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SPEECH BY THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR TRADE TO THE HONG KONG GENERAL CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, MONDAY 28 JANUARY 1980
Some-one asked me the other day whether the new Conservative! Government had a trade policy. I thought it was a very good question. I think the questioner was not really enquiring whether we have a policy towards say export credit, the GATT, - UNCTAD or the import of ladies' Footwear from Brazil; he was simply noting the absence of a published (theoretical) framework for trade policy, since the Conservatives took possession of the And indeed it would glasshouse at Number 1 Victoria Street.
be correct to say that there has been a lack of weighty academic pronouncements by the new Government on trade policy of the kind so admirably orchestrated by my predecessor, Mr Edmund Dell.
Of
2 But I must tell you that this does not embarrass me. course it would be nice to fit each aspect of trade activity into a neat, consistent, intellectually respectable pattern which excited undergraduates and leader writers in the press but, alas, the only consistent, coherent, and certain thing I therefore see about world trade is its unpredictability.
nothing wrong in a relatively pragmatic approach to trade problems since the imposition of a preconceived doctrine on a constantly moving, highly politicised series of world economic events would be more likely to lead to the wrong actions rather
than the right ones.
3
Fortunately unlike internal economic policy, trade policy has to a considerable extent been a bipartisan matter in the UK since the War. There was much that I approved at the time in the Labour Administration's approach, notably their support for GATT MINS and the maintenance of the open trading system, and Fr Dell's nestebance to pressure from within his own panks as well as outside - for a aring inte protectionism.
Nevertheles
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