Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

International Economic Order: Implications for Globalization Tain-Jy Chen Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "International Economic Order: Implications for Globalization Tain-Jy Chen Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research."— Presentation transcript:

1 International Economic Order: Implications for Globalization Tain-Jy Chen Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research

2 I. Pax Britannica 1815 – 1870 II. Gold Standard - First wave of globalization 1871 – 1914 III. US Hegemony - Second wave of globalization 1946 – Present IV. The Future of Multilateralism

3 I.Pax Britannica 1815 – 1870  1815: Battle of Waterloo with Napoleon Bonaparte (June 18, 1815) 1870: Franco – Prussian War July 19, 1870 – May 10, 1871  British Dominance of World Politics and Trade  The Spread of English, British Imperial System of Measures, The Emergence of Commodity Markets, English Common Law  The Supremacy of Royal Navy as a power to maintain the security of trade.  Colonization of the non-European world  Force open the world markets and control commodity flows (Taiwan was open to trade in 1860).

4 II.Gold Standard 1871 – 1914  Most major countries adopted the gold standard in the 1870s.  Fixed exchange rate facilitated world trade.  Trading system was based on bilateral treaties.  Capital mobility was substantial, particularly from Britain to its colonies.  Migration from Europe to the New World was substantial.  Globalization caused equalization of income between Europe and the “ New World ”.

5 III.US Hegemony 1. The Bretton Woods System  International Monetary Fund (IMF) established a dollar-based world reserve system, creating a fixed exchange rate until 1971.  International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (World Bank) was established to finance economic development.  International Trade Organization (ITO) was to be establish to manage world trade but failed. Instead General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) was created in 1947.

6 III.US Hegemony 2. The Contributions of GATT: 1947 – 1995  Establishing a multilateral trading system under the principle of “ most favored nations ” (MFN).  Tariff concessions led to an enlargement of world trade.  Removal of non-tariff trade barriers since the Tokyo Round further increased world trade.  Consultation and dispute settlement mechanisms avoided trade wars.

7 III.US Hegemony 3. The Positive Roles of US in GATT  Lead the way in market opening  Set the rules and agendas of GATT  Push and punish the non-performers (section 301 and others)  The power of US relies with its market potential in addition to military might

8 III.US Hegemony 4. The Negative Roles of US in GATT  Serving its own interests at the expense of the rules – agriculture, textiles, …  Pushing its own agendas without considering the interests of its trading partners – intellectual property rights, environment, labor standards, …  Insufficient care for developing countries – generalized system of preferences (GSP), tariff structure, …

9 IV.The Future of Multilateralism  The threat of bilateralism and plurilateralism (free trade areas, … )  Divide between the South and North – uneven distribution of trade benefits between developed and developing countries  What more can be traded? Agriculture, service, …  The limit of WTO as a ruling body for world trade – Can WTO monitor the environmental standards, labor standards, competition laws … ?  The limit of US as hegemony – war against terrorism, …  The rise of China – the return of Empire


Download ppt "International Economic Order: Implications for Globalization Tain-Jy Chen Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google