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Go Slow in Trade With Moscow
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14409 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
6 / 1988 |
2,488 Words |
| Author
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Henry R. Nau Henry R. Nau is professor and associate dean at the School of
International Affairs of George Washington University. He
served from 1981-83 as a senior staff member of the National
Security Council responsible for international economic
issues. |
In the American lexicon, trade has often been equated with rapprochement and peace, never more so than in the case of East-West trade. Today, once again, expectations are rising that the United States, through its trade policies, can play a significant role in economic and political liberalization in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union.
The Soviet Union is doing nothing to discourage these expectations. Mikhail Gorbachev, general secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, met with American industrialists during the Washington summit in December 1987 and again in April 1988 to promote the idea of joint ventures and other business arrangements between U.S. and Soviet firms. He called for "a new system of coordinates in the economic relationship between our society and ideologically different countries."
Making such arrangements more attractive this time around are reforms in the Soviet Union meant to decentralize management and control of foreign trade, decontrol prices, and improve worker incentives. In addition, the Soviet Union has expressed an interest in joining the principal international economic institutions, such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.
By any realistic measure, the obstacles to East-West trade are formidable. The reforms in the Soviet Union are in their early stages and remain uncertain. Bureaucratic resistance is evident; labor unrest is possible, especially in Eastern Europe. The Soviet capacity to export and pay for significant new industrial imports from the West is constrained by a weak dollar and low oil and gold prices. Soviet borrowing has already increased substantially, raising
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