Submitted by crinadmin on
Summary: Trade can be an engine for growth that lifts millions of people out of poverty, but many developing countries face constraints that prevent them from participating in the global trading system. Even if trade rules are radically reformed and a pro-development round is achieved at the WTO Ministerial in Hong Kong in December 2005, current ‘behind the borders’ problems mean that poor countries will continue to lose out on the potential benefits of global trade.
Oxfam Briefing Notes on Trade: What happened in Hong Kong? Initial analysis of the WTO Ministerial Blood on the floor: How the rich countries have squeezed development out of the WTO Doha negotiations Truth or consequences: why the EU and USA must reform their subsidies or pay the price Green but not clean: Why a comprehensive review of Green Box subsidies is necessary Non-agricultural market access (NAMA) talks threaten development: Six reasons why a fundamentally different approach is needed The impact of the second-hand clothing trade on developing countries A Round for Free: How rich countries are getting a free ride on agricultural subsidies at the WTO Critique of the EC’s Action Plan for ACP countries affected by EU sugar reform Making trade work for development in 2005: What the EU should do Kicking Down the Door: How forthcoming World Trade Organisation talks threaten poor-country farmers A Sweeter Future? The potential for EU sugar reform to contribute to poverty reduction in southern Africa Finding the Moral Fibre: Why reform is urgently needed for a fair cotton trade Dumping: The Beginning of the End? Dumping on the World: How EU sugar policies hurt poor countries One Minute to Midnight: Will WTO negotiations in July deliver a meaningful agreement? Bitter Sugar: How unfair trade affects China's sugar industry Robbing the Poor to Pay the Rich? How the United States keeps medicines from the world's poorest US bullying on drug patents: One year after Doha The Euro-Mediterranean Agreements: Partnership or Penury? Time to Make Trade Fair in 2003 Milking the CAP: How Europe's dairy regime is devastating livelihoods in the developing world Boxing Match in Agricultural Trade: will WTO negotiations knock out the world's poorest farmers? Stop the Dumping! How EU agricultural subidies are damaging livelihoods in the developing world Cultivating Poverty: The Impact of US Cotton Subsidies on Africa Death on the doorstep of the Summit The Great EU Sugar Scam: How Europe's sugar regime is devastating livelihoods in the developing world The Challenge to the EU: Stop the Sugar Dumping Europe's double standards: how the EU should reform its trade policies with the developing world Trade, globalisation and poverty: why the rules of the game matter
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