trade
Supposedly, revised NAFTA gives labor groups some power to enforce regulations. I am extremely skeptical this will happen in reality. We are all about to find out. The A.F.L.-C.I.O. and.
Source: The White House from Washington, DC [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons At least, that's the conclusion of an interesting piece in Bloomberg News. The deficit did fall year-on-year in.
I suppose this is inevitable in a campaign. As inevitable as showing a bunch of ads of farms, as if any appreciable percentage of Americans are farmers anymore. But I.
Abraham Newman and I have a new article in Foreign Policy on progressive policy and the use of American market power. We begin by discussing China's ham-handed response to Houston.
If Pompeo sounds like he's trying to gaslight the world, it's probably because he.
I have a new essay up in the Boston Review arguing that the left needs to take the policymaking of global trade regimes seriously, offering real alternatives to the corporate-political.

I want to thank Dan for his discussion of progressives and trade from a few days ago. I would have liked to respond sooner but I just got back from.
Five years after Rana Plaza, basically nothing has changed for south and southeast Asian sweatshop workers. American consumers effectively don't care. The left doesn't actually take trade policy seriously except.