Protectionism and the global trade stagnation Cover Image

Protectionism and the global trade stagnation
Protectionism and the global trade stagnation

Author(s): Alessandro Vitale
Subject(s): Politics / Political Sciences, Political Sciences
Published by: Wydawnictwa Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego
Keywords: protectionism; neo-protectionism; European Union; Eastern Europe; Global South; global trade; globalisation; protekcjonizm; neo-protekcjonizm; Unia Europejska; Europa Wschodnia; Globalne Południe

Summary/Abstract: The protectionism of the last twelve years is forcing many countries to backtrack in the face of the devastating consequences of those policies on their economies and the world trade. The pandemic COVID-19 has highlighted even more how those policies may be destructive and produce impoverishment. The current global pandemic crisis is producing an abrupt and probably very long braking effect on international trade. However, it would be wrong to consider it as the exclusive or the most important cause of global trade stagnation. In fact, the ground had already been prepared by the economic-financial crisis of 2007–2008 and in particular by the choices of “economic nationalism” of neo-protectionist type, which made a precise political use of the modern linear border. Globalisation means mainly the overcoming of political barriers, borders, and the opening to the global free trade market. On the contrary, it is now still hindered by heavy political factors, among which protectionism has been the main one for many years. Those policies, implemented on the large areas by major world powers, have caused a long phase of “de-globalisation”, characterised by the renewed use of the modern border to enclose economies, well before the pandemic crisis.

  • Issue Year: 2020
  • Issue No: 4
  • Page Range: 147-153
  • Page Count: 7
  • Language: English
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