This adds up to what the Japanese and others call managed trade, as opposed to free trade.
But he quoted Ronald Reagan, who called free trade "a forward strategy for freedom."
He called free trade a "moral imperative" essential to economic and political progress.
America has a bipartisan policy toward democracy and human rights in China, and it is called trade.
It's called trade, and it leads to enormous increases in living standards.
In terms of specificity, it goes beyond managed trade to what might be called micro-managed trade.
Your, what do you call them, rough trade.
The Guardian has an extensive advocacy for what it calls fair trade.
What the report calls fair international trade does not exist.
My second question refers to another complex matter, namely to what we call electronic trade.