World Trade - August 2008 - (Page 8) POLICY PERSPECTIVES Helping the World’s Poorest Nations Benefit from Global Trade he theory that trade is good for development is not really in doubt. The Peterson Institute for International Economics, for one, has estimated that global free trade could end poverty for 500 million people over 15 years. Most other economists, including at BY M. JEAN ANDERSON AND PATRICK MACRORY the World Bank and the OECD, have concluded that lowering trade barriers—unilaterally, regionally, or globally—is one of the most effective ways to “develop out of poverty.” But to make the theory a reality, developing countries must be able to negotiate trade agreements that enable them to get the benefits of trade. As yet, that has proved highly problematic. A major reason is that developing countries do not have a great deal of leverage when negotiating Developing trade agreements with the developed countries, which have many ways to exert pressure on the countries must developing countries, for example, by implicitly threatening to cut back on or withdraw aid. be able to This is a reality that is hard to change. However, another handicap for the poorer developing negotiate trade countries is simply a lack of human capacity. For example, Zambia, which is one of the agreements that world’s least developed countries, has a stable enable them to government and a liberal trade regime, but its resources for negotiating trade agreements get the benefits are limited to a small handful of officials. Yet Zambia is in virtually non-stop international of trade. trade negotiations: in the Doha Round, in two overlapping regional associations that are As yet, that has aiming to create African common markets, and, like many other former European colonies, in a proved highly lopsided and time-pressured negotiation with the EU to replace preferential access to the EU problematic. market with a reciprocal “Economic Partnership Agreement” (EPA), under which goods from the EU will also have duty-free access to the developing country markets. In order to help level the playing field, the International Senior Lawyers Project (ISLP), founded in 2000 to promote equitable economic development (along with the rule of law and human rights) has implemented a program to help develop trade negotiation skills in developing countries. In the last three years, 8 WORLD TRADE AUGUST 2008 T ISLP has conducted trade negotiation workshops in Botswana, Rwanda, and Zambia, and it is planning future workshops in other leastdeveloped countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. The Zambia workshop, which was funded by a generous grant from the Hewlett Foundation, was conducted by three trainers. One had been a lead U.S. negotiator for the U.S.Canada FTA, another the head of the African Center for the Constructive Resolution of Disputes (ACCORD), based in South Africa. The workshop participants—14 from the government, three from the private sector— included lead trade negotiators and others with no exposure to trade negotiations at all. The highlight of the workshop was a two-day simulated negotiation, which the participants threw themselves into with great gusto. All agreed that the workshop had taught them a great deal about the techniques of negotiating trade agreements. . The experience underscored how critical capacity building is for trade negotiations for countries like Zambia. If the EPA with the EU is not negotiated effectively, a deluge of imports from Europe could cripple Zambia’s efforts to diversify its economy and to encourage valueadded industries. It appears that in the EPA negotiations the EU used a “divide-and-conquer” approach, putting pressure on individual countries to sign in order to continue their preferential access to the EU. Once one country had signed, the pressure on its neighbors to sign was enormous, since if they did not sign, their exports to the European market would be at a competitive disadvantage vis-à-vis the signer. Perhaps the developing countries would have been able to strike a better bargain with the EU if they had taken a unified approach. However, as explained above, the least-developed countries have little substantive leverage. But improving their technical negotiating skills may enable them to strike better bargains. WT M. Jean Anderson, a Partner at Weil Gotshal & Manges LLP, practices international trade law in the firm’s Washington, D.C. office. Patrick Macrory, formerly an international trade lawyer in Washington, is the Trade Negotiation Training Program Manager for the International Senior Lawyers Project and Director of the International Trade Law Center of the International Law Institute.
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of World Trade - August 2008 World Trade - August 2008 Contents Weathering the Storm Helping the World’s Poorest Nations Benefit from Global Trade Supply Chain Watch Tradewinds World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners LTL Shipping ‘On the Fly’ Air Cargo Flies a New Heading Getting More from China Sourcing Why 3PLs Need a Seat at the C-TPAT Table Performance-based Supply Chains Drive Total Lifecycle Value SmartWay Navigates Sustainable Transportation Around the World in 80 Days—Hours—Minutes World Trade - August 2008 World Trade - August 2008 - (Page Intro) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade - August 2008 (Page 1) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade - August 2008 (Page 2) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade - August 2008 (Page 3) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade - August 2008 (Page 4) World Trade - August 2008 - Contents (Page 5) World Trade - August 2008 - Contents (Page 6) World Trade - August 2008 - Weathering the Storm (Page 7) World Trade - August 2008 - Helping the World’s Poorest Nations Benefit from Global Trade (Page 8) World Trade - August 2008 - Helping the World’s Poorest Nations Benefit from Global Trade (Page 9) World Trade - August 2008 - Supply Chain Watch (Page 10) World Trade - August 2008 - Supply Chain Watch (Page 11) World Trade - August 2008 - Tradewinds (Page 12) World Trade - August 2008 - Tradewinds (Page 13) World Trade - August 2008 - Tradewinds (Page 14) World Trade - August 2008 - Tradewinds (Page 15) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 16) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 17) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 18) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 19) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 20) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 21) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 22) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 23) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 24) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 25) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 26) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 27) World Trade - August 2008 - LTL Shipping ‘On the Fly’ (Page 28) World Trade - August 2008 - LTL Shipping ‘On the Fly’ (Page 29) World Trade - August 2008 - LTL Shipping ‘On the Fly’ (Page 30) World Trade - August 2008 - LTL Shipping ‘On the Fly’ (Page 31) World Trade - August 2008 - LTL Shipping ‘On the Fly’ (Page 32) World Trade - August 2008 - LTL Shipping ‘On the Fly’ (Page 33) World Trade - August 2008 - Air Cargo Flies a New Heading (Page 34) World Trade - August 2008 - Air Cargo Flies a New Heading (Page 35) World Trade - August 2008 - Air Cargo Flies a New Heading (Page 36) World Trade - August 2008 - Air Cargo Flies a New Heading (Page 37) World Trade - August 2008 - Getting More from China Sourcing (Page 38) World Trade - August 2008 - Getting More from China Sourcing (Page 39) World Trade - August 2008 - Getting More from China Sourcing (Page 40) World Trade - August 2008 - Getting More from China Sourcing (Page 41) World Trade - August 2008 - Getting More from China Sourcing (Page 42) World Trade - August 2008 - Getting More from China Sourcing (Page 43) World Trade - August 2008 - Why 3PLs Need a Seat at the C-TPAT Table (Page 44) World Trade - August 2008 - Why 3PLs Need a Seat at the C-TPAT Table (Page 45) World Trade - August 2008 - Why 3PLs Need a Seat at the C-TPAT Table (Page 46) World Trade - August 2008 - Why 3PLs Need a Seat at the C-TPAT Table (Page 47) World Trade - August 2008 - Performance-based Supply Chains Drive Total Lifecycle Value (Page 48) World Trade - August 2008 - Performance-based Supply Chains Drive Total Lifecycle Value (Page 49) World Trade - August 2008 - Performance-based Supply Chains Drive Total Lifecycle Value (Page 50) World Trade - August 2008 - SmartWay Navigates Sustainable Transportation (Page 51) World Trade - August 2008 - SmartWay Navigates Sustainable Transportation (Page 52) World Trade - August 2008 - SmartWay Navigates Sustainable Transportation (Page 53) World Trade - August 2008 - Around the World in 80 Days—Hours—Minutes (Page 54) World Trade - August 2008 - Around the World in 80 Days—Hours—Minutes (Page 55) World Trade - August 2008 - Around the World in 80 Days—Hours—Minutes (Page 56) World Trade - August 2008 - Around the World in 80 Days—Hours—Minutes (Page Map1) World Trade - August 2008 - Around the World in 80 Days—Hours—Minutes (Page Map2)
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