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Trade is more contentious now than it has been for decades. Since
their heyday during the 1980s and 1990s – which saw the creation of the
WTO, the birth of NAFTA and China's rapid integration into the global
economy – international trading relationships have fallen into an uneasy
state of flux. From the US' decision to pull out of the Trans-Pacific
Partnership, to negotiations over Britain's future relationship with the
EU, and even a trans-Atlantic debate about chlorinated chicken, trade
is at the heart of public discourse and it's proving divisive.
On the face of it trade activity looks healthy. The number of
containers traversing the world's shipping lanes is rising steadily
after a sharp shock during the financial crisis. Yet the value of the
goods they contain is dropping as commodity prices struggle. Before the
crisis trade was growing faster than GDP. Now it isn't, buffeted by a
dangerous mix of economic and political headwinds.
Some are being tempted by the argument that trade is the primary
cause of inequality, and that the system is run by global elites who
work against national interests. This narrative is fundamentally wrong.
It threatens global peace and prosperity by encouraging policy-makers to
resort to protectionism at a time when the world urgently needs more
trade liberalisation, not less, to tackle the great socio-economic
issues of today and tomorrow.
All advocates of free and fair trade need to repel this false
narrative and regain the initiative, which means doing three things.
The first is to explain that trade exists because people want it to.
At its heart is the simple concept of comparative advantage, whereby a
community that can produce goods others need is empowered to sell to
those buyers and so afford to buy the goods it needs in return.
Maritime trade was how cutlers made my home city of Sheffield into
the steel capital of the world, and how those same cutlers were able to
buy imported goods such as tea, cotton and rubber. Digital trade is how
we can now buy Hollywood blockbusters from video-on-demand platforms
hosted on servers a continent away. Trade isn't just about physical
goods, it's increasingly about services too, which are being made more
tradable by technology.
Trade is essential for prosperity, stability and security. According
to the OECD, manufacturing workers in countries that are relatively open
to trade earn between three and nine times more than their peers in
closed economies. Half a century ago South-East Asia was tearing itself
apart, but this year the ASEAN bloc celebrates its 50th anniversary.
Through cooperation and commerce the member states have collectively
built the world's seventh-biggest economy, and by 2030 we expect ASEAN
to rank third.
The second thing we need to do is to acknowledge that the benefits of
trade haven't been shared evenly, so we must find policy solutions that
rebuild trust by supporting wealth distribution and protecting the
vulnerable. Rather than leaving responsibility for the displaced solely
to governments, businesses must play a greater role in a world where
technology and automation are already revolutionising how we live and
work.
Paying tax isn't enough; companies need to collaborate with
governments to develop education and labour markets that give workers
the skills and protections they need to succeed.
The third thing is to ensure we have legal and regulatory frameworks
that optimise access to trade. This means making procedures, standards
and agreements simpler and more consistent so it's easier for companies
to conduct cross-border business. It also means ensuring that capital
regulation encourages trade finance by recognising its low risk profile,
enabling financial institutions to fill more of the estimated $1.7
trillion gap in unmet demand for trade finance.
Trade is not a panacea for all the world's problems, but its power to
create prosperity is enormous. This, fundamentally, is why I take a
glass-half-full view of the future.
Some unstoppable trends are already in motion that will advance trade
and increase prosperity in the twenty-first century. E-commerce is
empowering businesses to sell to customers in countries without ever
setting foot there. Over the next 30 years the expansion of the middle
classes in Asia and Africa will lift some three billion people out of
poverty.
Asia-led initiatives are building a more integrated global economy –
such as the single market of the ASEAN Economic Community and China's
Belt and Road Initiative, which has halved the time it takes for goods
to travel between the UK and China by rail.
But only by repairing trust in trade, and by creating a better and
fairer system, can we take advantage of these trends and seize the
opportunities on offer. This is important work for the German G20
Presidency as it strives to defend the legitimacy of trade as an engine
of human progress.
We have an opportunity today to create a new era for trade – where
negative perceptions are dispelled, where gains are distributed more
evenly, and where access is increased on an unprecedented scale. The
result will be a better and brighter future for us all.
Source:china daily.com
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