Putting Development First: The Importance of Policy Space in the WTO and International Financial InstitutionsSome of the world's most prominent development thinkers address the following question in this volume: to what extent are the rules and economic forces that govern the global economy shrinking the 'policy space' that developing countries can draw from in order to construct policies to raise the standards of living of their people? They then analyse the possibly considerable room for manoeuvre that developing countries still have at their disposal despite global macro-economic realities, IMF/World Bank policies, and the trade rules regime of the World Trade Organization. Finally, the authors suggest actual policies that could be put in place in order to preserve existing spaces for development and to expand the tools developing countries can deploy. |
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Page 34
The political element – that governments are necessarily less efficient than markets – has less to do with economics than with ideology . The structuralist view puts less faith in free markets as the driver of competitiveness and more ...
The political element – that governments are necessarily less efficient than markets – has less to do with economics than with ideology . The structuralist view puts less faith in free markets as the driver of competitiveness and more ...
Page 83
It is also that as most natural science research is being privatized , less and less research is being done on issues from which the researchers and right holders are unlikely to receive a significant economic pay - off .
It is also that as most natural science research is being privatized , less and less research is being done on issues from which the researchers and right holders are unlikely to receive a significant economic pay - off .
Page 111
The problem with it is that the productivity gap between today's developed countries and the developing countries is much greater than what existed between the more developed NDCs and the less developed NDCs in earlier times .
The problem with it is that the productivity gap between today's developed countries and the developing countries is much greater than what existed between the more developed NDCs and the less developed NDCs in earlier times .
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Contents
Development Policies in a World of Globalization | 15 |
The Role of the State in | 33 |
Toward the Optimum Degree of Openness | 69 |
Copyright | |
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Putting Development First: The Importance of Policy Space in the WTO and ... Kevin P. Gallagher No preview available - 2005 |
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activities advantage Agreement allow American areas argued Asia Bank benefits capital cent century China commitments competition costs create developing countries direct discussion domestic East economic effects electricity energy enterprises evidence example experience export firms foreign further GATS global growth important income increase India industrial policy innovation institutions integration intellectual interest investment issues Italy less liberalization limited manufacturing means measures Members ment negotiations neoliberal North obligations Organization patent performance period political possible production promotion proposed protection recent regime regional requirements restrictions result role rules S&DT sector selective social South South Korea space standards strategy studies subsidies success suggest sustainable tariff trade transfer TRIPS Agreement United University