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Chapter Thirteen - Active Non-Alignment and Global Economic Governance: Trade and Investment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 November 2023

Carlos Fortin
Affiliation:
Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex
Jorge Heine
Affiliation:
Boston University
Carlos Ominami
Affiliation:
Fundación Chile21
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Summary

Introduction

A key dimension of the hegemonic conflict between the United States and China is the design of the rules, structures, and processes that govern the world economy.

The subject is, of course, not new. Already at the beginning of the 1980s, the governments of developed countries—particularly the United States—and multinational companies in those countries argued that it was necessary to reformulate global economic governance to bring it into line with globalization. The explicit objective was to establish international regimes that would provide a normative framework to facilitate and deepen globalization. The implicit objective was to consolidate this model of market capitalism and to promote the global expansion and penetration of multinational capital through the establishment of international disciplines.

In the field of international trade, the effort was initially successful. The Uruguay Round of trade negotiations concluded in 1994 with the creation of the World Trade Organization (WTO)—the successor to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)—designed to be the nerve center of global trade governance.

Less successful was the effort in the area of international investment. As outlined further in this chapter, the constitutive instruments of the WTO agreed at the Marrakesh Conference in April 1994 included a basic agreement on trade-related investment measures; however, a proposal to fully incorporate this into the organization’s rules and ensure the free movement of foreign capital failed at the first Ministerial Conference in Singapore in 1996, largely due to opposition from developing countries.

However, the effort of governments and companies from developed countries to set up a unified international regime for global economic governance to reflect their interests continued at multilateral, plurilateral, regional, and bilateral levels. A brief account of that process provides a useful background for understanding today’s hegemonic conflict.

The Governance of Economic Globalization: The Central Issues

Debates and conflicts about the governance of economic globalization during the last four decades have revolved around four main questions: (1) Is a fundamental reform of global economic governance necessary, and should this be done by establishing a general normative framework for globalization? (2) Should this framework be extended to areas previously accepted as belonging to the sphere of national autonomy?

Type
Chapter
Information
Latin American Foreign Policies in the New World Order
The Active Non-Alignment Option
, pp. 167 - 182
Publisher: Anthem Press
Print publication year: 2023

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