Skip to main content Site map

Free Trade: Myth, Reality and Alternatives


Free Trade: Myth, Reality and Alternatives

Hardback by Dunkley, Graham

Free Trade: Myth, Reality and Alternatives

£85.00

ISBN:
9781856498623
Publication Date:
1 Mar 2004
Language:
English
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint:
Zed Books Ltd
Pages:
278 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 13 - 18 May 2024
Free Trade: Myth, Reality and Alternatives

Description

In this book Australian economist, Graham Dunkley, explains and critiques the crucial concept of free trade. A policy of free trade is central to today's world-dominating globalization project. The more euphoric globalists uncritically assume that it has universal and unequivocal benefits for all people and countries. And the perpetual negotiations of the World Trade Organization are wholly based on this presumption. Graham Dunkley shows, however, that leading economists have always been more sceptical about free trade doctrine than the dogmatic globalizers realize. There are more holes in free trade theory than its advocates grasp. And the benefits of free trade in practice are more limited and contingent than they acknowledge. He also argues that the World Bank's long-time push for export-led development is misguided. A more democratic world trading order is necessary and possible. And more interventionist, self-reliant trade policies are feasible, especially if a more holistic view of economic development goals is adopted.

Contents

1. Introduction: Trade, Myth and Obsession 2. That's the Theory! Debating Free Trade Doctrine Forever 3. A Confederacy of Heretics: Two Centuries of Free Trade Dissent 4. What About the Practice? Trading and Free Trade in History and Reality 5. Development: Myths and Alternatives: A Critique of Globalising Growth 6. The Export Cult: The Import Substitution versus Export Orientation Debate 7. The Self-Reliance Option: Global Myths and Alternative Development 8. The Free Trade Adventure: The WTO, Global Myths and Alternatives 9. Conclusion

Back

University of Sunderland logo