by SooYeonKim (Contributor)
In Power and the Governance of Global Trade, Soo Yeon Kim analyzes the design, evolution, and economic impact of the global trade regime, focusing on the power politics that prevailed in the regime and shaped its distributive impact on global trade. Using documents now available from the archives of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), Kim examines the institutional origins and critical turning points in the evolution of the GATT, as well as preferences of the lesser powers of the developing world that were the subject of heated debate over the International Trade Organization (ITO), which failed to materialize.
Using quantitative analysis, Kim assesses the impact of the global trade regime on international trade and finds that the rules of trade forged by the great powers resulted in a developmental divide, in which industrialized countries benefited from trade expansion but developing countries reaped far fewer gains. The findings indicate that a successful conclusion to the Doha Round of the World Trade Organization (WTO) is urgently needed to mitigate the developmental divide by increasing trade between the industrialized and developing worlds.
Kim offers a timely reading of the GATT/WTO system as a way to think about how trade and globalization more broadly may be governed in this post-Cold War century, as the global economy contends with a new geopolitical configuration featuring rising powers from the developing world. Important trading nations such as China, India, and other emergent actors in the G-20 countries, Kim argues, reflect the new power politics that will shape the course of global trade governance in the years to come.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 192
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Published: 09 Sep 2010
ISBN 10: 0801448867
ISBN 13: 9780801448867
Soo Yeon Kim has made a real contribution to the study of international institutions and their centrality in determining global economic outcomes. Power and the Governance of Global Trade is particularly insightful in mapping how power has shaped the rules governing global trade and showing that those rules created uneven distributional effects that persist to this day. -Brian Pollins, The Ohio State University
In Power and the Governance of Global Trade, Soo Yeon Kim provides a thoughtful and extremely interesting account of the origins, evolution, and distributive consequences of the multilateral trade regime. Kim convincingly argues that power politics has played a key role in shaping the GATT/WTO system and her careful and sophisticated empirical analysis sheds new light on the linkages between power relations and the governance of global trade. -Edward D. Mansfield, Hum Rosen Professor of Political Science, University of Pennsylvania