Trade Diversification by Country of Origin
By: Amit Bhushan Date: 19th Feb. 2020
There are quite a few challenges for the trade deal between democratic countries. It is not that complimentaries aren’t available for the trade deals to succeed and yield benefits to nations, developed or developing. The challenges are basically how the larger population visualizes the benefits of such trade deals. Basically, the people in developed world see benefit only when the goods/services that they want to source can be sourced from the cheapest source and in appropriate quantities. Other cnsiderations like the risk to sourcing such goods are often given a go bye. The market access for counter-trade or domestically produced wares is the next issue, but achieving a trade-balance may not be such a big issue as is made out in sundry political circles. Also while the intellectual property theft is made out to be a big issue, it basically tends to affect the businesses/corporate sector, then the voting pubic and therefore becomes an issue only when jobs are being lost in large numbers rather than otherwise. The authoritarian regimes understand and know this behaviour and tend to exploit it for own advantage and the polity in developed democratic regimes seem to be in a bind, for now.
While the business lobbies in developed nations seem to be a strong lobby, however these are guided by consumers even if they face own peril with the loss of intellectual property to certain dominant powers. Therefore compromise in the face of a low cost production base is more of a norm as it yields short term profits and also gains in number of consumers. This however can only be sustained on the back of high speed innovation with continuos obsolence of technologies, but a continued dominence of the firm/s over evolving technology. When this is not sustained there would be challenges to such firms/markets and stability. The developed democratic world (read North America nd Europe) still retains the negotiating power compared to say the democratic developing nations, however they need to look at balancing the trading interests which has been neglected. While they would need to keep the ‘cheap sourcing bases’ intact to satisfy their domestic economic and trading needs, they would need to explore that if dependecy of firms on a single or very few sourcing base is a cause of strength of these firms over a long term.
They should consider if a trade regime whereby trade and sourcing needs of these firms needs to be mandatorily diversified via tariff and non-tariff measures and if this makes them better off. If a product that is not at all manufactured within the country (no running production-lines), then should the entire production be sourced from a single country or should there be a cap of say only upto fifty percent or may be upto a thrid can be sourced from a country with special tariffs kicking-in for the breach of norms. This would force the firms to negotiate harder for protection of their intellectual property and also to find and develop other competitive locations. The nations gains ability to ‘trade’ with these nations competitively and while the population may have a pay a bit higher for the widgets, however the supplies become more sustainable even in the face of threats such as corona virus or natural calamities. The authoritarian nations ability to subsidize their way into world trade and technology plays is cooled down a bit. The challenge however would be domestic polity within America/Europe with the democracy here serving as a means of production and trade concentration to an extent where is an erosion of their own trade competitiveness over a longer term. Such a trade regime would better than National leaderships within these nations signing trade concessions deals with other trade-partners in an adhoc manner, however this may or may not be compliant with multilateral trading regimes, which in any case are becoming defunct. This would also force the developing democratic countries to become more competitive on one hand, it nudges the authoritarian countries to be more accomodative of interests of these firms and reduces penchant to hoarding trade-based negotiating powers. Let the ‘Game’ evolve….