Global Economic Prospects 2005 : Trade, Regionalism and Development

The proliferation of regional trade agreements is fundamentally altering the world trade landscape. The number of agreements in force surpasses 200 and has risen eight-fold in two decades. Today as much as 40 percent of global trade takes place amo...

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Main Author: World Bank
Format: Publication
Language:en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14783
id okr-10986-14783
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-147832021-04-23T14:03:21Z Global Economic Prospects 2005 : Trade, Regionalism and Development World Bank AUTONOMOUS LIBERALIZATION BORDER BARRIERS CUSTOMS DELAYS EXCLUDED COUNTRIES MARKET ACCESS REGIONAL TRADE AGREEMENTS SERVICES COMPETITION TARIFFS TRADE DIVERSION WORLD TRADE The proliferation of regional trade agreements is fundamentally altering the world trade landscape. The number of agreements in force surpasses 200 and has risen eight-fold in two decades. Today as much as 40 percent of global trade takes place among countries that have some form of reciprocal regional trade agreement. Global Economic Prospects 2005: Trade, Regionalism, and Development addresses two questions: 1) What are the characteristics of agreements that most promote-or hinder-development for member countries? 2) Does the proliferation of agreements pose risks to the multilateral trading system, and if so, how can these risks be managed? The report argues that agreements leading to open regionalism-that is, deeper integration of trade as a result of low external tariffs, increased services competition, and efforts to reduce cross-border and customs delays costs-are effective as part of a larger trade strategy to promote growth. Such regional agreements can complement a strategy that, on the one hand, includes autonomous liberalization to promote productivity gains and, on the other hand, leverages domestic reforms to enhance market access. Although regional agreements can prove beneficial to member countries, they can have adverse effects on excluded countries. Lowering of border barriers around the world is crucial to minimizing these effects. The completion of the Doha Development Agenda by all countries in the World Trade Organization will reduce the risk of trade diversion associated with regional agreements and will decrease trade losses of countries excluded from agreements. 2013-08-02T22:30:00Z 2013-08-02T22:30:00Z 2005 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14783 en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Publication Publications & Research
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language en_US
topic AUTONOMOUS LIBERALIZATION
BORDER BARRIERS
CUSTOMS DELAYS
EXCLUDED COUNTRIES
MARKET ACCESS
REGIONAL TRADE AGREEMENTS
SERVICES COMPETITION
TARIFFS
TRADE DIVERSION
WORLD TRADE
spellingShingle AUTONOMOUS LIBERALIZATION
BORDER BARRIERS
CUSTOMS DELAYS
EXCLUDED COUNTRIES
MARKET ACCESS
REGIONAL TRADE AGREEMENTS
SERVICES COMPETITION
TARIFFS
TRADE DIVERSION
WORLD TRADE
World Bank
Global Economic Prospects 2005 : Trade, Regionalism and Development
description The proliferation of regional trade agreements is fundamentally altering the world trade landscape. The number of agreements in force surpasses 200 and has risen eight-fold in two decades. Today as much as 40 percent of global trade takes place among countries that have some form of reciprocal regional trade agreement. Global Economic Prospects 2005: Trade, Regionalism, and Development addresses two questions: 1) What are the characteristics of agreements that most promote-or hinder-development for member countries? 2) Does the proliferation of agreements pose risks to the multilateral trading system, and if so, how can these risks be managed? The report argues that agreements leading to open regionalism-that is, deeper integration of trade as a result of low external tariffs, increased services competition, and efforts to reduce cross-border and customs delays costs-are effective as part of a larger trade strategy to promote growth. Such regional agreements can complement a strategy that, on the one hand, includes autonomous liberalization to promote productivity gains and, on the other hand, leverages domestic reforms to enhance market access. Although regional agreements can prove beneficial to member countries, they can have adverse effects on excluded countries. Lowering of border barriers around the world is crucial to minimizing these effects. The completion of the Doha Development Agenda by all countries in the World Trade Organization will reduce the risk of trade diversion associated with regional agreements and will decrease trade losses of countries excluded from agreements.
format Publications & Research :: Publication
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Global Economic Prospects 2005 : Trade, Regionalism and Development
title_short Global Economic Prospects 2005 : Trade, Regionalism and Development
title_full Global Economic Prospects 2005 : Trade, Regionalism and Development
title_fullStr Global Economic Prospects 2005 : Trade, Regionalism and Development
title_full_unstemmed Global Economic Prospects 2005 : Trade, Regionalism and Development
title_sort global economic prospects 2005 : trade, regionalism and development
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14783
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