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A trade policy for free societiesA trade policy for free societies

A trade policy for free societies1994

Robert W. McGee

About this book

McGee takes the position that the only proper trade policy is one of total, immediate and unilateral free trade, since such a policy is the only one that is consistent with individual rights. This book is unique in that it (1) does not limit itself to utilitarian arguments, (2) explains why trade deficits are irrelevant, and (3) calls for immediate repeal of the antidumping laws. Part I discusses the philosophy of protectionism and reviews nearly two dozen arguments that projectionists have used to restrict trade. A whole chapter is devoted to exploding the myth that trade deficits are bad. Part II elaborates on the monetary and nonmonetary costs of protectionism. Part III addresses the philosophy and practice of antidumping policy in the United States, and shows why the policy is irrational, destructive and anti-consumer, and concludes that repeal rather than reform is called for. Part IV discusses other issues, such as the policy options for Europe, the effect of competition on prices and efficiency, the stages of economic development and their connection to trade policy, and the irrationality of the United States trade policy toward Eastern Europe.

Details

First published
1994
OL Work ID
OL2801118W

Subjects

Free tradeDumping (International trade)ProtectionismProtectionismeDumping (economie)DumpingDumpingabwehrProtektionismusProtectionnismeLibre-échange

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.