Policymakers must be constantly reminded of the benefits of free trade and the costs of protectionism. Free trade is the extension of free markets across political borders. Enlarging markets to integrate more buyers, sellers, investors, and workers enables more refined specialization and economies of scales, which produce more wealth and higher living standards. Protectionism does just the opposite. Congress and the administration should pursue policies that expand the freedom of Americans to participate in the international marketplace.
Trade Policy
5,407 results found
Feds Propose Forfeiture as Immigration Employer Sanction
Daniel Griswold debates NAFTA on C-SPAN’s Washington Journal
Daniel J. Ikenson discusses U.S. exports on Ideas in Action with Jim Glassman
Immigration Law — Up Close
James A. Dorn discusses U.S./China relations on VOA’s Mandarin Service
Update on the Arizona Immigration Issue
Wary Cooperation: The 2010 China-US Dialogue
New Crime Stats Contradict Anti-Immigrant Hype
Collin Peterson’s Cognitive Dissonance
A Legal Analysis of the New Arizona Immigration Law
U.S. Antidumping Regime Restrains U.S. Export Growth
Beware of Americans Proselytizing the Chinese Economic Model
The Realities Behind the Immigration Debate
Proclamation of ‘World Trade Week’ Tops President’s Trade Policy Achievement List