The
paper argues that trade, except when it
gives rise to a net export surplus, and
not even necessarily then, can, and usually
does, have a retrogressive impact on an
economy. In this context, a simple single-period
model with the assumption of balanced
external trade is used in the first instance
to establish the proposition that if an
economy has a comparative advantage in
the bottleneck sector in the pre-trade
situation, it is likely to experience
retrogression in the non-bottleneck sector
and hence in a macroeconomic sense through
exposure to international trade. This
result is than shown to be likely even
for a world where the exporting sector
has demand-constrained output. It is then
argued that this has serious implications
in that trade disarticulates economies,
delinking sectors from one another and
gives rise either to de-industrilization
as in the colonial period, or to "de-agriculturalization"
as in case of the Indian economy in the
current context leaving behind a vast
pauperized mass of agricultural peasantry,
which constitutes a potentially highly
explosive, socially destabilizing force.
October 29, 2006.
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