波音游戏-波音娱乐城赌球打不开

Research

Pandemic and the Future of Trade

The outbreak of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has created a global, disruptive, long-lasting, and unprecedented public health crisis. However, the impact of the pandemic has moved beyond health and generated economic uncertainty and political instability. Specifically, many observers expressed concern that the pandemic will stir up protectionist sentiments in many countries and affect the public’s trade preferences worldwide. Public trade preferences are about the public’s preferences for the economic openness of a country and whether the country should be expansive on doing more trades and businesses with other countries. Yet, the impact of the pandemic on public trade preferences is unexplored and thus requires systematic empirical study to fill the gap.

Dr Nick OR and Dr Edmund CHENG of CityU’s Department of Public Policy examined the pandemic impact on international trade in their recent article by assessing public attitudes toward trade in Asia during the early outbreak of the pandemic. They conducted original cross-national surveys in six key and highly integrated economies in Asia – Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, and Thailand – in May 2020. The study found that most people support establishing closer trade relationships with foreign countries. Surprisingly, most people prefer to buy more domestic products than foreign products. The incongruent view is observed in all six economies, but what explains this?

The study analysed the influences of pandemic-related risk perceptions, anxiety, ethnocentrism (that is, how racial or ethnic in-group evaluate out-group), and socio-economic status to provide a more nuanced understanding of the incongruent view.

The study shows that pandemic-related risk perceptions are the key psychological drivers for the incongruent opinions on those two trade preferences. It found that the cognitive evaluation of the pandemic – when the pandemic ends – stimulated more protectionist attitudes in support of trade but has no effect on foreign product preference. The affective appraisal process – one’s worries on job and health – gives an even more pronounced difference. A higher level of affective risk perception stimulated more support for trade but attenuated the preference for buying foreign products. Anxiety, however, does not contribute to the incongruence.

Overall, the study offered a nuanced framework to understand the relationship between psychological factors and public trade preferences. The framework improves the understanding of how the current pandemic affects the future of international trade and contributes to the ongoing and burgeoning research in international political economy and economic globalisation.


Publication and achievements

Or, N. H. K., Cheng, E. W., Yue, R. P. H., & Yuen, S. W. H. (2021). Risk perceptions, anxiety and the future of international trade: a cross-national study of public trade preferences in Asia under COVID-19. Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and Parties, 31(Supplement 1), 26–40. DOI: 10.1080/17457289.2021.1924732

百家乐官网能赚大钱吗| 澳门百家乐官网介绍| 德州扑克比大小| 打百家乐庄闲的技巧| 圣淘沙百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则 | 视频百家乐破解| 百家乐庄闲和的倍数| 皇冠网百家乐赢钱| 扑克百家乐官网麻将筹码防伪| 买百家乐官网程序| 百家乐官网庄闲的比例| 百家乐官网998| 百家乐官网打水论坛| 现金百家乐官网赢钱| 百家乐官网电脑游戏高手| 百家乐视频游戏视频| 博彩百家乐官网字谜总汇| 合乐8百家乐官网娱乐城| 大发888游戏大厅下载| 大发888老虎机苹果版| 大发888老虎机技巧| 大发888娱乐城账号| 老牌全讯网| 百家乐官网是咋玩法| 金域百家乐官网娱乐城| k7娱乐城| 百家乐官网辅助工具| 百家乐官网娱乐用品| 百家乐官网大眼仔用法| 赌场百家乐官网试玩| 百家乐官网技巧网址| 百家乐网投注| 大发888游戏是真的吗| 百家乐怎样赢| 平台百家乐官网的区别| 百家乐网上娱乐场开户注册 | 博彩网百家乐全讯网| 百家乐真人百家乐皇冠| 大发888娱乐场下载ypu rd| 百家乐官网免费是玩| 免费玩百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则 |