Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Foreword
- Preface: the ICC vision
- Historical overview and dynamics
- Editorial note
- A Global systemic transformations
- B Governance of global trade
- Editorial introduction
- B1 Securing the global trade regime: the demand for global governance
- B2 The trade regime and the future of the WTO
- B3 WTO reform: the time to start is now
- B4 ‘Murky protectionism’ and the WTO
- B5 Preferential trade agreements: imagining a world with less discrimination
- B6 The G-20 after the Great Recession: rebalancing trade
- B7 The missing piece: global imbalances and the exchange rate regime
- B8 Trading knowledge fairly: intellectual property rules for global prosperity and environmental sustainability
- B9 Trade and subsidies: undermining the trading system with public funds
- B10 Trading labour: a dilemma for migration regimes
- C Poverty and global inequities
- D The long view on interlocking crises
- E Global business responsibilities
- Conclusion: the imperative of inclusive global growth
- Index
B6 - The G-20 after the Great Recession: rebalancing trade
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Foreword
- Preface: the ICC vision
- Historical overview and dynamics
- Editorial note
- A Global systemic transformations
- B Governance of global trade
- Editorial introduction
- B1 Securing the global trade regime: the demand for global governance
- B2 The trade regime and the future of the WTO
- B3 WTO reform: the time to start is now
- B4 ‘Murky protectionism’ and the WTO
- B5 Preferential trade agreements: imagining a world with less discrimination
- B6 The G-20 after the Great Recession: rebalancing trade
- B7 The missing piece: global imbalances and the exchange rate regime
- B8 Trading knowledge fairly: intellectual property rules for global prosperity and environmental sustainability
- B9 Trade and subsidies: undermining the trading system with public funds
- B10 Trading labour: a dilemma for migration regimes
- C Poverty and global inequities
- D The long view on interlocking crises
- E Global business responsibilities
- Conclusion: the imperative of inclusive global growth
- Index
Summary
The 2009 global economic downturn poses an unprecedented challenge and a unique opportunity for China, the United States and the G-20. Just as the lessons of the Great Depression shaped post-World War II trade policy, contributing to a half century of unparalleled growth in world trade and economic activity, the experience of the Great Recession will shape globalization for years to come.
The financial meltdown that spawned the Great Recession was rooted in the record global current account imbalances that emerged over the last decade. These imbalances were, in part, a product of trade policies that had served the world well for years. Economists argued that unilateral import liberalization benefited consumers and thus should be pursued even if it was non-reciprocal and a nation's exports did not increase. But this economic reasoning eventually sowed the seeds that led to the recent crisis because it ignored the unintended economic consequences when non-reciprocity in trade created unsustainable current account imbalances.
Re-establishing more sustainable trade balances will require a new global economic growth paradigm, one in which debt-dependent countries, such as the United States, produce more of what they consume and export-dependent countries, such as China, Germany and Japan, consume more of what they produce.
The post-war trade regime was largely designed by the United States and a few of its European allies, reflecting their experience, insights and interests.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Peace and Prosperity through World TradeAchieving the 2019 Vision, pp. 101 - 104Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010