Keith Wheeles

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The failure of agreements with Japan to put a significant dent in its large trade surplus should not have been unexpected: opening up particular markets on a piecemeal basis might help some exporters sell more in Japan, but the bilateral trade deficit did not exist because Japan imported “too little” in protected sectors. Rather, it existed because Japan was experiencing large capital outflows, a matter entirely outside the scope of trade negotiations.
Clashing Over Commerce: A History of US Trade Policy (Markets and Governments in Economic History)
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