Putting Development First: The Importance of Policy Space in the WTO and International Financial InstitutionsKevin Gallagher Some 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. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 54
Page 70
... regime of trade - related intellectual property rights ( TRIPS ) , de- veloping countries will find it increasingly difficult to learn and adopt the production technology involved in the new goods and services they import . At the same ...
... regime of trade - related intellectual property rights ( TRIPS ) , de- veloping countries will find it increasingly difficult to learn and adopt the production technology involved in the new goods and services they import . At the same ...
Page 98
... regime , however , has overlooked the positive and dynamic elements in its virtual blanket disavowal of the Asian economy .... It may be necessary , therefore , for Asian nations to build a body which can serve as an Asian monetary fund ...
... regime , however , has overlooked the positive and dynamic elements in its virtual blanket disavowal of the Asian economy .... It may be necessary , therefore , for Asian nations to build a body which can serve as an Asian monetary fund ...
Page 198
... regime that restricted monopoly returns on ideas to the minimal degree necessary to reward invention . In practice , the corporations whose returns are based on their monopoly control of intangible assets are the most powerful non ...
... regime that restricted monopoly returns on ideas to the minimal degree necessary to reward invention . In practice , the corporations whose returns are based on their monopoly control of intangible assets are the most powerful non ...
Contents
Development Policies in a World of Globalization | 15 |
The Role of the State in | 33 |
Toward the Optimum Degree of Openness | 69 |
9 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Putting Development First: The Importance of Policy Space in the WTO and ... Kevin P. Gallagher No preview available - 2005 |
Common terms and phrases
activities American Amsden Argentina argued Article Asian benefits capabilities capital cent China competition costs crisis developing countries developing world developmental differential treatment disciplines Doha Doha Declaration Doha Round domestic East Asia economic development economic growth effects electricity sector energy enterprises environmental European Union export firms foreign direct investment foreign investment free trade GATS global important income increase India industrial policy infrastructure innovation institutions integration intellectual property intellectual property rights interventions investment rules investors issues Japan Korea Latin America manufacturing ment multilateral NAFTA NDCs negotiations neoliberal patent performance requirements policy space political production promotion protection reforms regime restrictions Rodrik role S&DT Singapore social South Special and Differential Stiglitz strategy subsidies sustainable development Taiwan tariff technology transfer trade liberalization TRIPS Agreement UNCTAD United Uruguay Round Washington Consensus World Bank WTO Agreements