Stormy Days on an Open Field: Asymmetries in the Global Economy
- Working Paper 81
Publication Info
Publication Type
Download
Initiative
Research Topics
CGD Expert
Opinions
- What to Read: Inequality and Development in a Globalizing World (Syllabus)
- The World is not Flat: Inequality and Injustice in our Global Economy
Articles
Rights and Permissions
We welcome the use of CGD work-just let us know in advance! For contact information see our Rights & Permissions page. CGD rights and permissions are managed under the terms of the Creative Commons license below.
Nancy Birdsall
02/16/2006
Does openness in trade and the free flow of capital promote growth for the poor? In this Working Paper, Nancy Birdsall discusses the inherent asymmetries in globalization, and the implications those inequalities have for poverty reduction. She suggests that global trading rules work less well for the people and households within poor countries. While modern capitalist and rich societies have mechanisms to manage their markets so that free trade and commerce more equally benefit all, poor countries cannot benefit from effective social contracts, progressive tax systems, and laws and regulations to manage asymmetries and market failures. This is also true at the global level, where poor countries are especially susceptible to the risks of free trade, and the vagaries of volatile capital flows.
This paper is updated from a paper presented at the 2002 G-20 Workshop on Globalization, Living Standards, and Inequality in Sydney, Australia. It is also forthcoming in a Jubilee Conference Volume of the World Institute for Development Economics Research.
Related CGD Publications
For more papers on the opportunities and challenges posed by free trade and open capital markets, see:



