Trade Protectionism in an Uncertain and Interconnected Global Economy

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Agreement
Argentina
Author_Nicolas Albertoni
Bec
Bilateral
Bilateral Investment Treaties
Brazil
Business
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China
China Shock
Close Trading Partners
Column Chart
Commercial
commercial policy reform
Common Official Language
Covid
Development
economic interdependence
Economy
Enabling Clause
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Gdp Growth
Global
Global Financial Crisis
global value chains
Govern
GTA
GVC Participation
Interconnected
Interconnected Global Economy
Interdependent
Interest
international political economy
IPE
Latin America
Latin American trade
Liberal
Market
Mexico
Non-automatic Licensing
non-tariff barriers
NTMs
Optimal Obfuscation
Pandemic
Policy
post-pandemic trade policy analysis
Protectionism
Protectionist
Protectionist Dynamics
Protectionist Measures
PTA Member
PTAs
Region
Stacked Column Chart
State
State Level Dynamics
Tariff
Tariff Measures
Trade
Trade Policy
Trade Policymaking
Uncertain
United States
US
Variable
Vice Versa
World Trade Organization
WTO

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032374789
  • Weight: 800g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Sep 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Trade Protectionism in an Uncertain and Interconnected Global Economy presents the results of almost five years of research on the political economy of trade policy. It argues that in a global context dominated by economic uncertainty and interdependencies, the mechanisms that have fueled the diffusion of trade liberalization under the World Trade Organization (preferential trade agreements and global value chains) can also become channels for protectionism (based on less observable non- tariff or murkier measures).

Countries have changed the way they respond to protectionism, which impacts bilateral relations. The author explores why and how increased global trade interconnectivity has also become a channel for new forms of trade protectionism, and especially how this impacts the developing world. These counterintuitive dynamics constitute the newest wave in the literature on trade interdependence. Previous research on trade policy has often concentrated on just one aspect of the effects of an interconnected global economy: the more political and economic linkages countries build among themselves, the fewer tensions they will generate across borders. From a trade policy perspective, this causal claim has held steady for many decades. This book bridges academic analysis with trade policymaking and offers a road map for the kinds of commercial policy reforms that will be essential for the successful revival of world markets after global economic crises as it was the COVID-19 pandemic.

This book will appeal to postgraduates, researchers, and academics interested in international political economy, comparative political economy, development, business, and all those with a particular interest in Latin American trade policy dynamics. It will also be of interest to trade policy scholars, practitioners, and readers with an interest in how governments, firms, and regions around the developing world transition into more knowledge-intensive activities.

Nicolás Albertoni is Fulbright-Laspau Scholar and Professor at the Universidad Católica del Uruguay. He is an active researcher at the Uruguayan National System for Researchers (SNI-ANII) and non-resident associate researcher at the University of Southern California’s Security and Political Economy (SPEC) Laboratory, USA. He is currently Uruguay’s deputy minister of foreign affairs. He holds a PhD in political science and international relations from the University of Southern California (USC), where he received the Order of Arethe, the highest honor accorded to graduate students. He received a master’s degree from Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service in Latin American Studies, and a master’ degree in Economics, and a master’s degree in Politics and International Relations from USC.

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