Within today’s global economy countries now trade more
intensively and frequently than in the past. Trade has become an
increasingly important global economic activity, with annual trade
volumes increasing sixteen fold over the last fifty years and the ratio
of world exports to Gross Domestic Product (GDP) now approaching twenty
percent. With this recent acceleration of global trade, countries
throughout the world have benefited from more investment, industrial
development, and employment and income growth. Other positive effects
include increased mobility of capital, increased ease of movement of
goods and services (and information) across national borders as well as
the diffusion of global norms and values, the spread of democracy and
international environmental and human rights agreements. Critics of
trade liberalisation argue that these much-acclaimed advantages of trade
liberalisation (and globalisation) often underrate the impact of
globalisation on widening the economic gap between the North and the
South. Over the years, attention has been given to the advantages of
trade liberalisation and globalisation to the detriment of the
disadvantages. The major disadvantage that is always swept under the rug
is the environmental problem. Recently, however, there has been an
increasing concern over the potential negative impacts of trade
liberalisation, particularly on the environmental and natural resources
of developing countries.
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