Saturday, November 9, 2019
World trade organization essays
World trade organization essays    One should probably start an argument on the issue of the Group of 21     proposals with a statement from Oxfam International's 2002 report Rigged     Rules and Double Standards: "the problem is not that international trade is     inherently opposed to the needs and interests of the poor, but that the     rules that govern it are rigged in favor of the rich.'  Starting from this,     I aim to prove not only that WTO's role is almost exclusively in favor of     the rich, but also that the important players in the WTO system do not     abide by the very rules that they have created.            The recent Cancun round of negotiations within the WTO, regarding     especially agricultural subsidies, showed that finally the developing     countries starting with giants such as India and Brazil, preponderantly     agricultural countries with significant contribution to world trade, backed     up by China, could finally make a common point and a stand still against     the European Union and the United Stated.  The strange and somewhat     revolting point of discussion is that, while boasting liberalization and     free trade, the EU and the United States spent an approximated $300 billion     in subsidies, almost all of them going to agriculture.  Isn't a subsidy a     way to ignore the free trade boasted as the main program by the WTO'  Of     course, you do not use taxes to raise imported goods prices, but you follow     a reverse pattern and use subsidies to lower national goods prices and make     them more competitive on the foreign market.  The agricultural problem is a      first concern for the G-21 demands and it should be noted that these     demands are not necessarily for lowering custom taxes or creating a     privileged position for the developing countries in the group, but for     respecting the conclusions of former WTO negotiations.  If trade is to be     liberalized, how can this be done in an environment of high subsidies from     developed countries'  How can the G-...     
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