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Dear Friends & Colleagues,

 

Donald Trump's trade wars have placed trade on the front page, above the
fold.

 

I have  <http://www.thomaspalley.com/> posted two papers on the economics
and political economy of globalization (abstracts below). Please consider
sharing them.

 

The economics paper offers a new theoretical reinterpretation of trade &
globalization. 

 

The political economy paper places Trump's trade wars in a broader political
economy perspective. If you only have time to read one, I urge you to read
it. I think it can help understand our dangerous political condition. There
are no "good" guys, only "bad" and "worse" guys.

 

Best,

 

Tom Palley

 

Globalization Checkmated? Political and Geopolitical Contradictions Coming
Home to Roost <http://www.thomaspalley.com/?p=1180> 

The deepening of economic globalization appears to have ground to a halt and
the process may even unravel a little. The sudden stop has surprised
economists, whose belief in globalization has strong parallels with
Fukuyama's (1989) flawed end of history hypothesis. The paper presents a
simple analytic model that shows how economic globalization has triggered
political and geopolitical contradictions. For the system to work, politics
within countries and geopolitics across blocs must be supportive of the
system. That is missing. The model is applied to a global economic core
consisting of the US, China, and the European Union. It is revealing of
multiple tensions, fracture lines, and contradictions. Within the US,
globalization has delivered economic outcomes that have estranged the
electoral bases of both major political parties. It has also delivered
outcomes that are inconsistent with the US neocon geopolitical inclination.
President Trump is a product of those forces, and he will likely prove to be
a historically significant figure. That is because he has surfaced
geopolitical contradictions that cannot be swept back under the rug.
Ironically, his biggest impact may be on the European Union, particularly
Germany, which is being compelled to recognize the neocon nature of the US
and the vulnerabilities of dependence on US exports and technology. China
was already aware of its vulnerabilities in those regards.

 

Three Globalizations, Not Two: Rethinking the History and Economics of Trade
and Globalization <http://www.thomaspalley.com/?p=1191> 

The conventional wisdom is there have been two globalizations in the modern
era. The first began around 1870 and ended in 1914. The second began in 1945
and is still underway. This paper challenges that view and argues there have
been three globalizations, not two. The first half of the paper provides
empirical evidence for the three globalizations hypothesis. The second half
discusses its analytical implications. The Victorian first globalization and
Keynesian era second globalization were driven by gains from trade, and
those gains increased industrialized country real wages. The neoliberal
third globalization has been driven by industrial reorganization motivated
by distributional conflict. Trade theory does not explain the third
globalization; capital's share has increased at the expense of labor's; and
there can be no presumption of mutually beneficial country gains from the
third globalization. 

 

Thomas Palley

[log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]> 

Tel: 202-667-5518

www.thomaspalley.com <http://www.thomaspalley.com/> 

 


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