Hanging by a Thread


Book Description

Contributed articles.







The WTO after Hong Kong


Book Description

After the World Trade Organization’s (WTO) critical December 2005 Hong Kong ministerial meeting, negotiations to implement the Doha Development Agenda (DDA) broke down completely in the summer of 2006. This book offers a detailed and critical evaluation of how and why the negotiations arrived at this point and what the future holds for the WTO. It brings together leading scholars in the field of trade from across the social sciences who address the key issues at stake, the principal players in the negotiations, the role of fairness and legitimacy in the Doha Round, and the prospects for the DDA’s conclusion. The WTO after Hong Kong is the most comprehensive account of the current state of the World Trade Organization and will be of enormous interest to students of trade politics, international organizations, development and international political economy.










WTO Ministerial Conferences


Book Description

WTO Ministerial Conferences: Key Outcomes contains all the key outcomes from World Trade Organization Ministerial Conferences since the organization was established in 1995. Covering 12 Ministerial Conferences held between 1996 and 2022, the key outcomes include Ministerial Decisions and Declarations as well as Chairpersons' statements. This publication also reproduces relevant ministerial outcomes of the Uruguay Round adopted in connection with the establishment of the WTO that were not formally integrated into the Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the WTO. This publication complements The WTO Agreements, published by Cambridge University Press and the WTO, which contains the Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the WTO and its Annexes.




Hong Kong Ministerial Conference of the WTO


Book Description

The Hong Kong Ministerial Conference took place on the backdrop and hangover from the failures of some of the previous ministerial Conferences, especially of the Cancun Ministerial in 2003 to conclude the Doha Development Agenda (DDA). After failure of the third Ministerial Conference of the WTO in Seattle in 1999, the Doha Ministerial resolved to carry out trade negotiations coupled with developmental perspective and for that purpose had roughly identified twenty-one agenda items. But the DDA remained unfinished by Cancun, which had therefore caused failure of the fifth Ministerial Conference of WTO in Cancun. As a fallback measure, the July Package, 2004 was devised to save the Doha Development Round. In generality, July Package opened deadline for completion of DDA, aimed at the sixth Ministerial Conference in Hong Kong. However, none of the items were completed by Hong Kong, which could have caused failure of the Ministerial Conference. Nonetheless, under the Trade Negotiation Committee and other Committees of the WTO, enormous amount of efforts were expended to build consensus among the Members on the DDA. But because of the diverse views and positioning of the Member Countries consensus could not be achieved till the Hong Kong Ministerial. The stark differences of the Members were specially figured out on the issues of agriculture, non-agriculture market access (NAMA) and services. Nonetheless, there were some progresses. When talks recommence, negotiators cannot simply turn up and carry on where they left off in Hong Kong. They need to examine their consciences. They cannot simply be content that they have bought off the LDCs. In order for the world's poor to gain benefit from the multilateral trading system, the developed countries' markets as well as the markets of the emerging developing economies must be opened significantly. In other words, market access negotiations on agriculture, NAMA and services must be conducted at an expedited pace and they must deliver tangible results. Only by achieving this, the DDA can truly be turned into a development round for the world's poor. The matter is urgent and there is no room for complacency.




Trade Mission to the Wto Ministerial Meeting in Singapore and to Hong Kong and the People's Republic of China - Scholar's Choice Edition


Book Description

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