Tradeoffs in Trade

Tradeoffs in trade: How the public perceives environmental, human rights, and labor standards in international trade agreements

Since the 1990s, governments have increasingly embedded “non-trade” provisions—such as environmental, human rights, and labor standards—into free trade agreements (FTAs). Today, at least one in three FTAs includes such obligations. These provisions are controversial. Advocates argue that they prevent social dumping and/or uphold moral imperatives, while critics claim they squander bargaining leverage and undermine comparative advantage. 

This paper examines public perceptions of these provisions through survey experiments in Canada and the UK, two countries currently considering FTAs with developing economies. Using conjoint analysis, Jana will assess preferences for non-trade provisions alongside core FTA features. Overall, the results are remarkably similar across the two countries. In both countries, respondents prefer moderate or considerable standards to none, even when these come at a cost to the initiating government. Equality principles are important, with respondents preferring identical investment in “non-trade” provisions even if they could have the partner country invest more. Partisanship strongly shapes these preferences, with potentially important implications for trade negotiations and democratic politics in both countries.

Jana von Stein is an Associate Professor in the School of Politics and International Relations. Her research focuses on international law, human rights, environmental cooperation, and public opinion. She has published in venues such as International Organization, the Journal of Conflict Resolution, the British Journal of Political Science, and the American Political Science Review.
 

This event was originally published on the School of Politics & International Relations website.

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RSSS Room 3.72 or Online via Zoom

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