The growth of the services sector in developing countries and their
increased participation in trade in services have far-reaching
implications for promotion of employment and income and management
of international migration. The book brings out these implications
in the context of the Uruguay Round Agreement on Trade in Services
(GATS) and explains how trade-related temporary movements of
persons can be a partial substitute for longer-term migration,
serving the interests of both developed and developing countries in
a more efficient global economy.
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