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An issue-by-issue guide to the current round of world trade negotiations.
The WTO Agreements are rewriting the rules of economic intercourse between countries and forging a multilateral framework for world trade. This text presents the provisions in non-technical language, seeking not to detract from their legal precision. It explains technical terms, gives examples where appropriate and links widely-scattered provisions in the Agreements where they are connected in their operation. The guide seeks to be useful to both those who are not yet acquainted with the subject and to those still needing clarification of certain concepts, ideas and general provisions. It aims to foster an understanding of WTO Agreements, to help countries to know their rights and obligations, and industry and trade bodies to know the parameters within which they now operate.
Examines deficiencies and imbalances in the World Trade Organization (WTO) Agreements from the point of view of developing countries. Gives an account of concessions made by developing and developed countries in the Uruguay Round results, and discusses the recent trend in the WTO towards enhancing rather than correcting imbalance. Details specific aspects of the agreements, such as the dispute settlement process, and specific sectors, such as agriculture and textiles, and makes recommendations for change. No index. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.
Following the Doha trade talks in November 2001, the World Trade Organisation (WTO) has started an intensive, three-year round of further international trade negotiations. This text explains the new Work Programme guiding these negotiations. Far from constituting a "development agenda" as the rich countries have claimed, the author shows that issues of great importance to developing countries like textiles and balance of payments do not even figure. Instead, the Work Programme gives special attention to those areas which are of interest to the major developed countries, thereby further increasing the imbalance in the WTO system between North and South. He examines each issue likely to figure in the new negotiations, including agriculture, services, subsidies, anti-dumping, regional trade arrangements, dispute settlement, industrial tariffs, intellectual property rights, investment, competition policy, transparency in government procurement, trade facilitation and electronic commerce. He makes practical policy proposals for the revision of the existing WTO Agreements to protect and improve the development prospects of the poor and disadvantaged countries.
This companion volume to An Introduction to the WTO Agreements looks at how the WTO agreements represent progress over the GATT rules they have replaced. The author also analyses their deficiencies and imbalances from the point of view of the developing countries. And he proposes detailed changes (and strategies) which, in his view, the countries of the South ought now to be putting forward in the next round of negotiations on trade and related issues which have already commenced.
Examing the evolution of the multilateral trading system and the World Trade Organisation itself, this book traces the development of the system and how major industrial nations have exploited its workings to serve their own narrow interests.
Binaifer Nowrojee and Regan Ralph.
"Ranging over a wide terrain of social, political and economic thinking and specific country experiences, the author explains the key concepts in complex systems theory and their possible applications in development practice. He examines various development issues and institutions in the light of what he sees as the limitations of rigid linear thinking in an essentially fluid, non-linear world. Little wonder, he concludes, that the results of half a century of development effort have been so disappointing."--BOOK JACKET.
"What is to be done? That is the issue political movements, social thinkers, economists, and governments all over the world must now confront. Without trying to propose specific policies, the author puts forward a highly suggestive set of principles and ideas."--BOOK JACKET.
Examines the World Trade Organization (WTO), begun in 1995 to promote relazed trade, expand world trade, and assist in the development of more than a few emerging economies.