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Abstract
International trade is the purchase and sale of goods by companies
in different countries. Consumer goods, raw materials, food, agricultural
products, pharmaceutical products, medical equipment, iron and steel, plastics,
chemicals, clothes, energy, vehicles, electrical and electronic equipment,
nuclear reactors, aircrafts, machinery, wind turbines, rare earth minerals,
weapons, military materials, all are bought and sold in the international
marketplace. Ethics has become a big issue in the last decades, due to
globalization, where they try to harmonize hundreds of different cultures,
customs, traditions, and values to a uniform one, but it is impossible and
unachievable. International trade allows countries to expand their markets and
access goods and services by importing them, otherwise it may not be available
domestically; but there are many cases which cause serious problems with
domestic production. As a result of international trade (exports and imports),
the markets become more competitive, however ethical and fair trade is
necessary for countries to maximize the wellbeing of their citizens, given
their income constraints. International fair-trade policies and trade
restrictions are the set of agreements, regulations, and practices by a
government that affect trade with foreign countries, which is a combination of
standards, laws, and practices that influence imports and exports. Trade
policies can include regulations, devaluation of currencies, dumping, tariffs,
and quotas, subsidies, with which they want to restrict trade and set policies
that protect local industries from foreign competition. Fair and ethical trade
policies must have a number of benefits, including economic growth, employment,
attracting domestic firms that operate abroad to produce locally more
efficiently at lower costs of production, and to lead countries to autarky,
prosperity, and to maximize their social welfare. These ethical and fair-trade
policies are effective if the price elasticities of demand for imports and
supply of exports are high (elastic). The empirical results show that most of
these elasticities are small (inelastic).
JEL classification numbers: D6, F10, F13, F42, I38, J38, L40, C52.
Keywords: Ethics
and Economic Welfare, International Trade, Commercial policy: Protection,
Promotion, Trade Negotiations, International Policy Coordination, Provision and
Effects of Welfare Program, Labor: Public Policy, Antitrust Policy, Model
Evaluation and Testing.