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Wednesday, July 11, 2007
Austin Bay :: Townhall.com Columnist
When Cheap Products Kill: Emerging Global Trade Regulations
by Austin Bay
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China's global customers are learning cheap products can be quite expensive --and deadly.

Shoddy workmanship may be a judgment call, but lethality is not. In Panama, cheap exacted the highest price: Over 100 Panamanians died after swallowing a Chinese-made cough syrup.

The list goes on. In March, pet food made with Chinese-manufactured ingredients killed or sickened several thousand American pets when a Chinese exporter "bulked" food ingredient shipments by adding melamine, a byproduct of plastic. Tainted Chinese-made toothpaste turned up in Central America, the United States and Canada. Canadian authorities later identified 24 different toothpastes (all from China) containing hazardous material. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration recently restricted the sale of Chinese seafood products after discovering high levels of carcinogens and antibiotic drugs in recent shipments. A recall of Chinese-made tires is also underway.

Belatedly, U.S. regulators have begun removing other Chinese-made processed foods, manufactured goods and personal products for American shelves.

We'll return to exports in a moment -- but China's risky products also plague its own domestic market. China's nascent regulatory agency, the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine, examined domestically sold Chinese agricultural products and manufactured goods and estimated almost 20 percent of the products and food sold to its own citizens were "substandard or tainted."

China depends on exports, and the United States is China's chief export customer. Exports are key to China's entire modernization strategy. Its lethal products are killing its customers and, in doing so, seriously damaging its own economic engine.

Which is why China will eventually adopt U.S. and European Union regulatory standards, to everyone's benefit.

At least, that's the argument made in a fascinating new book, "All Politics Is Global," by Daniel Drezner and published by Princeton University Press. Drezner teaches international politics at Tufts University's Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.

This is a detailed, scholarly book that explicates the arcane aspects of regulatory law and regulatory agreements. It won't crack the popular market. However, it will percolate and influence because it also explains quite well the "big picture" elements of global trade and global regulation. Continued...

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About The Author

Austin Bay Austin Bay is author of three novels. His third novel, The Wrong Side of Brightness, was published by Putnam/Jove in June 2003. He has also co-authored four non-fiction books, to include A Quick and Dirty Guide to War: Third Edition (with James Dunnigan, Morrow, 1996).
 
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Paranoid Article
If you change the word "China" in this article to "America," it would fit in perfectly with the relentless whining committed by European writers in the 1880s and 1890s. A few tainted products and a few deaths are a small price to pay for freer trade, which has saved hundreds of thousands, if not millions of lives around the world, by lifting them out of poverty.

Conservatives are starting to sound more and more like pansy-poet socialists.

Hound Dog
My sympathies for your arthritis. Fortunately that is not (yet anyway) among our problems. Not much sympathy, though, for Big Pharma (which BTW my husband worked for before he went with FDA). For thirty years he helped write those regs you hate. So we are on different sides of this gunfight, Hound Dog, but I respect you anyway, and many thanks for the thoughtful responses.
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