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Global Trade in Services - Fear, Facts, and Offshoring (Paperback)
Loot Price: R827
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Global Trade in Services - Fear, Facts, and Offshoring (Paperback)
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The service sector is large and growing. Additionally,
international trade in services is growing rapidly. Yet there is a
dearth of empirical research on the size, scope and potential
impact of services trade. The underlying source of this gap is
well-known-official statistics on the service sector in general,
and trade in services in particular, lack the level of detail
available for the manufacturing sector in many dimensions. Because
services are such a large and important component of the US
economy, understanding the implications of increased trade in
services is crucial to the trade liberalization agenda going
forward. In this path-breaking book, J. Bradford Jensen conducts
primary research using a range of data sources to produce the most
detailed and robust portrait available on the size, scope, and
potential impact of trade in services on the US economy. Jensen
presents new evidence on the prevalence of service firm
participation in international trade. He finds that, in spite of US
comparative advantage in service activities, service firms' export
participation lags manufacturing firms. Jensen evaluates the
impediments to services trade and finds evidence that there is
considerable room for liberalization-especially among the large,
fast-growing developing economies. The policy recommendations
coming out of this path-breaking study are quite clear. The United
States should not fear trade in services. It should be pushing
aggressively for services trade liberalization. Because other
advanced economies have similar comparative advantage in service,
the United States should make common cause with the European Union
and other advanced economies to encourage the large, fast-growing
developing economies to liberalize their service sectors through
multilateral negotiations in the General Agreement on Trade in
Services and the Government Procurement Agreement. Jensen notes
that the coming global infrastructure building boom is of historic
proportions and provides an enormous opportunity for US service
firms if the proper policies are in place. Increased trade in
services might help rebalance the global economy, and both
developed and developing economies would benefit from the
productivity-enhancing reallocation brought by increased trade in
services.
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