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- <text>
- <title>
- German Says GATT Agreement "Victory for Free Trade"
- </title>
- <article>
- <hdr>
- Foreign Broadcast Information Service, December 17, 1993
- German Says GATT Agreement "Victory for Free Trade"
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> [Klaus Peter Krause commentary: "A Victory for More Free
- Trade"]
- </p>
- <p> [Text] The war of nerves is over. All can breathe a sigh of
- relief: states, their economies, and consumers. The eighth
- multilateral GATT round on the liberalization of world trade has
- been successfully concluded. The outcome, albeit not perfect,
- will be like a warm April shower for the global economy. It
- boosts optimism, and because it reduces restrictions on trade,
- it will give free rein to economic forces.
- </p>
- <p> The GATT agreement will give world trade an added boost.
- Customs tariffs will be lowered, subsidies reduced, and markets
- (gradually) opened up. The agreement has the effect of a state
- economic program. There cannot be a better one: no state
- economic program makes more sense or has a more sustained effect
- than a decision to promote free trade. Free and open markets are
- always necessary for economic well-being. Now, however, they are
- the order of the day if the economy is to receive the boost it
- requires.
- </p>
- <p> It will only be possible for this stimulus to develop after
- 1995, because the treaty first has to be ratified by the GATT
- states. It is an especially urgent requirement for the old
- industrialized states. They are not only stuck in a recession,
- but their economies are also experiencing a structural crisis
- that involves propping up uneconomic branches of industry,
- excessive protection from competitive imports, too much state
- intervention, and wage rate cartels. The music of economic
- progress is now to be heard in the Far East, not in Europe.
- </p>
- <p> Trade produces prosperity. More trade leads to more
- prosperity. However, the increase in prosperity will not be
- distributed evenly. The old industrial countries (OECD States)
- will benefit most, then the threshold states of the Far East,
- and Third World countries less so. The poorest of them will even
- benefit least from the increase in prosperity: They receive too
- little attention as the big players haggle over trade.
- </p>
- <p> Consumers can also breathe a sigh of relief--that is, all
- the people in the participating states: If those things that
- hinder the international exchange of goods are reduced or
- removed, the supply of goods will improve and all the
- participating countries will gain in prosperity. Adam Smith and
- David Ricardo, the classical free trade thinkers, already
- developed that theory in the 18th century. The immediate
- benefits to consumers will also be reflected in a tendency for
- prices to fall.
- </p>
- <p> This will, however, involve hard work. No previous round
- has last as long as the current, eighth round, which has gone on
- for seven years and has been accompanied by drama, serious
- crises, poker tactics, and a negotiating marathon. Progress was
- delayed by the two giants in world trade, the United States and
- the EU. What was particularly shocking was how openly and
- shamelessly the United States presented its protectionist side.
- In the case of France, one is already accustomed to its
- shamelessness regarding protectionism. Germany really allowed
- itself to be blackmailed by Paris, which operated in a
- consummately brutal fashion. The interests of certain groups
- among France's farmers were magnified into questions of national
- existence. Yet France's economy with its strong export sector is
- just as dependent on free trade as the German one. Paris made
- sure that it was paid several times over for approving GATT,
- although its economy is one of the main beneficiaries of the new
- agreement.
- </p>
- <p> It is depressing for the other participating states that
- seemingly only the United States and Europe count, whereas they
- themselves have to wait on the sidelines until the two big
- players reach agreement; they more or less have to remain
- obedient while the two agree or disagree. Even Japan remained
- somewhat in the background, and only attracted attention with
- its ban on imports of rice, which has now been slightly eased
- with the greatest apprehension.
- </p>
- <p> Without doubt, protectionism does not make economic sense
- in the long run and harms people's well-being. The free trade
- message is equally beyond dispute, and it is: With
- protectionism, one not only harms one's trading partner, but
- harms oneself the most. This makes what the free trade round
- failed to accomplish all the more depressing and painful.
- Namely, other ("nontariff") barriers to trade have replaced the
- old customs restrictions a long time ago; the protectionists'
- capacity for innovation is inexhaustible. As there are still too
- many restrictions, exuberance--although there is satisfaction
- with the moves toward liberalization that have now been
- achieved--is out of place. A battle against protectionism has
- been won, but by no means the war.
- </p>
- <p> In terms of its scope, however, this is the most
- significant GATT round so far. It is the first time that
- services extending across borders, textiles, and intellectual
- property (patents, licenses) have been included in GATT. A
- worldwide reduction of one-third in customs tariffs has been
- achieved. The United States has made concessions on its
- commercial law and is modifying it to conform to GATT
- regulations. Speaking about the latest European Commission white paper,
- Delors said: "The peoples of Europe need a message that gives
- hope." At least, the GATT agreement provides such a message.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>