Why Politicians Lie About Trade
Dmitry Grozoubinski
- 23 mei 2024
- 9781914487118
Samenvatting:
A former trade negotiator reveals how the $32-trillion-a-year world of international trade really works – the roadblock tariffs, the hard-won deals and the damaging disputes.
Why Politicians Lie About Trade reveals how international trade really works, the choices facing the political leaders that govern it, and how to detect when they’re lying about what those choices mean for you.
With clear writing, a former trade negotiator foregoes jargon and acronyms to take readers on an often humorous tour of the agreements, tariffs, and procedures driving a $32 trillion-a-year endeavour.
Dmitry Grozoubinski reveals the underlying political, strategic and economic forces that shape trade’s impact on such diverse and important topics as national security, jobs, gender, and climate change.
Similar to eye-opening bestsellers How to Lie With Statistics and Freakonomics, Why Politicians Lie About Trade lights up an opaque system that, behind-the-scenes, holds sway over much of our lives.
About the Author
Dmitry Grozoubinski is a negotiations and trade policy expert known for his ability to explain the complexities of trade and economics.
A former Australian trade negotiator and current Executive Director of the Geneva Trade Platform in Switzerland, he has trained government negotiators, civil servants and corporate of cers all over the world in how trade policy works, how trade deals are negotiated, and how those on the outside can shape their outcomes.
His @DmitryOpines account on Twitter just may be the most followed of any trade expert in the world.
FT Recommended Book on the Global Trade War 'It succeeds both in explaining how global trade works and how it affects things many voters actually care about' – Financial Times
Why Politicians Lie About Trade – and What You Need to Know About It is your clear, witty crash‑course in how global trade really works – and how leaders weaponise it to win votes, wage culture wars and spin economic fairy tales.
Written by former trade negotiator Dmitry Grozoubinski, this smart, highly readable book explains trade policy, not trade economics – no graphs, no jargon, just sharp stories, plain English and a built‑in “bullshit detector” for every grand promise about tariffs, trade deals and jobs.
What this book shows you Across two parts – How Trade Works and Trade and the Things You Actually Care About – you’ll discover:
- How modern trade policy works in practice – from goods trade and services trade to customs unions, single markets, free trade agreements (FTAs), trade facilitation and the World Trade Organization (WTO).
- Why protectionism is so tempting – and how tariffs, quotas, sanctions, trade embargoes and “keeping out foreign junk” are sold as painless fixes, even when they quietly destroy jobs, growth and innovation.
- What “trading on WTO terms” really means – and why it’s usually code for accepting the bare‑minimum market access on the same terms as the country your partners trust least.
- How trade agreements are really negotiated – secrecy, leaks, horse‑trading, rules of origin, regulatory standards, dispute settlement and why no deal is ever truly “win‑win for everyone”.
- Trade and jobs – how trade policy is endlessly blamed or praised for employment figures, how politicians on all sides massage the numbers, and why press releases about “hundreds of thousands of jobs created” should make you sceptical.
- Trade and national security, climate change and peace – from sanctions and export controls to green trade rules, economic interdependence and “trade for peace”.
Along the way, Grozoubinski dissects Trump, Brexit, trade wars, culture‑war soundbites, populist protectionism and media myths that turn complex tradeoffs into easy slogans.
Why Politicians Lie About Trade is designed for non‑specialists who want to understand:
- International trade, trade policy and globalisation/globalization without a degree in economics.
- How tariffs, trade deals, customs unions, single markets, the WTO and trade wars actually affect jobs, prices, supply chains, national security and climate policy.
- How to spot when politicians, lobbyists or commentators are lying or oversimplifying about trade, free trade agreements, “sovereignty” and “cutting red tape at the border”.
It’s ideal for readers of politics, current affairs, public policy, economics, international relations and global trade, and for anyone trying to make sense of debates on Brexit, US–China rivalry, trade sanctions, export controls, reshoring, de‑risking and industrial strategy.
If you’re tired of being dazzled by big numbers, empty promises and scary headlines about tariffs, trade wars and globalisation, this book hands you the tools to push back – calmly, confidently and with the facts on your side.
Learn how global trade really works – before the next “world‑changing” trade deal hits the headlines.
Reviews 'For some time, there has been a clear gap in the market for a guide to trade policy to help those with an interest to gain a better understanding of this important field and enable them to engage more actively in trade policy debates. Dmitry Grozoubinski’s Why Politicians Lie About Trade fits the bill admirably.' Justin Brown, the Lowy Institute
'Despite being an entertaining read, this book is no joke. Structured in two parts, it succeeds both in explaining how global trade works and in illustrating how the rather rarefied topic of international trade policy affects things many voters actually care about: jobs, national security, climate change, and so on.' Felix Martin, Financial Times
'You will come out of it far more knowledgeable than you went in, and shielded from some of the more egregious deceit politicians want to inflict on you. You'll also laugh out loud.' Ian Dunt, author of How Westminster Works
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Written by a former trade negotiator who has trained many British diplomats, this book is authoritative, yet – and here’s the strange part – actually fun to read. Dmitry Grozoubinski has a rare knack for explaining complex information in an accessible and light-hearted way.' Richard Baldwin, Professor of International Economics
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Writing a 300-page book on international trade policy issues in a way that is not only accessible but also entertaining would be a serious challenge for most authors. Dmitry Grozoubinski’s new book rises to that challenge.' Chris Horseman, Bordelex
'Enraging & enlightening in equal measure. And the measure is absolutely enormous.' James O'Brien, author of How They Broke Britain
Recommended by The Rest is Politics podcast