Is the world’s biggest champion of global free trade about to hang up its
gloves? Conventional wisdom about the Democratic takeover of Congress holds that
multilateral efforts like the expansion of the WTO will be on permanent hold,
while protectionist policies will proliferate, curtailing free trade and other
manifestations of globalization.The Democrats intend to hamstring the Bush administration’s
multilateral efforts, ostensibly to serve their labor and middle-class
constituency, but also to deny the president as many foreign policy successes as
possible in his final two years in office. The fast track authority Congress
gave the administration in 2002, and which Bush has used to negotiate 10
bilateral trade accords, will almost certainly not be renewed this summer. That
means any hope for the Doha Round of negotiations lies in its immediate
resumption and conclusion by midyear. With intractable disagreements over farm
subsidies and tariffs cleaving the developed and developing nations into warring
camps, and other G7 nations consumed by their own internal political dramas,
there is no chance this will occur. Rising protectionist sentiment took a few scalps even during the
allegedly free-trade Republicans’ lame duck Congress in November and December. A
deal to open U.S. airlines to foreign ownership was abandoned in the face of
union and industry opposition. In a business where leading players are
recognized for having "only" filed for bankruptcy once or twice, the idea that
it could suffer from new ideas or sources of capital is beyond comprehension. Despite the worries about the Democrats’ embrace of the
Republicans’ traditional antitrade mantle (Smoot, Hawley and Hoover were all
Republicans, and the last three successful WTO negotiations rounds were
concluded by Democratic administrations), rollback is less likely than stasis,
and the status quo is still pretty good. The Democrats mumble about negotiating
labor "fairness" provisions and supporting domestic industries with subsidies,
but these moves could hardly be more damaging than the Bush administration’s
blunders. Raising steel tariffs to obtain fast track authority and buttress his
rustbelt constituency revealed the shallowness of Bush’s commitment to free
trade. His egregious toadying to farm-belt voters by jacking up trade-distorting
agricultural subsidies (which his Democratic predecessor had lowered) was worse.
The one area where the administration’s trade policy matched its rhetoric was in
the negotiation of the bilateral trade deals, eight of which have been ratified.
Although the much-preferable multilateral negotiations were botched, these
bilateral treaties are in accord with WTO standards, meaning that they do not
need to be amended later if the WTO negotiations are resuscitated. Or Beggar Yourself
Those with a taste for tortured historical analogies also hear
a faint echo of the beggar-thy-neighbor competitive devaluations of the 1930s in
the Treasury’s browbeating of the Chinese and others to let their currencies
appreciate. As Worth went to press, the dollar was careening
lugelike downward against the euro and yen, and managing a stately decline
against the yuan, fulfilling, perhaps a little too fully, the aims of the
Treasury. But again, today’s markets are driven more by expectations of monetary
policy, and central bankers are not beholden to exporters or (with some notable
exceptions) politicians.Even so, as a policy issue, protectionism remains a danger.
Economists say it breeds inefficiencies and makes commercial benefits accrue to
special interests. For investors and entrepreneurs, the idea is to be at the
receiving end of that accrual. As John Ferry writes in our cover story this
month ("A World Divided") identifying opportunities is devilishly hard,
due to shifting political factors. But smart or lucky individuals will
benefit—and it pays to be among them.
|