analyzes why it has occurred and how it threatens the multilateral trading system. This book is essential reading not only for economists and trade diplomats, but for anyone concerned with the design of the institutions that are central to our prosperity.”
—Andre Sapir, professor of economics, Universite Libre de Bruxelles; former economic adviser to European Commission president Romano Prodi (2001–2004)
“The world’s foremost trade policy scholar explains why what he calls ‘preferential trade arrangements’ are not a path towards global free trade, but a dangerous step away from it. A long-standing and brave opponent of these arrangements and particularly of those between hegemonic powers and developing countries, Jagdish Bhagwati explains how they promote costly trade diversion, interfere with the efficient operation of global business, and allow great powers to extract unjustified concessions from weaker countries. This book underlines the abiding wisdom of nondiscrimination, the now almost completely forgotten founding principle of the world trading system, and concludes that the only way to return to sanity is by movement towards free market access for all.”
—Martin Wolf, chief economics commentator, Financial Times
Jagdish Bhagwati is university professor, economics and law, at Columbia University and senior fellow in international economics at the Council on Foreign Relations. He has been uniquely celebrated with six festschrifts in his honor. His book In Defense of Globalization (Oxford, 2004), a huge success worldwide, has just been reissued with an afterword. He has received several honorary degrees and awards, among them the Freedom Prize (Switzerland), the Bernhard Harms Prize (Germany), and recently the Thomas Schelling Award (Kennedy School, Harvard).
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In Termites in the Trading System, Jagdish Bhagwati reveals how the rapid spread of preferential trade agreements endangers the world trading system.
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