The United States- Argentina honey case and the case against antidumping laws

The failure of the Fifth Ministerial Conference in Cancun2 was not only a setback for the Doha Round, but also for the World Trade Organization’s efforts to enhance international trade as means to growth and development. The group of developing countries led by Brazil, China, India and South Africa,...

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Autor principal: Luzi, Nora C.
Formato: Objeto de conferencia
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2004
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915/37048
http://www.iri.edu.ar/publicaciones_iri/IRI%20COMPLETO%20-%20Publicaciones-V05/CD-II%20Congreso/IRI/IRI_PAPERS/P_Economia/P_LUZI_NORA.pdf
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id I19-R120-10915-37048
record_format dspace
institution Universidad Nacional de La Plata
institution_str I-19
repository_str R-120
collection SEDICI (UNLP)
language Inglés
topic Ciencias Jurídicas
Relaciones Internacionales
Economía
spellingShingle Ciencias Jurídicas
Relaciones Internacionales
Economía
Luzi, Nora C.
The United States- Argentina honey case and the case against antidumping laws
topic_facet Ciencias Jurídicas
Relaciones Internacionales
Economía
description The failure of the Fifth Ministerial Conference in Cancun2 was not only a setback for the Doha Round, but also for the World Trade Organization’s efforts to enhance international trade as means to growth and development. The group of developing countries led by Brazil, China, India and South Africa, known as G-22, made the first step towards a new balance in the multilateral trading system. Agriculture was considered a key issue if the new Round was meant to succeed. It will certainly take time and a great deal of political will to get countries back to the negotiating table, but the benefits will outweigh the costs. Substantial poverty reduction in the world will be achieved by tackling agricultural protection. Poor countries mainly produce agricultural products and intensive labor products such as textiles usually facing protective – developed markets. Subsidies in the OECD account for more than US$ 300,000 million targeted at agricultural products originatingin developing countries. Annual subsidies at the OECD are equivalent to six times the direct economic aid those countries provide for the poor countries.3 Developing countries are responsible for seriously committing themselves and reducing agricultural barriers – tariff and non- tariff – in order to facilitate trade liberalization towards an equity free trade world. <i>Párrafo extraído del texto a modo de resumen</i>
format Objeto de conferencia
Objeto de conferencia
author Luzi, Nora C.
author_facet Luzi, Nora C.
author_sort Luzi, Nora C.
title The United States- Argentina honey case and the case against antidumping laws
title_short The United States- Argentina honey case and the case against antidumping laws
title_full The United States- Argentina honey case and the case against antidumping laws
title_fullStr The United States- Argentina honey case and the case against antidumping laws
title_full_unstemmed The United States- Argentina honey case and the case against antidumping laws
title_sort united states- argentina honey case and the case against antidumping laws
publishDate 2004
url http://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915/37048
http://www.iri.edu.ar/publicaciones_iri/IRI%20COMPLETO%20-%20Publicaciones-V05/CD-II%20Congreso/IRI/IRI_PAPERS/P_Economia/P_LUZI_NORA.pdf
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