Negotiating freer trade : the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, and the trade agreements of 1938

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Negotiating freer trade : the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, and the trade agreements of 1938

Ian M. Drummond, Norman Hillmer

Wilfrid Laurier University Press, c1989

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Includes bibliographical references and index

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Description

On November 17, 1938, Great Britain, the United States, and Canada, after four years of discussion and manoeuvre, signed two wideâranging and interlocking trade agreements. A few large elements dominated the talks. The Americans wanted to breach the walls of the British imperial preferential tariff system. The British were anxious to retain markets and political support in the British dominions and the Baltic, while protecting their domestic agriculture and improving political relations with the United States. Canada, whose acquiescence and coâoperation were necessitated by the preâexisting network of trade agreements, hoped to win new export markets, to retain old ones, and to achieve international political tranquility through economic means. Although the negotiations began with a mixture of lofty and ignoble motives, in the end the latter predominated. The authors have drawn on archival and statistical materials in all three countries to provide a clear and detailed account of the economic context of the midâ1930s, the process of negotiations, the issues, and the political and economic significance, both then and now, of the final agreements. Their work is a valuable caseâstudy of the problems that face any country that tries to negotiate freer trade. It is therefore full of contemporary resonance and relevance, and will be of interest to students of and specialists in modern history (European, British, and North American), international relations, and international economic policy.

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