Christian Barry and Sanjay G. Reddy
List of Tables
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. What Is Linkage? Two Propositions
2. Three Types of Linkage, and What Linkage Proponents Must Show
3. What Linkage Opponents Must Show
4. Arguments Against Linkage
5. Ruling Out Linkage Proposals
6. A Constructive Procedure-Identifying Linkage Proposals That Meet the Standard Objections-A Constructive Procedure
7. Sketch of One Posible Linkage System
8. Conclusion
Appendix. Empirical Evidence on the Likely Effects of Improvements in Labor Standards
Commentary by Kyle Bagwell: Economic Theory, WTO Rules, and Linkage
Commentary by Rohini Hensman: Fine-Tuning the Linkage Proposal
Commentary by Robert Goodin: The Ethics of Political Linkage
Commentary by Roberto Mangabeira Unger: The Transformative Imagination and the World Trading System
Reply to Commentators
Notes
Index
Progressive governments in poor countries fear that if they undertake measures to enhance real wages and working conditions, rising labor costs would cause wealthier countries to import from and invest elsewhere. Yet if the world trading system were designed to facilitate or even reward measures to promote labor standards, poor countries could undertake them without fear.
In this book, Christian Barry and Sanjay G. Reddy propose ways in which the international trading system can support poor countries in promoting the well-being of their peoples. Reforms to the trading system can lessen the collective-action problem among poor countries, increasing their freedom to pursue policy that better serves the interests of their people. Incorporating the right kind of linkage between trading opportunities and the promotion of labor standards could empower countries, allowing them greater effective sovereignty and enabling them to improve the circumstances of the less advantaged.
Barry and Reddy demonstrate how linkage can be made acceptable to all players, and they carefully defend these ideas against those who might initially disagree. Their volume is accessible to general readers but draws on sophisticated economic and philosophical arguments and includes responses from leading labor activists, economists, and philosophers, including Kyle Bagwell, Robert Goodin, Rohini Hensman, and Roberto Mangabeira Unger.