|
Books > Business & Economics > Economics > International economics > International trade
"I really admire the authors, who - in a time of political impasse
- provide a strong and well argued analysis of the WTO Doha Round.
It becomes crystal clear that there are solid economic benefits
from concluding the Doha Round, but even clearer that there are
strong political benefits in terms of openness, security and
positive effects on multilateral negotiations. This is exactly what
the world needs in a time of crisis!" Christian Friis Bach,
Minister for Development Cooperation, Denmark; Affiliated Professor
at the University of Copenhagen. "The World Bank, led by the troika
of outstanding trade economists Aaditya Mattoo, Will Martin and
Bernard Hoekman, has established itself as an important player in
trade negotiations through excellent research. This splendid volume
on the Doha Round shows why. Read it to see why failure to close
the Round would be a tragedy." Jagdish Bhagwati, University
Professor, Economics and Law, Columbia University; Senior Fellow in
International Economics at the Council on Foreign Relations "This
is an excellent book which reflects one of the most comprehensive
analyses done on the draft agreements by an excellent team of
renowned trade experts. The Doha Development Agenda is still as
relevant as ever to achieve trade and development, and thus this
body of work comes at a timely juncture as we search for a way
forward in these very important negotiations. I recommend this book
for all those who are serious about achieving the end game,
especially the middle D in DDA - development." Mari Pangestu,
Minister of Trade, Indonesia "This book reviews the Doha Round
negotiations and offers lessons relevant to the current stalemate.
No important topic is omitted, the information provided is
extremely rich, the calculations are presented in a simple way, and
the analysis is rigorous. The book is a must for a very wide
audience - from negotiators and economists to anyone interested in
the fate of the trade regime which is so critical for the economic
recovery of rich countries and for the continued growth of
developing countries." Patrick Messerlin, Professor of Economics at
Sciences Po, Paris
"Why didn't the global economic crisis of 2008-9 lead to a massive
outbreak of protectionism? Chad P. Bown and his associates perform
the great service of taking a very close look at trade policies
around the globe to identify where trade barriers crept up and
where they didn't. This book will be required reading for anyone
interested in understanding why the world trading system survived
the shock so well. At the same time, it reinforces the importance
of careful monitoring of country trade policies." Douglas A. Irwin,
Robert E. Maxwell '23 Professor, Department of Economics, Dartmouth
College "With the onset of the Great Recession, the world trading
system faced a defining moment. How has it performed? Answers to
this question will be debated for years, but this timely volume
takes a critical first systematic step in advancing our
understanding of how countries did - and did not - respond to
economic collapse with import restrictions. The editor has brought
together a world-class team of empirical trade researchers to
explore this question for eleven major developed and developing
countries, and the result is a collection of studies rich in detail
and subtle in implication that will help shape the research agenda
on trade policy for years to come. This is a mustread volume for
anyone interested in the world economy, researchers and
policy-makers alike." Robert W. Staiger, Holbrook Working
Professor, Department of Economics, Stanford University "The years
2008 and 2009 witnessed a financial crisis, but not a trade crisis
and a protectionist tsunami, in sharp contrast to the 1930s. Why
such a resilience of the world trade regime? This book focuses on
the contribution of 'temporary trade barriers' (antidumping,
antisubsidy and safeguard measures) to such a resilience. It covers
eleven of the largest economies, relies on a massive effort to have
the best data available and provides a subtle mix of economic and
legal analyses. It is definitively a must for everybody who wants
to understand our troubled times." Patrick A. Messerlin, Professor
of Economics, Groupe d'Economie Mondiale at Sciences Po
When the investment bank Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy in
late 2008, the news sent shockwaves across the global economy. The
drop in confidence decimated world trade, leading to what the
authors of this book call the Great Trade Collapse. The fall in
trade was sudden, severe and synchronised - falling faster than
during the Great Depression and by more than at any time since the
Second World War; more than during the oil-price hikes of the
1970s, the recession of the early 1980s and the bursting of the
dotcom bubble in 2001. It affected all 104 nations on which the WTO
reports. This book, first published as an eBook on VoxEU.org to
inform world leaders ahead of the WTO's Trade Ministerial
conference in Geneva in late 2009, presents the economics
profession's received wisdom on the causes, consequence and
prospects of the Great Trade Collapse - a wisdom that continues to
serve the trade community today. The authors are: Dony Alex, Carlo
Altomonte, Sonia Araujo, Richard Baldwin, Rudolfs Bems, Fred
Bergsten, Gilberto Biacuna, Ingo Borchert, Peter Draper, Simon
Evenett, Michael Ferrantino, Lionel Fontagne, Joseph Francois,
Caroline Freund, Jeffry Frieden, Guillaume Gaulier, Leonardo
Iacovone, David Jacks, Robert Johnson, Tonia Kandiero, Anne
Krueger, Rajiv Kumar, Aimee Larsen, Andrei Levchenko, Logan Lewis,
Aaditya Mattoo, Christopher Meissner, Jesse Mora, Leonce Ndikumana,
Dennis Novy, Joaquim Oliveira Martins, Kevin O'Rourke, Gianmarco
Ottaviano, William Powers, Raymond Robertson, Peter Schott, Daria
Taglioni, Kiyoyasu Tanaka, Linda Tesar, Ruyhei Wakasugi, Julia
Woerz, Kei-Mu Yi, Veronika Zavacka.
This insightful Handbook provides a comprehensive overview of the
most recent developments in the academic debate on the numerous and
complex linkages between international trade and climate change.
Adopting a broad interdisciplinary approach, it brings together
perspectives from scholars in economics, political science and
legal studies to confront the critical environmental challenges
posed by globalization. Initial chapters provide an overview of the
key debates related to international trade and climate policy,
engaging with empirical data from the US and China to assess the
impact of new trade initiatives and policy on greenhouse gas
emissions, carbon leakage and the increase of trade in
carbon-intensive products. Contributors propose policy options that
align international trade with climate change mitigation and
address crucial legal and practical implications, including the
implementation of Border Carbon Adjustments and international trade
disputes. Offering critical and empirically-based perspectives on
the future of international trade policy, this timely Handbook is
crucial reading for scholars, researchers and graduate students in
political science, public policy and climate research. Policymakers
will also benefit from its unique and insightful policy
recommendations.
The correspondence from the most successful Irish-American trading firm of the colonial period forms a remarkable archive for economic historians of the eighteenth century. This is an edition of a letterbook that contains the first nine months of correspondence from this New York trading house. The letters to commercial contacts throughout the North Atlantic region offer a vivid picture of the transatlantic economy. And the private communications of Waddell Cunningham to his partner, Thomas Greg in Belfast, allow a rare behind-the-scenes look at the management and operation of an overseas merchant house. Guided by Professor Truxes's authoritative introduction, we can see in these letters the difficulties of decision-making over long distances, the problems of over-stretched resources, and the impact of the Seven Years War on the evolution of a vigorous enterprise.
From the pen of highly esteemed trade scholar Alan Sykes, this book
presents a rigorous introduction to the law and economics of modern
international trade agreements. With a bottom-up approach that
requires neither a background in international trade law nor
significant economics training, Sykes sets out to map and explain
the complex dynamics of international trade agreements and
institutions, synthesising legal analysis and cutting-edge economic
research in order to present the reader with a sophisticated,
holistic view of the field. Against the backdrop of the current
impasse in both negotiation and dispute settlement at the World
Trade Organisation, the book charts a clear path from the
historical origins of trade law and the international system, to
the current state of play, including unpacking the major areas of
controversy. It exposits the economic theory of trade agreements,
discusses the role of international trade law in domestic legal
systems and analyzes the role of self-enforcement and formal
dispute resolution mechanisms. It provides lucid and detailed
analysis of the restrictions, exceptions, obligations and special
measures that constitute the core building blocks of international
trade rules, including the distinct features of international trade
in services. With an international outlook, the book also addresses
the role of China in the world trading system, looking at such
issues as the credibility of market access commitments, China's
industrial policies, “forced technology transfer” and currency
manipulation. Providing an eloquent, thorough and technically
astute overview of international trade agreements, this title will
be invaluable to scholars and teachers of international trade
across the disciplines of law, economics and political science.
This forward-looking book introduces the concept of Ethical Value
Networks, building upon a theoretical exploration with primary
evidence of their impacts in the Global South. It moves away from
focusing on the consumption section of networks, with grounded
impact studies that explore ethicality as a concept, how ethical
value is created and how this is distributed through the
socio-economy. Framed by theoretical exploration and reflection,
the book offers a selection of case studies from Africa, Latin
America, the Pacific, and Southeast Asia to highlight the
implications of Ethical Value Networks for producers and localities
in the Global South. Chapters further analyse and critique the rise
of the ethical trade and certification schemes, as well as three
ethical trade constellations: social justice through fair trade,
sustainability through organic agriculture, and authenticity
through geographic indications. The in-depth analysis of ethical
trading in wine, coffee, fruit and other key sectors combined with
theoretical study will make this an important read for ethical
trade researchers as well as policy makers and those responsible
for the governance and operation of ethical value networks. It will
also be an invigorating read for economic geography, development
studies, international development and management studies scholars.
The value of major conventional weapons imported by Third World
countries between 1971 and 1985 was quadruple that for the previous
two decades. This spectacular increase reflects changes in the
economic and technological relations between industrialized nations
and the Third World, as well as having profound political
repercussions. This book gives a comprehensive overview of the flow
of major conventional weapons during the period 1971-85. It
analyses both the suppliers and the main Third World recipients,
describing the inflow of arms and the reasons underlying it. The
facts that propel this arms trade are assessed in a concluding
chapter which also analyses the structural changes that have
occurred in the arms markets and their implications. The detailed
statistics and arms trade registers for the period (in some cases
from 1951), and the introduction of a new SIPRI price system for
evaluating the arms trade, make this a valuable reference work.
This publication contains detailed tables showing international
trade for 258 individual commodities (3-digit SITC groups) and
eleven world trade tables covering trade values and indices up to
the year 2013. The information contained is based on data provided
by approximately 175 countries (areas), representing more than 90%
of world trade of 2013. The publication is aimed at both specialist
trade data users and common audience at large. The presented data,
charts and analyses will benefit policy makers, government
agencies, non-government organizations, civil society
organizations, journalists, academics, researchers, students,
businesses and anyone who is interested in trade issues. The
information and analyses are presented in a way which can be
comprehended by non-expert users of statistics.
The Research Handbook on Trade Wars presents an informative and
in-depth account of the origins, dynamics, and implications of
trade wars, which are growing both in scale and scope in today's
increasingly interdependent global economy. Timely and
comprehensive, it provides a holistic understanding of trade wars,
including not only the domestic and international factors that
influence the pattern of trade war onset and escalation, but also
the stakeholders and processes that shape the outcomes of such
highly intense trade conflicts. Leading scholars in the field
present original and thought-provoking research material,
critically engage with academic and policy debates, and make
theoretical contributions as well as valuable policy
recommendations. In addition to its in-depth analysis of the
global, domestic, political, and economic origins of trade wars,
this Research Handbook also examines the variation in the scope of
trade wars, the forum for dispute settlement, the factors that
influence the pattern of dispute escalation, and the linkages
between national security considerations and commercial conflicts.
Providing the frameworks necessary for understanding the political
and economic logics of trade wars, this Handbook will be a valuable
source of reference for researchers, government officials,
businesses, and post-graduate students interested in international
political economy, international economics, economic statecraft,
public policy, and international relations.
The untold story of the mysterious company that shook the world.
On the coast of southern China, an eccentric entrepreneur spent three decades steadily building an obscure telecom company into one of the world’s most powerful technological empires with hardly anyone noticing. This all changed in December 2018, when the detention of Meng Wanzhou, Huawei Technologies’ female scion, sparked an international hostage standoff, poured fuel on the US-China trade war, and suddenly thrust the mysterious company into the global spotlight.
In House of Huawei, Washington Post technology reporter Eva Dou pieces together a remarkable portrait of Huawei’s reclusive founder, Ren Zhengfei, and how he built a sprawling corporate empire—one whose rise Western policymakers have become increasingly obsessed with halting. Based on wide-ranging interviews and painstaking archival research, House of Huawei dissects the global web of power, money, influence, surveillance, bloodshed, and national glory that Huawei helped to build—and that has also ensnared it.
Exploring themes associated with corruption, sustainable
development, and human rights and security, Robert J. Hanlon
considers the political dynamics of corporate social responsibility
(CSR) within the context of the 'Asian Century' and its place in an
increasingly multipolar world. By assessing how social
responsibility is changing the discourse around trade, development
and diplomacy, Hanlon sheds light on how competing visions of
social responsibility are influencing political narratives in China
and the West, examining multipolarity, the construction of Global
China, and the ascent of competitive pluralism. Chapters argue that
the liberal economic order founded at Bretton Woods is wavering
with Western governments and multinational corporations who are
seeking new strategies to compete against China, especially in
emerging economies known for weak governance structures and
dysfunctional rule of law. As CSR emerges as a political tool for
states and business actors, this timely book adopts a human
security approach for assessing the weaponization of political
values within an increasingly fragmented rule-based liberal order.
Expanding on the themes of constructivism, competitive pluralism
and progressive neoliberalism, while introducing the novel concept
of developmental CSR, this forward-thinking book will prove a vital
resource for students, scholars and policymakers interested in
Asian politics, public policy, CSR and international relations.
The third edition of EU Customs Law provides a fully updated
treatment of legislation, new treaties and cases in the two courts
of the EU especially but also in Member States. This volume also
includes commentary on the Union Customs Code and secondary
legislation, and increased coverage of areas such as the wider role
of customs authorities apart from the collection of customs duty,
such as security of goods and post 9/11 developments generally, the
history of customs unions and their implications for governments,
non-EU customs unions to which EU law is relevant, and the
inter-relation between customs duty and direct tax.
Commodities are basic goods used in commerce and are most often
used as inputs in the production of other semi-finished or finished
materials. They are very important products in our lives today and
constitute non-negligible sources of income for many countries.
This book serves as a guide to the marketing of these goods and
provides scholars and commodity market participants with useful
concepts, tools and guidelines to better organize and operate
commodities exchanges. Issouf Soumare explains in detail
commodities exchanges, from conceptualization of the exchange to
its operationalization. He describes the architecture of a typical
commodities exchange, looking at its trading and clearing
functions, the warehouse receipt system and the regulatory
framework. The book also presents practices of commodities
exchanges around the world and discusses commodity products and
instruments traded on these exchanges, their pricing and usage.
This book is very useful and timely, as many emerging countries are
setting up commodities exchanges. Academics interested in
commodities and their marketing as well as industry professionals
such as commodity traders, commodity exporters, risk managers,
clearing officers, market makers, commodity producers, agricultural
cooperatives, commodity processors, bankers, warehouse operators,
and regulators will find this a useful reference.
The United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), a modified and
modernized version of the North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA), will continue to govern most economic relationships in
North America, including the more than $1.3 trillion in annual
regional trade in goods and services, for the foreseeable future.
USMCA preserves the bulk of the NAFTA structures that permit North
American manufacturers to compete effectively with their European
and Asian counterparts in North American and foreign markets. Once
in effect, USMCA should largely resolve the chilling effect on
investment and new hiring generated by three years of uncertainty
over NAFTA's future. This book provides a detailed analysis and
critique of the provisions of the USMCA and the USMCA's relation to
NAFTA. It is designed to assist lawyers and non-lawyers alike,
including law, economics and public policy scholars, business
professionals and governmental officials who require an
understanding of one of the worlds' most economically and
politically significant regional trade agreements.
Bill Pritchard provides an important update on how current trade
methodologies are implemented as China becomes one of the world's
largest fresh fruit importers from countries such as Laos, Myanmar,
Thailand and Vietnam. The book also looks at their distinctive
trade aspects and what can be learnt from alternative practices
carried out in other countries through the use of global production
networks. An in-depth analysis provides the reader with a welcome
insight into existing processes from production through to export,
often through informal routes, with a marketing structure providing
more power to the distributors and brokers and mixed effects on the
farmers. Using empirical evidence from four countries, this book
explores what could, and should, be implemented in this
under-researched topic to aid rural development. This will be an
invaluable resource for researchers of human geography,
international trade and Asian studies, particularly those with a
focus on Southeast Asia and China.
In an era where services play an increasingly vital role in
servicified global value chains, this insightful book provides a
comprehensive study of legal aspects of rules of origin for
services and their importance in international trade. The author
identifies and examines the defects in the current approach to
rules of origin for services through an astute analysis of these
rules in the General Agreement on Trade in Services and in
preferential trade agreements. In addition, by asserting that trade
in goods and trade in services cannot be separated, the author
provides a comparative analysis of rules of origin in these two
fields, offering a better understanding of their boundaries and
connections. Paving the way for further development, the author
concludes that certain aspects of rules of origin for goods, such
as the product-based approach, may be repurposed for services.
Addressing an area of rule making insufficiently explored to date,
this book will prove important reading for students and scholars of
international trade, economics, and governance. The focus on new
patterns of international trade will also benefit trade experts,
policy makers and businesses.
This authoritative book explores copyright and trade in the Pacific
Rim under the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), a mega-regional
trade deal. Offering a perceptive critique of the TPP, Matthew
Rimmer highlights the dissonance between Barack Obama's ideals that
the agreement would be progressive and comprehensive and the
substance of the trade deal. Rimmer considers the intellectual
property chapter of the TPP, focusing on the debate over copyright
terms, copyright exceptions, intermediary liability, and
technological protection measures. He analyses the negotiations
over trademark law, cybersquatting, geographical indications, and
the plain packaging of tobacco products. The book also considers
the debate over patent law and access to essential medicines, data
protection and biologics, access to genetic resources, and the
treatment of Indigenous intellectual property. Examining
globalization and its discontents, the book concludes with policy
solutions and recommendations for a truly progressive approach to
intellectual property and trade. This book will be a valuable
resource for scholars and students of intellectual property law,
international economic law, and trade law. Its practical
recommendations will also be beneficial for practitioners and
policy makers working in the fields of intellectual property,
investment, and trade.
Lecture Notes in International Trade Theory covers classical
international trade models (including the Ricardian, Ricardo Viner,
and Heckscher-Ohlin-Samuelson models). The course is designed for
M.Sc. and first year PhD students. It relies on both graphical and
analytic methods, requiring only intermediate microeconomics and a
solid grounding in calculus. The material emphasizes 'second-best'
settings, where markets are imperfect. The goal is to equip
students with a good enough understanding of open-economy general
equilibrium relations that they understand how distortions ripple
across different markets, e.g. commodity and factor markets. The
Author applies these ideas to environmental and natural resource
problems, including pollution 'leakage' (where pollution reductions
in one country are offset by trading partners' increased pollution)
and imperfect property rights. Other applications include the
general equilibrium effects of commodity and trade taxes,
international transfers (the 'transfer problem'), minimum wage
constraints, and immiserizing growth. The Author assumes that
students have some experience in formulating and answering
comparative statics questions in an optimization setting. Building
on these skills, and developing the idea of stability in an
equilibrium setting (the Marshall Lerner condition), students learn
how to formulate and answer comparative static questions in trade
models.
The United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), a modified and
modernized version of the North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA), will continue to govern most economic relationships in
North America, including the more than $1.3 trillion in annual
regional trade in goods and services, for the foreseeable future.
USMCA preserves the bulk of the NAFTA structures that permit North
American manufacturers to compete effectively with their European
and Asian counterparts in North American and foreign markets. Once
in effect, USMCA should largely resolve the chilling effect on
investment and new hiring generated by three years of uncertainty
over NAFTA's future. This book provides a detailed analysis and
critique of the provisions of the USMCA and the USMCA's relation to
NAFTA. It is designed to assist lawyers and non-lawyers alike,
including law, economics and public policy scholars, business
professionals and governmental officials who require an
understanding of one of the worlds' most economically and
politically significant regional trade agreements.
Antidumping trade protection is one of the most frequent and
ubiquitous trade policies in the global economy. This review
discusses the key reference pieces in the antidumping literature
that have critically defined and shaped what we know about this
important and unique form of trade protection. The review
critically analyzes the literature and discusses its future
directions - it is an important research tool not only for new and
established scholars in international economics, but also
policymakers and legal scholars.
|
|