Skip to content Skip to navigation
University of Warwick
  • Study
  • |
  • Research
  • |
  • Business
  • |
  • Alumni
  • |
  • News
  • |
  • About
  • Text only
  • |
  • Sign in
  • Search CSGR
  • Search University of Warwick
  • Search for people at Warwick
  • Search Warwick Blogs
  • Search past exam papers
  • Search video
  • More…

    Centre for the Study of Globalisation and Regionalisation

    • News and Events
    • People
    • Research
    • Projects
    • CSGR Globalisation Index
    • Abstracts »
    • The Short But Significant Life of The International Trade Organization: Lessons For Our Time
    University of Warwick

    The Short But Significant Life of The International Trade Organization: Lessons For Our Time

    Daniel Drache

    CSGR Working Paper No. 62/00

    December 2000

     

    Abstract:

     

    Along with the World Bank and the IMF, the International Trade Organization (ITO) formed the centrepiece of new kind of international organization in the late 40s. At the time, what was particularly novel about the Havana Charter was that it was not simply or mainly a trade organization like the WTO, its latter day descendent. At its core, the countries of the world rejected the idea that it was possible to maintain a firewall between trade, development, employment standards and domestic policy. Its most distinctive feature was the integration of an ambitious and successful program to reduce traditional trade barriers, with a wide-angled agreement that addressed investment, employment standards, development, business monopolies and the like. It pioneered the idea that trade disputes had to be settled by consultation and mediation rather than with legal clout. Further it established an institutional linkage between trade and labour standards that would effect a major advance in global governance. Finally it embedded the full employment obligation, along with "a commitment to free markets" as the cornerstone of multilateralism.

    Despite these accomplishments, the US Congress refused to ratify the Havana Charter even though it had signed it. As a direct consequence, the ITO's collapse represented a significant closure of the full employment era internationally. In the end, it's demise made possible the rapid return of the free trade canon that increasingly, would impose its authority and ideology on all international organizations and on the practice of multilateralism. As this essay concludes, its history compelling because whatever its apparent shortcomings, governments, economists and ordinary people demanded that trade, employment goals and developmental needs should reinforce each other in the world trading system.

    Keywords: global trade, governance, free trade, labour standards, postwar consensus and trade liberalization.

    Download the Full Document PDF icon

     

     

    CSGR, University of Warwick, Coventry, CV4 7AL, UK
    Telephone: +44 (0) 247657 5344 | Fax: +44 (0) 24 765 72548 | Email: csgr at warwick dot ac dot uk

    Close this email form
    Page contact: Leonard Seabrooke Last revised: Thu 16 Nov 2006
    • Sign in
    • |
    • Powered by Sitebuilder
    • |
    • © MMXII
    • |
    • Privacy
    • |
    • Accessibility