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The thrust to free trade: Conviction or fashion

Seymour Patterson

International Advances in Economic Research, 1998, vol. 4, issue 2, 115-127

Abstract: Recently many developing countries flocked to free trade because the forces that led policymakers to resist trade reforms in the past have weakened. Apart from obvious external pressures from lending institutions, developing countries may simply have seen that cooperation promises more benefits than conflict in the area of international trade. The ideological debate between market forces and government planning has been decided in favor of market forces. However, another possibility not much considered is that trade reform is in vogue and this provides the motivation for following suit. Thus, trade reform can precipitate a cascade effect (Hirshleifer's term) of countries queuing up to adopt trade reform policies. A country is more likely to favor the notion of trade reform if two or more other countries have already successfully moved in that direction. Copyright International Atlantic Economic Society 1998

Date: 1998
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DOI: 10.1007/BF02295484

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