Abstract

The politicisation of recent European Union (EU) trade negotiations such as the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership or the Comprehensive and Economic Trade Agreement suggests that the more negotiations focus on deep integration issues, the higher the potential for polarization of values and interests. Yet, as we argue, this pattern does not necessarily hold true in EU trade negotiations with the developing world. In the case of the Economic Partnership Agreements with West Africa and the Caribbean region, the pattern of politicisation was ‘reversed’: Politicisation remained low in the Caribbean region, despite the inclusion of deep integration issues. To the contrary, negotiations became highly politicised in West Africa, where negotiations focussed on the traditional realm of trade in goods. Combining the insights from the literature on the role of non-state actors (NSAs) in trade policy-making in developing countries and on politicisation, we show that limited pre-existing mobilisation resources of NSAs, and few opportunities to engage with the political level of negotiations, imply that those affected by the inclusion of deep integration issues hardly mobilise. We also find that lack of technical expertise and the significance of traditional trade areas pre-empts NSAs from engaging in emotive framing on deep integration issues. This helps us to unpack the different patterns of politicisation across both regions: Politicisation in West Africa was facilitated by civil society actors who—in contrast to the Caribbean region—could draw on pre-existing networks, expertise, and direct access to the regional negotiation level.

Highlights

  • In the recent decade, we have witnessed increasing politicization of trade policy on a global scale

  • Many authors that assess politicization of recent European Union (EU) trade negotiations such as Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) or Comprehensive and Economic Trade Agreement (CETA), have come to the conclusion that the more negotiations focus on deep integration issues, the higher the potential for politicization

  • The uncertainties associated with complex behind-the-border regulatory reforms open up opportunities for strategic framings that resonate widely. We find that this assumed link between deep integration in Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) and politicization does not necessarily hold true in developing partner countries of the EU

Read more

Summary

Introduction

We have witnessed increasing politicization of trade policy on a global scale. Our findings question the presumed link between politicization of EU trade policies and the greater depth of regulatory commitments that the EU’s FTAs recently included (De Bièvre & Poletti, 2020, see therein Young & Peterson, 2006; Eliasson & García-Duran, 2017; Laursen & Roederer-Rynning, 2017; Young, 2017) This is in line with existing research that emphasises the importance of intermediary variables that may undermine politicization. Our findings indicate more generally that if the EU negotiates deep integration issues with developing country partners, the level of awareness among NSAs will vary greatly and will oftentimes be low This means, firstly, that support or opposition to including deep integration issues may primarily depend on the political preferences of state representatives, rather than the positions of NSAs. Secondly, if NSAs engage in politicization, they are less likely to focus the limited resources they have on complex deep integration issues, even if they are knowledgeable about them. We rely on press releases, publications, and qualitative data, which we complement with evidence from 30 interviews conducted between 2008 and 2012 with policy-makers, negotiators, and NSAs from both regions, as well as with EU officials involved in EPA negotiations

The Politicization of Trade Policies
Actor Expansion I
Actor Expansion II
Issue Salience
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call