The power to deal : the domestic origins of the shift in Australia's trade policy in the 1990s and early 2000s
Abstract
In mid-1997 the Cabinet of the Howard government decided to approve the
negotiation of explicitly preferential trade agreements, overturning a
political consensus that had developed over the preceding five decades that
trade policy should be non·discriminatory. The move indicated a
fundamental shift in the intent of trade policy, from being primarily a tool
for productivity-enhancing domestic economic reform to become much more
closely integrated with the government's domestic and international
political aims.
The purpose of this thesis is to assess how and why this polit,-y shift, with its
far-reaching implications for economic development, occurred. In seeking to
develop an account of the Howard government's decision to negotiate
preferential trade agreements, two propositions regarding state behaviour
and trade policy formation are examined. The first, which was espoused by
the Howard government itself, is that the decision to negotiate preferential
trade agreements was a pragmatic response to a changing international
policy environment characterized by faltering progress toward multilateral
trade liberalization and the proliferation of preferential trade agreements.
The second proposition, which owes much to work in the field of political
economy, is that trade policy is driven and shaped by the demands of
politically influential material-based societal interests.
In examining these propositions this study concludes that the international
environment is a necessary, but not in itself a sufficient, factor in explaining
the policy shift. Similarly, although organized economic interests were
important in helping implement the government's decision to negotiate
preferential trade agreements, they did not drive it.
Instead, the evidence gathered indicates that the Howard government's
decision to negotiate preferential trade agreements, though influenced by
developments in international trade policy and supported by some private interests, was driven by partisan political considerations. The findings of
this study indicate that Prime Minister John Howard and senior colleagues
viewed trade policy primarily as an instrument to help advance geopolitical
goals and domestic political and electoral ascendancy rather than as a
means to drive economic development and reform, and used it to that end.
In executing this strategy Howard and his advisers were aided by a political
institutional architecture in which an electorally-successful prime minister
could wield substantial trade policymaking authority - an arrangement that
fostered policy entrepreneurship of the kind that led to the negotiation of
the Australia-United States Free Trade Agreement.
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