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AfDのマニフェストを見る限りでは、計画経済を批判し、自由で開かれた市場経済・国際貿易による繁栄を目指すとする
ただ弱者配慮はカトリック社会教説(アウグスティヌス)あたりを参考にしており、それがベーシック・インカムあたりつながっている

MANIFESTO FOR GERMANY 2017(Afd)

10.2 Social Market Economy instead of
State-Directed Economy
Based upon our ideas on the role of the state, we are calling for a business and economic ethos along the lines of the
social market economy developed by Walter Eucken, Alfred Müller-Armack and Wilhelm Röpke, and implemented by
Ludwig Erhard. Key principles are ownership, personal responsibility and free pricing. Protection of private ownership
is an indispensable part of it, as are open markets, freedom of contract and free competition with appropriate
competition policy and antitrust control.

Any form of state-directed economy will sooner or later end in misallocation and corruption. And so, we share the
opinion of the founders of the social market economy that the economy is always a means to an end, never an end in
itself. In our view, the biggest burdens currently imposed on the proper functioning of the social market economy
are the unprecedented Euro bailout policy pursued by countries within the Euro zone, and the manipulation of
the monetary policy by the European Central Bank. Here, fundamental market mechanisms such as the relationship
between savings and investment are being undermined, liability principles are violated, and the relationship between
creditors and debtors is seriously impaired.

10.4 Maintain High Standards in Trade Agreements
International trade is the foundation of our prosperity and peaceful coexistence. We regard economic sanctions as
fundamentally wrong. We want to lower trade barriers in Europe and across the world. Foreign trade and economic
initiatives of overriding importance must take account of German sovereignty. Therefore, the AfD is in favour of international
trade agreements which respect the principle of equal treatment and German industrial, social and environmental
standards. Temporary exemptions are appropriate only for those economies that have not yet moved beyond the
level of developing countries. Negotiations of a multilateral nature and within intergovernmental organisations
must be conducted transparently, and all treaties are to be disclosed.

Any transfer of sovereignty or delegation of state powers to special arbitration courts under free trade agreements
should be rejected out of hand. While arbitration bodies are proven tools in business and economy, the relationship
between the national legal system and arbitration courts must be set out in trade agreements in such a way that arbitration
court rulings can always be appealed in the ordinary national courts upon request of the defendant.
Therefore, the AfD in principle rejects any trade agreements which are negotiated in a non-transparent, non-public
manner and without the involvement of the German Federal Parliament, worded without balancing the interests of the
parties concerned, and undermining domestic law in an unacceptable manner. For these reasons, we reject TTIP,
TISA and CETA.

In any event, all treaties and agreements which exceed mere trade agreements by incorporating investment protection
rules, or are aimed at harmonisation of regulations, must remain subject to national powers of authority. Only the
involvement of the German Federal Parliament can ensure adequate democratic legitimacy.