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Seminar paper from the year 2008 in the subject Politics - International Politics - Topic: International Organisations, grade: 1,7, University of Potsdam, language: English, abstract: Die Ursprnge und aktuelle Problemstellungen des multilateralen Handelssystems.
The multilateral trade Regime, the World Trade Organization, arrived, as
so often in its past, at a cross road. The Doha Development Agenda is now in its
7th year, once again cancelled and once again tried to be revitalized. How come?
On the one hand a broad consensus exists, saying that free trade is better for
everyone. From farmers and fishermen to bankers and C.E.O.'s, everybody from
white to blue-collar is supposed to gain welfare from global free trade. And those
who don't even have collars can get some through trading. China's rise in the last
decades is not imaginable without global trade. Almost 1 billion people profit
from that and that is just one country!
But on the other hand there are protectionist measures, bilateral
overreaching treaties, subsidies for bankrupt industries and non-tariff barriers to
trade installed from those countries that benefitted the most of the liberalizations
of the past decades.
Today the small ones, the former colonies, the developing countries try to
pick their piece of the pie and are not willing to let the industrialized countries
break the rules they used to engage years ago. They are not willing to take the
inequality anymore and raise their voices in one of the only forums they have,
where they're treated on a one to one basis.
This essay will give an overview about the historic development from the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade to the World Trade Organization. Their
structures as well as their development will be pointed out. After exploring
libraries full of literature to the topics of GATT and WTO, the remarkable text by
Robert Winham about "The evolution of the global trade regime" appeared to be
the most comprehensive, intelligible and workable.
The multilateral trade Regime, the World Trade Organization, arrived, as
so often in its past, at a cross road. The Doha Development Agenda is now in its
7th year, once again cancelled and once again tried to be revitalized. How come?
On the one hand a broad consensus exists, saying that free trade is better for
everyone. From farmers and fishermen to bankers and C.E.O.'s, everybody from
white to blue-collar is supposed to gain welfare from global free trade. And those
who don't even have collars can get some through trading. China's rise in the last
decades is not imaginable without global trade. Almost 1 billion people profit
from that and that is just one country!
But on the other hand there are protectionist measures, bilateral
overreaching treaties, subsidies for bankrupt industries and non-tariff barriers to
trade installed from those countries that benefitted the most of the liberalizations
of the past decades.
Today the small ones, the former colonies, the developing countries try to
pick their piece of the pie and are not willing to let the industrialized countries
break the rules they used to engage years ago. They are not willing to take the
inequality anymore and raise their voices in one of the only forums they have,
where they're treated on a one to one basis.
This essay will give an overview about the historic development from the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade to the World Trade Organization. Their
structures as well as their development will be pointed out. After exploring
libraries full of literature to the topics of GATT and WTO, the remarkable text by
Robert Winham about "The evolution of the global trade regime" appeared to be
the most comprehensive, intelligible and workable.
- Format: Pocket/Paperback
- ISBN: 9783640553457
- Språk: Engelska
- Antal sidor: 56
- Utgivningsdatum: 2010-03-04
- Förlag: Grin Verlag