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

百家乐官网辅助分析软件| 万达百家乐官网娱乐城| 百家乐的巧门| 百家乐官网缆法排行榜| 百家乐网页游戏| 大发888苹果手机下载| 财神百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则| 百家乐官网怎样做弊| 类乌齐县| 大发888真人娱乐场游戏平台 | 乐百家乐官网彩娱乐城| 威尼斯人娱乐开户送18| 网上百家乐官网游戏玩法| 百家乐官网在线娱乐网| 百家乐官网马渚| 专业百家乐官网筹码| 百家乐官网开户送18元| 网上百家乐官网哪里开户| 网上百家乐官网哪里开户| 瑞金市| 祥云县| 邹平县| 凯旋门百家乐官网娱乐城| 德州扑克 玩法| 太阳城娱乐城去大丰收娱乐| 扶风县| 百家乐官网园sun811 | 大发888官方pt老虎机| 大发888亚洲城| 博狗备用网址| 百家乐官网怎样概率大| MG百家乐官网大转轮| 赌百家乐的体会| 现金百家乐技巧| 百家乐官网娱乐分析软件v| 百家乐桌子轮盘| 百家乐视频游戏世界| 线上百家乐信誉| 赌百家乐官网容易的原| 博士百家乐现金网| 太阳城线上娱乐城|