Titre : | COVID-19 and trade policy : why turning inward won’t work |
Auteurs : | Richard Baldwin, Editeur scientifique Simon J. Evenett, Editeur scientifique Centre for economic policy research (London), Editeur scientifique |
Editeur : | London : Centre for economic policy research |
Année de publication : | 2020 |
Collection : | A VoxEU.org book |
Présentation physique : | 187 p.cartes, tableaux, graphiques |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-1-912179-30-5 |
Mots clés : |
Gestion des crises
Politique économique Politique commerciale Commerce international Relations économiques internationales Commerce extérieur Protectionnisme |
Note générale : | Ebook du 29 avril 2020 (selon les propriétés du document PDF) |
Résumé : |
The COVID-19 pandemic sparked broad-ranging resort to export restrictions on medical supplies and food. This eBook asks : Should governments react to the health, economic, and trade crises by turning inward ? The authors provide an unequivocal a[...]
The COVID-19 pandemic sparked broad-ranging resort to export restrictions on medical supplies and food. This eBook asks : Should governments react to the health, economic, and trade crises by turning inward ? The authors provide an unequivocal answer : No.
Turning inward won’t help today’s fight against COVID-19. National trade barriers in a world of internationalised manufacturing processes will make it harder for every nation to produce vital medical supplies. Insular policies will also fail to foster economic recovery, and they are a threat to the collaborative spirit that the human race will need to defeat this threat. Richard Baldwin : Professor of International Economics at The Graduate Institute, Geneva ; Founder & Editor-in-Chief of VoxEU.org ; exPresident of CEPR. Simon Evenett : Professor of International Trade, University of St. Gallen ; Research Fellow, CEPR. [Présentation par le site internet de l'éditeur, 29 avril 2020] |
Note de contenu : |
Introduction (Richard Baldwin & Simon J. Evenett)
1. How trade can fight the pandemic and contribute to global health (Anna Stellinger, Ingrid Berglund & Henrik Isakson)
2. COVID-19 : demand spikes, export restrictions, and quality concerns im[...]
Introduction (Richard Baldwin & Simon J. Evenett)
1. How trade can fight the pandemic and contribute to global health (Anna Stellinger, Ingrid Berglund & Henrik Isakson) 2. COVID-19 : demand spikes, export restrictions, and quality concerns imperil poor country access to medical supplies (Chad P. Bown) 3. Flawed prescription : export curbs on medical goods won’t tackle shortages (Simon J. Evenett) 4. COVID-19 : expanding access to essential supplies in a value chain world (Matteo Fiorini, Bernard Hoekman & Aydin Yildirim) 5. COVID-19 : export controls and international cooperation (Bernard Hoekman, Matteo Fiorini & Aydin Yildirim) 6. Trade policy and food security (Will J. Martin & Joseph W. Glauber) 7. Export restrictions in times of pandemic : options and limits under international trade agreements (Joost Pauwelyn) 8. Global supply chains will not be the same in the post-COVID-19 world (Beata Javorcik) 9. Resilience versus robustness in global value chains : some policy implications (Sébastien Miroudot) 10. Will the post-COVID world be less open to foreign direct investment ? (Przemyslaw Kowalski) 11. An unintended crisis in sea transportation due to COVID-19 restrictions (Inga Heiland & Karen Helene Ulltveit-Moe) 12. Exposing governments swimming naked in the COVID-19 crisis with trade policy transparency (and why WTO reform matters more than ever) (Robert Wolfe) 13. What’s next for protectionism ? watch out for state largesse, especially export incentives (Simon J. Evenett) |
Documents numériques (2)
Bibliothèque numérique SPW Adobe Acrobat PDF | Document PDF librement téléchargeable URL |