Transfer of technology to developing countries: unilateral and multilateral policy options
In: Policy research working paper 3332
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In: Policy research working paper 3332
In: Policy research working paper 3188
In: Discussion paper series 3777
In: International trade
In: Discussion paper series 3374
In: International trade
In: World Bank discussion papers 282
"This book is a comprehensive and non-technical introduction to the institutional mechanics, economics, and politics of the world trading system as embodied in the WTO. The WTO is the primary organization through which member states will manage their trade relations. It is also the forum in which attempts will be made in the future to expand the coverage of multilateral rules to new policies such as competition (antitrust) law and investment regulations. Understanding the reach and relevance of the organization is therefore important, and requires an interdisciplinary approach. Few countries allow unfettered market forces to determine the pattern and structure of trade and investment. Instead, governments develop policy in response to domestic political forces, taking into account likely reactions by trading partners. In discussing the WTO, the authors take a political economy-based approach that can explain these fundamental aspects of the 'real' world. This in turn helps to explain the successes and failures of international co-operation in trade policy, the primacy of negotiated solutions, and the challenges facing the WTO in the years to come as further efforts are made to extend the reach of multilateral policy disciplines. Extensive references are made to the existing literature, and guides to further reading are provided at the end of each chapter."--Jacket.
In: Policy research working paper 1346
In: Discussion paper series 749
In: Discussion paper series 748
In: The journal of North African studies, Band 3, Heft 2, S. 89-104
ISSN: 1362-9387
The author discusses the Tunisian Euro-Mediterranean Partnership Initiative (EMPI). More generally, he argues that EMPI provides a unique opportunity for the southern partners to pursue trade liberalisation. However, there are no commitments in the areas of liberalisation of service markets and foreign investments. Without public sector reform (hard budget constraints) the impact of trade liberalisation may be muted. "...one way of the EMPI to be unambiguously welfare-improving is if it is used as a deliberate strategy to offset political economy constraints on most-favoured-nation liberalisation. A publicly announced timetable for such MFN liberalisation of barriers to trade and investment (...) would do much to provide a strong signal to domestic producers and foreign investors that the ultimate objective is not regionalism, but integration into the world economy." (DÜI-Cls)
World Affairs Online
In: Global Development Fifty Years after Bretton Woods, S. 252-279
In: The Economic Journal, Band 103, Heft 421, S. 1528
In: Journal of international economics, Band 29, Heft 1-2, S. 189-195
ISSN: 0022-1996