Apr 2, 2025

Max Rangeley and Daniel Hannan on the post-WWII trade order

In closing, we know what happened when the world moved away from Cobdenite [free trade] principles.  It happened at the beginning of the 20th century with cataclysmic consequences.  Indeed it was precisely as a reaction to the horrors of the two wars, the Holocaust and the Holodomor that delegations from the free nations met in Bretton Woods in 1944 and agreed to a progressive reduction in trade barriers, a policy which led to the creation of what is now the World Trade Organization and to seven decades of unprecedented democracy as well as unprecedented prosperity.  

That process is now going in reverse.  Trade is falling as a proportion of global GDP and we are seeing a revival of the doom loop between political instability and autarkic tendencies.  "The owl of Minerva," wrote Hegel, "spreads its wings only with the gathering of the dusk."  If ever there was a time to remind ourselves how fortunate we have been in the economic order we have enjoyed, that time is upon us.

~ Max Rangeley and Daniel Hannan, Free Trade in the Twenty-First Century," Preface

2025


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