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<DIV>The weasel sounds a little worried...</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV><B>Tuesday November 14 10:06 AM ET</B><BR><FONT size=5><B>Greenspan Speaks
for Free Trade</B></FONT> </DIV>
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<P><FONT size=-1><I>By MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP Economics Writer </I></FONT>
<P>WASHINGTON (AP) - Anti-globalization protesters cannot be allowed to roll
back the important gains to the world economy growing out of increasing economic
links among nations, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said Tuesday.
<P>Greenspan said spreading protests that began at the World Trade Organization
meetings in Seattle last December reflect demonstrators' ``fear that they would
lose local political control of their destinies.''
<P>Greenspan's concerns about threats to the global trading system were
contained in a speech prepared for delivery at a monetary conference sponsored
by Mexico's central bank in Mexico City. They echoed a number of his past
comments in support of free trade.
<P>``The progress in lowering trade barriers since World War II marks the
triumph of putting an important idea into practice - that international trade
benefits all nations,'' Greenspan said. ``Indeed, in every nation, those
benefits are shared by people spread across quite different income brackets.''
<P>Greenspan cautioned against complacency in dealing with the issues raised by
the protesters, who after Seattle clogged streets in Washington in April and
hurled cobblestones at police lines during the annual meetings of the
International Monetary Fund in Prague in September.
<P>Greenspan said that any weakening from the strong economic growth of recent
years ``runs the risk of reviving mistrust of market-oriented systems, even
among conventional policy-makers. ... Clearly, the risk is that support for
restrictions on trade is not dead, only quiescent.''
<P>Greenspan said the progress made since World War II in lowering trade
barriers between nations really represented an effort by countries to get back
to the open borders that had existed at the beginning of the 20th century.
<P>He said it had taken a half-century to roll back those barriers that were
erected after World War I as country after country responded to economic
downturns by erecting protectionist barriers that made economic conditions
worse.
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<P>On the Net:
<P>Federal Reserve: <A
href="http://www.federalreserve.gov/">http://www.federalreserve.gov</A> <!-- TextEnd --><!-- TL --></P></BODY></HTML>