In the aftermath of September 11, the foreign policy dimension of trade has reasserted itself. Expanding trade, especially with and among less developed countries, is once again being recognized as a tool for encouraging democracy and respect for human rights in regions and countries of the world where those commodities have been the exception rather than the rule.
Political scientists have long noted the connection between economic development, political reform, and democracy. Increased trade and economic integration promote civil and political freedoms directly by opening a society to new technology, communications, and democratic ideas. Economic liberalization provides a counterweight to governmental power and creates space for civil society. And by promoting faster growth, trade promotes political freedom indirectly by creating an economically independent and political aware middle class.
The reality of the world today broadly reflects those theoretical links between trade, free markets, and political and civil freedom. As trade and globalization have spread to more and more countries in the last 30 years, so too have democracy and political and civil freedoms. In particular, the most economically open countries today are more than three times as likely to enjoy full political and civil freedoms as those that are relatively closed. Those that are closed are nine times more likely to completely suppress civil and political freedoms as those that are open. Nations that have followed a path of trade reform in recent decades by progressively opening themselves to the global economy are significantly more likely to have expanded their citizens' political and civil freedoms.
The powerful connection between economic openness and political and civil freedom provides yet another argument for pursuing an expansion of global trade. In the Middle East, China, Cuba, Central America, and other regions, free trade can buttress U.S. foreign policy by tilling foreign soil for the spread of democracy and human rights.
| Trade Briefing Papers |
- Trade Briefing Paper no. 21. The Case for CAFTA: Consolidating Central America's Freedom Revolution
by Daniel Griswold and Daniel Ikenson (September 24, 2004) |
- Trade Briefing Paper no. 18. Free-Trade Agreements: Steppingstones to a More Open World
by Daniel T. Griswold (July 10, 2003) | - Trade Briefing Paper no. 16. Grounds for Complaint? Understanding the "Coffee Crisis"
by Brink Lindsey (May 6, 2003) | - Trade Briefing Paper no. 12. Missing the Target: The failure of the Helms-Burton Act
by Mark Groombridge (June 5, 2001) | - Trade Briefing Paper no. 5. Trade and the Transformation of China: The Case for Normal Trade Relations
by Dan Griswold, Ned Graham, Robert Kapp, and Nicholas Lardy (July 19, 1999) | - Trade Briefing Paper no. 3. State and Local Sanctions Fail Constitutional Test
by David R. Schmahmann and James S. Finch (August 6, 1998) | - Trade Briefing Paper no. 2. Free Trade and Human Rights: The Moral Case for Engagement
by Robert A. Sirico (July 17, 1998) |
| Commentary |
- Weighing the Dubai Ports Deal
By Daniel Griswold (March 22, 2006) |
- There's a new Tariff in Town
by Daniel Ikenson (March 15, 2006) | - Globalization, Human Rights, and Democracy
By Daniel T. Griswold (February 28, 2006) | - Our New Coalition of the Willing
By Daniel Griswold (February 15, 2006) | - Peace on earth? Try free trade among men
By Daniel Griswold (December 29, 2005) | by Dan Griswold (May 5, 2005) | - Fair Trade or Betrayed? CAFTA SI! Promise of stability and prosperity
by Dan Ikenson (April 3, 2005) | - Trade with China is win-win
by Daniel T. Griswold (October 20, 2004) | - Los mercados libres promueven la democracia
Por Daniel T. Griswold (March 22, 2004) | - The Best Way to Grow Future Democracies
by Daniel T. Griswold (February 15, 2004) | - Competition In Iraq...But Not In America
by Aaron Lukas (January 2, 2004) | - Commitment to Free Trade Critical to Recovery of Iraq
by Daniel Griswold (April 25, 2003) | - Abuse of 18th Century Law Threatens U.S. Economic and Security Interests
by Daniel T. Griswold (February 5, 2003) | - War & the Battle of Ideas: At the gates, again (Part III)
by Brink Lindsey (November 21, 2002) | by Brink Lindsey (November 20, 2002) | by Brink Lindsey (November 19, 2002) | - Seven Moral Arguments for Free Trade
by Daniel Griswold (May 1, 2002) | - Seven Moral Arguments for Free Trade
by Daniel Griswold (May 1, 2002) | - Should the US Reduce by 50% the Number of Legal Immigrants and 'Immigrant' Students?
By Daniel T. Griswold (April 23, 2002) | - Forum Follies, No news from Porto Alegre
by Aaron Lukas (March 1, 2002) | by Brink Lindsey (March 1, 2002) | - Immigrants have enriched American culture and enhanced our influence in the world
Daniel T. Griswold (February 18, 2002) | by Brink Lindsey (February 5, 2002) | by Gary Dempsey and Aaron Lukas (January 23, 2002) | - How Argentina Got Into This Mess
by Brink Lindsey (January 9, 2002) | - Free Trade and Our National Security
by Brink Lindsey (December 5, 2001) | - Congressman Uses Sept. 11 Terrorism to Advance Anti-Immigration Agenda
by Daniel T. Griswold (November 18, 2001) | - Poor Choice: Why Globalization Didn't Create 9/11
by Brink Lindsey (November 12, 2001) | - Don't Blame Immigrants for Terrorism
by Daniel T. Griswold (October 23, 2001) | by Brink Lindsey (September 28, 2001) | - America Still the Villain
by Aaron Lukas (September 18, 2001) | - China's Accession to the WTO: A Winning Outcome for both China and the United States
By Mark Groombridge (July 24, 2001) | - Time To End the War Against Yugoslavia
by Aaron Lukas and Gary Dempsey (June 11, 2001) | - Insight Symposium: Has Clinton's China policy put U.S. national security at risk?
by Kenneth R. Timmerman (November 6, 2000) | - Trade Winds (book review)
by Brink Lindsey (November 1, 2000) | - The Blessings and Challenges of Globalization
by Daniel T. Griswold (September 1, 2000) | - China: Constructive Partner or Emerging Threat?
by Ted Galen Carpenter and James A. Dorn (May 10, 2000) | - Trade with China: Business Profits or Human Rights?
by Doug Bandow (May 5, 2000) | - Advancing Human Rights In China
by James Dorn (July 10, 1999) | - Improving Human Rights In China
by James Dorn (February 8, 1999) | - A Global Intervention Crisis
by Daniel T. Griswold and Ian Vasquez (November 11, 1998) | - Sanctions Backlash in Balkans
by Gary Dempsey and Aaron Lukas (October 7, 1998) | - Trading with the Hungry Bear
by Aaron Lukas (June 25, 1998) | - A Personal Overview of U.S. Trade Policy
by William A. Niskanen (June 24, 1998) | - Dropping the Sanctions Ball on Kosovo
by Aaron Lukas and Gary Dempsey (April 28, 1998) | - Stuck In Sanctions: U.S. Needs Way Out of Policy Morass
by Aaron Lukas (February 9, 1998) |