Choosing Openness: A Lowy Institute Paper: Penguin Special
By (Author) Andrew Leigh
Random House Australia
Random House Australia
2nd October 2017
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Paperback
192
Width 111mm, Height 181mm
Across the developed world, global engagement has become a major political fault line. Populists say that we should hunker down in the face of difference, that trade is a zero-sum game, and that foreign investment will cost us in the long run. They say openness is the cause of the growing income gap. The siren song of populism, global uncertainty and rising inequality presents real challenges to globalists. Choosing Openness argues that Australia's past prosperity has flowed from our willingness to build bridges to the world, not walls against it. Maintaining our engagement with the world demands stronger advocacy for trade, investment and immigration. It requires smarter policies to ensure that we maximise the spoils of globalisation and share them fairly across the community. From 1914 to 1945, the world turned inwards, as fear shut down flows of people and goods across national borders. A century later, can we make a better choice
Andrew Leigh is a Member of the Australian House of Representatives, and author of several books, including Choosing Openness, Randomistas- How Radical Researchers Are Changing Our World and Innovation + Equality- How to Create a Future That Is More "Star Trek" Than "Terminator" (with Joshua Gans).