Politics

Footnotes to the week's trade-talks breakdown

When I wrote about international trade and the presidential campaign [/business-technology/16323/] recently, I characterized the seven-year-long Doha Round global trade negotiation as being "stuck on neutral." As it turned out, the negotiation promptly thereafter took a negative turn.

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Ted Van Dyk

When I wrote about international trade and the presidential campaign recently, I characterized the seven-year-long Doha Round global trade negotiation as being "stuck on neutral." As it turned out, the negotiation promptly thereafter took a negative turn.

When I wrote about international trade and the presidential campaign recently, I characterized the seven-year-long Doha Round global trade negotiation as being "stuck on neutral." As it turned out, the negotiation promptly thereafter took a negative turn.

Within 24 hours, the round unexpectedly collapsed — in particular because rising economic powers China, India, and Brazil, allied with developing countries, refused to submit to terms of reference they saw as set by the U.S. and the European Union. Earlier, the U.S. and EU had offered to reduce their barriers to farm imports in return for concessions on industrial imports.

If the Doha Round is not revived, it will be the first such global negotiation to fail since the Kennedy Round of the 1960s launched such multilateral reductions in tariff and non-tariff barriers to international trade.

Some reactions:

There have been crises before in global trade negotiations. Always before the negotiations have been rescued — sometimes after a cooling-off period. This may not happen this time. If that is the case, this will turn out to have been a bad week for the American and global economies.

Ted Van Dyk

By Ted Van Dyk

Ted Van Dyk has been active in national policy and politics since 1961, serving in the White House and State Department and as policy director of several Democratic presidential campaigns. He is auth