How odd, it’s the European Commission that’s on the right side in this economic argument. The UK seems to have swallowed the Christian Aid/ Oxfam line that the poor countries should not open up their markets to imports. The EU, in the process of actually negotiating the agreements (trade is an EU sole competence), wants them to open up their markets. Much as I hate to credit the EU with being correct on any subject whatsoever, they are in the right here.
Simple and basic trade theory shows that imports are the good thing, exports being simply the price one must pay to get them. Even of everyone else on the planet was not a free trader, an economy would still benefit by being so. So it is in the poor countries’ own interest to dismantle their tarrif barriers (actually, sharpening up their bureaucratic logistics would have a similar effect). Just somewhat surprising that the EU is pushing the point.
We’ll still have to wait a long time before they apply the same logic to our own economies, of course, as Mandelson’s desire to limit Chinese textile imports shows.
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