Protectionism and Free Trade
Principles of Economics:
A Discussion on Protectionism and Trade Liberalization
Rich nations make the rules. This comes as no surprise: Since rich people have significant power in their own nations it is to be expected that the rich nations should have analogous power in the world system. Just as surely as rich nations hold the balance of power in the world, it is just as certain that when they use this power it may or may not benefit developing nations. At first such power on the part of the developed nations is likely to seem blatantly unfair. However, the debate about the relative power in the world today between rich and poor nations is more nuanced than that: While wealthy nations may or may not make choices that are most beneficial to developing nations, it is also the case that developing nations can and often do make very poor choices for themselves -- choices that are generally considered to be poor by leaders of both the developed and the developing world.
Leaders in both the developed and developing world debate how international power should be apportioned: Should rich nations (which may be argued to have a high level of expertise) make decisions for poorer nations (which may not have the experience to make good long-term economic decisions) or should poorer nations have the power to make decisions for themselves, even if those decisions are misguided. One of the complexities involved in posing such a question, much less in attempting to answer it, is that implicit in the question itself is the idea that the developed nations have the right to be considered as part of the possible solution to the developing world's economic problems.
Beyond this debate over which nations should have the power to set policy for developing nations is the question of what would be the most appropriate methods for rich nations to use if it is indeed they who are to control the system. The most often used and most highly vaunted system until now is that of trade liberalization, especially when it is conducted through the kind of financial policies as those involving International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan programs. Under current IMF regulations, developing...
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