A need for education and reconciliation.

AuthorKelly, Jr., William B.
PositionTrade and the Environment

MY professional career has involved trade policy and trade negotiations at the level of an international secretariat (GATT), the U.S. Government (USTR), and teaching and research at various universities. Nevertheless, I regard myself as an environmentalist. In fact, I see no necessary conflict between freer international trade and the achievement of environmental goals. On the contrary they can be mutually beneficial. Often cited in this connection is the liberalization of restrictions on oil imports and the reduced air and water pollution soil erosion, and wildlife devastation caused by wood burned as fuel in some developing countries. There are others.

Much useful considerations of this subject has been poisoned by prejudices, suspicions, and misinformation. (Full-page newspaper advertisements, plagued, inter alia, with factual errors, have denounced the GATT.) This hostile atmosphere is not surprising given the vacuums in which trade-policy and environmental advocates have worked in the past. This must change. Education is the answer. The sponsors of this symposium are to be congratulated.

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