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Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO.

Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO

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Criticisms of free trade? May lead to domestic unemployment - welfare losses may outweigh welfare benefits Gains may not be distributed fairly May lead to formation of domestic monopoly Thus, governments impose barriers to trade to protect domestic interests.

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Page 1: Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO

Economic Environment of

BusinessInternational Trade.GATT and the WTO.

Page 2: Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO

Why is free trade so important?The Law of Comparative Advantage –extends Adam Smith’s Division of Labourto the global scale:Recognises countries have differentResources. So trade acts as: Competitive force for efficiency, and Enables growth etc.

Barriers to trade include quotas,

tariffs and bureaucratic regulations

Page 3: Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO

Criticisms of free trade? May lead to domestic unemployment -

welfare losses may outweigh welfare benefits

Gains may not be distributed fairly

May lead to formation of domestic monopoly

Thus, governments impose barriers to

trade to protect domestic interests.

Page 4: Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO

GATT (The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade) and the WTO (World Trade Organisation):

GATT is to promote economic well-being by “enabling its members to enter into reciprocal and mutually advantageous arrangements” It aims for the substantial reduction of tariffs and other barriers to trade and to the elimination of discriminatory treatment of international trade.

Emphasis is on:MFN (Most Favoured Nation) Principle.

Page 5: Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO

What is meant by Most Favoured Nation?

This requires a country to apply its lowest tariff for any particular product to all of its suppliers.  (Article One: GATT 1947)

Page 6: Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO

The Three Principles Behind GATTNon-discrimination - includes avoiding internal protection

Market compatibility - liberal trade increasing economic welfare

Predictability - transparencyWhat has GATT

achieved over the years?

Page 7: Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO

GATT Talks Since 1947:Significant developments: By late 1990s the average tariff had fallen from 40% in 1947 to

about 5%

Uruguay Round 1993 extended free trade in agriculture, services, textiles, intellectual property and foreign investment and abolished tariffs altogether in 11 sectors

Doha (the latest round: since 2001) has faced problems from the EU in agricultural reform. Focus on anti-dumping and subsidies, investment and competition policy and government procurement/services

Page 8: Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO

The WTO (World Trade Organisation)This was created in January 1993 to police and enforce GATT rules in the future. It aims to foster economic growth and development by developing trade. GATT now comes under the umbrella of the WTO.WTO has established dispute procedure, with provision for appeals and binding arbitration.

Services and intellectual property rights are also

covered by WTO

Page 9: Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO

Is it still possible for a country to impose trade barriers?YES - in certain circumstances: Article 6 if there is proof of dumping Article 18 to assist infant industry Article 19 to assist domestic production Articles 21-25 to protect national interests

These might give us some idea as to why

trade talks have broken down in the

21st Century.

Page 10: Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO

The Collapse of Trade Talks

In what has been referred to as the Battle of Seattle, trade talks collapsed in December 1999. Indeed, in that month, there were riots, rallies and marches in twenty countries across the world.

The Economist of 13th January 2007 referred to the Doha round as

three dimensional chess!!!

Page 11: Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO

Why has there been a rise in protectionism? The world trade crisis of the 1970s.

The entry of new and successful competitors.

Loopholes – e.g. VERs (Voluntary Export Restraints)

Range of other non-tariff barriers.

Page 12: Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO

How can imports be restricted? Tariffs - a tax on imports raising their price Quotas - a physical limit on a particular

good/service Subsidy - to domestic suppliers Exchange controls - restrict access to foreign

currency Safety, technology and environmental standards Public sector contracts

Page 13: Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO

The Case for Protection To prevent dumping (sales in an overseas

market below the real cost of production) - retaliation. World Bank suggests that this accounts for about a 17% hike in tariffs of manufactured goods in the USA.

To protect infant industries - high initial costs may make it difficult to achieve scale economies early on.

To protect strategically important industries

Page 14: Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO

Who are against trade liberalization? Environmentalists Trade Unions Charities Third World ActivistsWTO/IMF demonstrations in Seattle and Praguerecently.

Page 15: Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO

SummaryWe established: Principles of free trade The objectives and principles of

GATT/WTO Key stages of the GATT/WTO trade talks The resurgence of protectionism The case for and against protectionism