🔴 LIVE NOW: Strategic Autonomy and Europe's Shattered Single Market
Tune in to our webinar with @MatBauerEcon,… https://t.co/6FyofdrGIdHow does Europe make #digital policy and how can it be improved? What role plays the #D9+ group?
Read our paper an… https://t.co/3VGSwCfYH0📣 New Publication!
Expectations of what a #UK outside of the #EU could achieve were exaggerated, but nonetheless,… https://t.co/NDYqfJvrJP📣 New Publication!
Expectations of what a #UK outside of the #EU could achieve were exaggerated, but
nonetheless, t… https://t.co/n6TsilU8UnWant to learn more about #StrategicAutonomy and
📌potential economic costs
📌asymmetries in impacts on small & large… https://t.co/yLub1PkaUE
This Policy Brief concerns the troubled state of the Doha Round. The classical model for a multilateral trade negotiation (as developed from the GATT years and commonly called a Round) would include trade liberalisation through tariff reductions and elimination of non-tariff barriers, with an expectation of active participation by around 40 countries who would collectively account for 90% of world trade. Many GATT members were thus peripheral to the process. Among other consequences this led to skewed results with much less progress in areas where developing countries had a major interest, but where the main players had a defensive attitude such as agriculture and textiles