ABSTRACT

This book provides a longitudinal study of developing country involvement in multilateral trade negotiations.

The trade regime established at the end of the Second World War did not cater for, and in some cases excluded, the developmental interests of the newly independent countries. This book offers a detailed analysis of:

  • The first attempts to revise the trade regime in the 1960s through the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development and the formation of the Group of 77 to enhance their bargaining potential.
  • The mixed coalition strategy, with the Cairns Group in the Uruguay Round of GATT.
  • The new bargaining coalition, the Group of Twenty, that took on a much more confrontational and assertive bargaining position in the unsuccessful Doha round of the World Trade Organization.

In part two, the author explores the possibility that economic globalization may finally deliver to developing countries what they had failed to achieve in five decades of multilateral negotiations - an opportunity to climb the industrialization ladder and achieve development. The book offers a proposal for revising the format of trade negotiations in a way that helps overcome stalemates and deadlocks.

Trade, Development and Globalization will be of interest to students and scholars of international trade, trade and development, negotiation, global governance, political economy, international relations and economics.

chapter 1|30 pages

Introduction

part I|76 pages

Developing countries in multilateral negotiations

chapter 2|18 pages

Southern coalitions in trade negotiations

chapter 3|17 pages

The G77 and UNCTAD

chapter 4|20 pages

The Cairns Group and the Uruguay Round

chapter 5|19 pages

The G20 in the Doha Round

part II|58 pages

Developing countries, globalization and institutional reforms

chapter 6|25 pages

Economic globalization and development

chapter 7|21 pages

Reforming the architecture of world trade

chapter 8|10 pages

Conclusion