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The Economics of Regional Trading Arrangements

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The Economics of Regional Trading Arrangements provides a unified analysis of policies which discriminate among trading partners.

Regionalism became a major issue in international commercial diplomacy during the early 1990s. The proliferation of RTAs was viewed by some as a challenge, and by others as a complement, to the establishment of the World Trade Organization as the successor to GATT.

This book analyses the new RTAs. It situates them in the broader realm of discriminatory trade polices for which there is a well-defined body of theory and empirical studies, before asking whether the new regionalism requires new theoretical analysis. The approach is to combine in roughly equal proportions history, theory, and a review of empirical studies. This is appropriate given the key theoretical result is the welfare ambiguity of discriminatory trade policy changes. Empirical studies can provide a sense of which of the potentially offsetting effects are more or less important. Since some effects may take a long time to have their full impact and may be systemic, it is also useful to observe how RTAs have evolved in practice.

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Product Details
Clarendon Press
0198233353 / 9780198233350
Hardback
382.9
01/10/1997
United Kingdom
456 pages, line figures, tables
Professional & Vocational Learn More