ABSTRACT

A deep and unresolved tension exists within American trade politics between the nation’s promotion of an open world trading system and the operations of its democratic domestic political regime. Whereas most scholarly attention has focused on how domestic politics has interfered with the United States’ global economic leadership, Orin Kirshner offers here an analysis of the ways in which U.S. leadership in the arena of global trade has affected American democracy and the domestic political regime.

By participating in multilateral trade agreements, the U.S. Congress has transferred its trade policymaking authority to the president and, through international trade negotiations, from the American state to the GATT/WTO regime. This reorganization of policymaking authority has resulted in the "triumph of globalism," and fundamentally alters the citizen-state relationship assumed in democratic theory. Kirshner illustrates this process through four case studies: The Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act of 1945, The Trade Expansion Act of 1962, The Trade Act of 1974, The Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988, and further examines the impact of the Uruguay Round Agreements Act of 1994 on the political and institutional structure of American trade politics up to the current period.

American Trade Politics and the Triumph of Globalism makes a significant contribution to the study of both international trade and domestic American politics. This is essential reading for students and scholars of trade policy, international political economy, American politics, and democratic theory.

part |30 pages

The Problem

chapter |28 pages

Triumph of Globalism

American Trade Politics

part |50 pages

Theory

part |84 pages

Historical Cases

chapter |19 pages

Going Global

The Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act of 1945

chapter |21 pages

Atlantic Partnership

The Trade Expansion Act of 1962

chapter |21 pages

Trilateralism

The Trade Act of 1974

chapter |21 pages

The New Multilateralism

The Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988

part |13 pages

Conclusions

chapter |11 pages

Triumph of globalism

Politics, Theory, Policy