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Z Giles's avatar

Good piece. Personally, I’d like to draw attention to this bit in particular:

“There has been no next wave of export-led development following on the East Asian success.”

Whilst it has been abused in recent years, as far as I can tell, with the exception of the UK and a few oil rich countries, EOI is by and large the only way countries have ever developed - even the US had to use the UK’s markets to industrialise before successfully switching to a consumption-led model (ironically using the exact same asymmetric abuse of free markets that East Asian states used themselves). As such, whilst the US definitely needs to rebase its advanced demand domestically, I still think there’s room for it to act as a demand sink for certain specific developing countries, provided its done in a more controlled manner than the neoliberal bonanza of the 90s and 00s.

Because of that, whilst I would definitely be in favour of the US, CANZUK and EU cutting out China almost entirely and significantly curtailing other East Asian nation’s access, I would still like to see the US maintain strongly preferential access to CAFTA-DR and to a lesser extent South America (and potentially Liberia as a wild card), with the EU doing the same for ECOWAS and ECCAS, and the East Asian Tigers switching over to consumption to substitute partially for the US in SE Asia. CANZUK also needs to become a thing (ideally incorporating Sierra Leone into the core grouping), and then team up with the likes of Malaysia, Sri Lanka and others to serve as a demand sink for Commonwealth East and Central African nations plus Ghana and The Gambia.

Just because the system has been abused doesn’t necessarily absolve the US of having a duty to assist in international development, and given that most standard cheap EOI fodder like textiles isn’t suitable for demand rebasing anyway, there’s no reason why it should conflict with its current objectives.

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Jeff Herrmann's avatar

I would point to Eastern Europe as an area that has done well with export lead development over the past 30 years along with the Carolina’s.

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