Economic Arguments in the Czech Discourse about Agricultural Trade Policy
Abstract
The aim of this article is to contribute to the discussion of the political economy of trade policy. We also focus on the issue of foreign agricultural trade policy in the contemporary Czech Republic. We assume that in the Czech discourse the position of economic nationalism and mercantilism is clearly dominant. We would like to demonstrate this through a content analysis of several major Czech journals. We also believe that the arguments of those who request further regulation of agricultural trade are not much different from those articulated in the discussion between the free trade stance and the mercantilist stance. Even though the prevailing arguments of classical economists are still not entirely accepted in the Czech Republic (certainly not in its economic policy), the strong mercantilist position in favor of the primary sector in the country, which has a strong comparative advantage in industrial production, is nevertheless an interesting object of research interest.
Keywords
history of economic thought, mercantilism, classical economics, international economics, trade policy, Czech agricultural policy
Author Biography
Oldřich Krpec
Born in 1978, he works as an assistant professor at the Department of International Relations and European Studies at the Faculty of Social Studies at Masaryk University. His academic focus lies in the international political economy of trade and development, as well as in the mediation of interests in contemporary democracies.
Vladan Hodulák
Born in 1981, he works as a research fellow at the Department of International Relations and European Studies at the Faculty of Social Studies at Masaryk University in Brno, where he completed his postgraduate studies in 2012. His academic focus is on international political economy, particularly the role of money in the international arena. His interests also include international relations theory, within which he explores the potential of the evolutionary paradigm for understanding international relations.