Steel trade war threatens to bring back “dark ages” in world commerce




Asia's Developing Future show

Summary: A brewing trade war over steel is threatening to bring the world back to the economic “dark ages” when countries used trade curbs to retaliate politically against rival governments. The World Trade Organization and its members must find ways to ease tensions between rival countries and look for innovative ways to ensure global trade rules remain relevant and adaptive to the challenges of the present and the future. It may mean revisiting the WTO and the role it can play in trade governance. One of the reasons the WTO was formed was to make sure global trade is balanced and fair by isolating international trade from government intervention. Revisiting the WTO has become urgent in the wake of US President Donald Trump’s decision to slap tariffs on steel imports to protect the United States’ national interest, which is purportedly endangered by dependence on imported steel. The US acted before the WTO could consider its complaints of dumping, and the European Union and the People’s Republic of China are considering retaliatory tariffs. Read the transcript https://bit.ly/2v5Z5nZ Read the blog https://www.asiapathways-adbi.org/2018/04/impact-of-retaliatory-trade-enforcement-actions-on-the-world-trade-organization-and-trade-governance/ About the author Soo-hyun Lee is a research associate of International Law and Dispute Settlement at the Asian Institute of Policy Studies in Seoul, Republic of Korea. Know more about ADBI’s work on trade https://bit.ly/2mZ5tsQ https://bit.ly/2ytVl1X