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- World Trade Report 2009
- Chapter
Trade policy commitments and contingency measure
- By: World Trade Organization
- Source: World Trade Report 2009 , pp 19-160
- Publication Date: July 2009
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.30875/c2f5c60d-en
- Language: English French, Spanish
Trade agreements define rules for the conduct of trade policy. These rules must strike a balance between commitments and flexibility. Too much flexibility may undermine the value of commitments, but too little f lexibility may render the rules politically unsustainable. This tension between credible commitments and flexibility is often close to the surface during trade negotiations. For example, the question of a “special safeguard mechanism” (the extent to which developing countries would be allowed to protect farmers from import surges) was crucial in the discussion of the July 2008 mini-ministerial meeting, which sought to agree negotiating modalities – or a final blueprint – for agriculture and non-agricultural market access (NAMA).
Related Topics:
Anti-dumping, subsidies, safeguards
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Economic research and trade policy analysis
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Trade monitoring
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