Why TTIP is an unprecedented geopolitical game-changer, but not a Polanyian moment

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Why TTIP is an unprecedented geopolitical game-changer, but not a Polanyian moment
Abstract
This contribution argues that the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) is unprecedented, not because it constitutes a Polanyian moment, but rather because it offers an alternative to multilateralism through the World Trade Organization (WTO). Never before has bilateralism offered such a 'best alternative to no agreement' (BATNA) to members of the core decision-making body of the WTO negotiating arm, making TTIP an unprecedented geopolitical game-changer. The anti-TTIP campaign, however, has not been driven by concerns with either geopolitics or trade liberalization, but rather fears about the European Union's (EU's) bargaining power. By strategically focusing on the potential impact on public policy and safety standards, normative arguments promulgated by opponents reflect concerns with perceived threats to the status quo and a willingness to preserve the same. The United States is presented (implicitly) as more powerful than the EU, and therefore perceived as able to impose its preferences, which are considered too neoliberal.
Publication
Journal of European Public Policy
Volume
24
Issue
10
Pages
1522-1533
Date
October 2017
Journal Abbr
Journal of European Public Policy
Language
English
ISSN
13501763
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Eliasson, Leif Johan, and Patricia García-Duran. 2017. “Why TTIP Is an Unprecedented Geopolitical Game-Changer, but Not a Polanyian Moment.” Journal of European Public Policy 24 (10): 1522–33. DOI: 10.1080/13501763.2016.1254275.
Publication year
Keywords
  • bilateralism
  • European Union
  • free trade
  • geopolitics
  • trade
  • Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)
  • TTIP
  • World Trade Organization (WTO)

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