Keep up to date with Peterson Institute publications, events, and interviews with a subscription to our email newsletter.
Use filters to narrow your search.
POLICY BRIEF 08-5
World Trade at Risk
by C. Fred Bergsten, Peterson Institute for International Economics
The decision by the House of Representatives on April 10 to change the rules for Congressional action on trade agreements drives a gaping hole in US trade policy and poses the gravest threat to the global trading system in decades. By rejecting long-settled procedures that prevented Congressional sidetracking of trade deals agreed by fully authorized Presidents, it instantaneously destroyed the credibility of the United States as a negotiating partner in the eyes of the rest of the world. Unless reversed soon, the House action will severely damage both the US economy and US foreign policy. It will particularly undermine the presumed goal of any new Administration in 2009 to restore our country’s standing as a reliable partner in a cooperative multilateral world.
It would help if Congress and the present Administration could pick up the pieces and pass the Colombia agreement, and the pending South Korea and Panama agreements as well. But the fundamental problem of US international credibility on trade will remain until a foolproof Trade Promotion Authority, or some equivalent successor, is renewed and indeed ensconced permanently. This can only be done, probably by the next Administration, as part of a "grand bargain" that recognizes the costs of liberalization and thus includes a major expansion of governmental assistance to workers dislocated by trade and perhaps other sources of dynamic change in our economy. In the absence of such a renewed foundation for an open and active US trade policy, both our economy and our foreign policy will suffer severely.
View full document [pdf]
RELATED LINKS
Book: Long-Term International Economic Position of the United States April 2009
Op-ed: New Imbalances Will Threaten Global Recovery June 10, 2010
Op-ed: How Best to Boost US Exports February 3, 2010
Op-ed: Cooling the Planet Without Chilling Trade November 13, 2009
Paper: Submission to the USTR in Support of a Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement January 25, 2010
Working Paper 09-2: Policy Liberalization and US Merchandise Trade Growth, 1980–2006 May 2009
Policy Brief 09-2: Buy American: Bad for Jobs, Worse for Reputation February 2009
Paper: Report to the President-Elect and the 111th Congress on A New Trade Policy for the United States December 17, 2008
Book: American Trade Politics, 4th Edition June 2005
Op-ed: The Payoff from Globalization June 7, 2005
Article: A Renaissance for United States Trade Policy? November-December 2002
Policy Brief 03-8: More Pain, More Gain: Politics and Economics of Eliminating Tariffs June 2003
Op-ed: A Competitive Approach to Free Trade December 4, 2002
Op-ed: When the Dollar Bill Comes Due April 27, 2005
Policy Brief 01-2: A Prescription to Relieve Worker Anxiety March 2001