The Political Economy of the World Trading System
WTO and Beyond
Bernard M. Hoekman(Author)
Oxford University Press
2nd Edition
Published on 1. September 2001
Book
Paperback/Softback
570 pages
978-0-19-829431-3 (ISBN)
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Description
The creation of the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 1995 ushered in a new era in world trading arrangements. Building on the General Agreement on Trades and Tariffs (GATT), the intergovernmental treaty that for 50 years had regulated international trade relations, the WTO is a global organization of equal standing to the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, and will set the agenda for international trade for decades to come. The authors of this volume were heavily involved in the Uruguay Round of GATT negotiations that laid the foundations for the creation of the WTO, and were ideally placed to see how the politics of negotiation affects the economics of trade. "The Political Economy of the World Trading System" is the first comprehensive and accessible introduction to the institutional mechanics, economics, and politics of the global trading networks. It goes beyond description of the rules of the WTO to analyse the political and economic forces that sculpted them, the incentives for countries to abide by them, and the likely future direction of the organization.
The authors show how governments are not necessarily the social welfare-maximizing entities often found in textbooks, but instead develop policy subject to the pressures of a variety of interest groups. Although economic theory suggests that countries should pursue liberal trade policies and exchange goods and services on the basis of their comparative advantage, in practice most nations actively intervene in international trade. The political economy approach taken in this volume explains how the WTO functions, why GATT has been very successful in reducing tariffs, and why it has proven much more difficult to expand the reach of multilateral disciplines to domestic policies impacting on trade. This book will increase the reader's understanding of international economics, business, and international relations by supplying in-depth insider knowledge of how trade negotiations take place, how this decision-making affects trade policy, and how the multilateral arrangements that shape world trade are created.
This information is crucial to understand why WTO rules are phrased as they are, and to understand the processes by which business organizations, industrial associations, and political lobbies influence the multilateral trading system. In this expanded and thoroughly revised edition, the authors have taken account of the recent developments in international trade relations, included an extra chapter on the historical importance of international trading arrangements, and updated all the references and guides to further reading.
The authors show how governments are not necessarily the social welfare-maximizing entities often found in textbooks, but instead develop policy subject to the pressures of a variety of interest groups. Although economic theory suggests that countries should pursue liberal trade policies and exchange goods and services on the basis of their comparative advantage, in practice most nations actively intervene in international trade. The political economy approach taken in this volume explains how the WTO functions, why GATT has been very successful in reducing tariffs, and why it has proven much more difficult to expand the reach of multilateral disciplines to domestic policies impacting on trade. This book will increase the reader's understanding of international economics, business, and international relations by supplying in-depth insider knowledge of how trade negotiations take place, how this decision-making affects trade policy, and how the multilateral arrangements that shape world trade are created.
This information is crucial to understand why WTO rules are phrased as they are, and to understand the processes by which business organizations, industrial associations, and political lobbies influence the multilateral trading system. In this expanded and thoroughly revised edition, the authors have taken account of the recent developments in international trade relations, included an extra chapter on the historical importance of international trading arrangements, and updated all the references and guides to further reading.
More details
Edition
2nd Revised edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Edition type
Revised edition
Illustrations
num. tab.
numerous tables
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-19-829431-3 (9780198294313)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
New editions

Bernard M. Hoekman | Michel M. Kostecki
The Political Economy of the World Trading System
Book
10/2009
3rd Edition
Oxford University Press
€223.90
Shipment within 15-20 days
Previous edition
Bernard M. Hoekman
The Political Economy of the World Trading System
Book
12/1995
Oxford University Press
€18.56
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Persons
Content
Introduction; PART I. THE GLOBAL TRADING SYSTEM; 1. The Trading System in Perspective; PART II. THE INSTITUTION; 2. The World Trade Organization; 3. Dispute Settlement and Enforcement of Rules; 4. Negotiating Forum; PART III. THE MULTILATERAL TRADE AGREEMENTS; 5. Trade in Goods; 6. Sector-Specific Multilateral Trade Agreements; 7. Trade in Services; 8. Intellectual Property Rights; PART IV. HOLES AND LOOPHOLES; 9. Safeguards; 10. Regional Integration; 11. Plurilateral Agreements; PART V. IMPROVING THE TRADING SYSTEM; 12. Developing Countries and Economies in Transition; 13. Beyond the Border: Domestic Regulation and National Preferences; 14. Domestic Stakeholders, Transparency and Legitimacy; 15. Governance, Ownership, Coherence and the Global Public Good