ABSTRACT

This study demonstrates why the global economy and global policies can only be understood by assigning equal importance to actors from different continents and international institutions. The contributors begin by examining the effects of reducing trade barriers through the WTO processes, and the implications for our understanding of market forces, the diminishing capacity of governments, consumer power, and the role of international agreements. They provide fascinating details on how the European Union and Japan develop their own strategies toward emerging Asian and Latin American states, quite separately from the United States.The focus then shifts toward integration processes in Latin America. The book concludes by attempting to make sense of the political principles underlying the complex economic policies of the main actors in today's global economy, focusing on development strategies offered by the World Bank.

chapter |23 pages

Introduction and Overview

part |70 pages

European Perspectives

chapter |24 pages

The WTO, Governments and Global Business

Who Decides the Shape of International Trade Relations?

part |67 pages

Asian Perspectives

chapter |16 pages

The Political Economy of ‘East Asian' Cooperation

Towards Better Regional and Global Governance

chapter |28 pages

Japan and Latin America

chapter |21 pages

An Assessment of the Impact of China's WTO Accession

A Comparative Perspective

part |76 pages

Latin American Perspectives

chapter |28 pages

Transformation in Latin America

Integration, Cooperation and Reforms

chapter |21 pages

Mercosur/l at Crossroads

Difficulties in the Integration Process or Neoliberalism's Crisis?

chapter |10 pages

Who is Integrating Whom?

Trade in the Perennial North-South Conflict