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pobreza economíaeconomía socialsocial análisisanálisis unauna encuestaencuesta ennivennivsozialer wandelsocial change1994 1997
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Years of publications: 1999 - 1999

13 records from EconBiz based on author Name Information logo


1. China's Emerging Regional Trade Policy

abstract

The purpose of this paper is to provide a timely review and analysis of China's regional trade agreements, its motivations, and its economic implications for Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)-China Free Trade Agreement (ACFTA) member countries and other trading partners. The paper uses the SMART model of the World Integrated Trade Solution to quantify the economic implications of the ACFTA on merchandise trade flows among member countries and other trading partners. Then, for comparative purposes, the impact of two possible paths beyond the ACFTA is simulated: an East Asia Free Trade Agreement (EAFTA) and the possible Doha Round multilateral trade liberalization. The paper finds that, if regional and bilateral trade arrangement (RTA) were only concentrated in tariff reductions, the impact on trade flows would be quite limited. China's trade liberalization will bring the similar impacts to ASEAN in three of the scenarios modeled. Japan and Korea would get more market access to China if an EAFTA were to become reality. Only in a multilateral liberalization would all RTA member countries and the rest of the world benefit. Three limitations are noteworthy. First, these types of models capture only static gains from trade. Second, the simulations do not include services liberalization, which could readily provide benefits in several multiples of merchandise trade, and third, it is assumed that full removal of all border barriers at once, in a multilateral scenario, would be of illuminating heuristic value but is unlikely to occur in reality. The paper demonstrates the wisdom of China's simultaneous pursuit of unilateral, regional, and multilateral liberalization--because the wider the trading group involved in the liberalization, the more China and its partners will benefit. The tariff reductions in RTAs will have limited effects on expanding merchandise trade, especially when compared with comprehensive and multilateral liberalization agreements.

Zhao, Longyue; Malouche, Mariem; Newfarmer, Richard S.;
2008
Availability: Link Link

2. Trade Remedies and Non-Market Economies : Economic Implications of the First Us Countervailing Duty Case on China

abstract

In 2007, the United States Department of Commerce altered a 23-year old policy of not applying the countervailing duty law to non-market economies, and initiated eight countervailing and antidumping duty investigations on Chinese imports. The change brings heated debate on trade remedy policies and issues of non-market economies. This study focuses on the first countervailing duty case on imported coated free sheet paper from China and analyzes the implications of this test case for United States-China bilateral trade, and industrial policies in transitioning market economies. The paper also provides a brief review of the economics of subsidies, World Trade Organization rules on subsides and countervailing measures, and United States countervailing duty laws applied to non-market economies. While recently acceded countries should review their domestic development policies from the perspective of economic efficiency and comply with the World Trade Organization rules, it is also important to further clarify the issues of non-market economies under the multilateral trading system, and pay keen attention to the rules negotiations in the current World Trade Organization Doha Development Round

Zhao, Longyue; Wang, Yan;
2017
Availability: Link

3. Trade remedies and non-market economies : economic implications of the first US countervailing duty case on China

Zhao, Longyue; Wang, Yan;
2008
Type: Arbeitspapier; Working Paper; Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature;
Availability: The PDF logo Link
Citations: 2 (based on OpenCitations)

4. China's emerging regional trade policy

Zhao, Longyue; Malouche, Mariem; Newfarmer, Richard S.;
2008
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;

5. Trade Remedies and Non-Market Economies : Economic Implications of the First US Countervailing Duty Case on China

abstract

In 2007, the United States Department of Commerce altered a 23-year old policy of not applying the countervailing duty law to non-market economies, and initiated eight countervailing and antidumping duty investigations on Chinese imports. The change brings heated debate on trade remedy policies and issues of non-market economies. This study focuses on the first countervailing duty case on imported coated free sheet paper from China and analyzes the implications of this test case for United States-China bilateral trade, and industrial policies in transitioning market economies. The paper also provides a brief review of the economics of subsidies, World Trade Organization rules on subsides and countervailing measures, and United States countervailing duty laws applied to non-market economies. While recently acceded countries should review their domestic development policies from the perspective of economic efficiency and comply with the World Trade Organization rules, it is also important to further clarify the issues of non-market economies under the multilateral trading system, and pay keen attention to the rules negotiations in the current World Trade Organization Doha Development Round.

Zhao, Longyue; Wang, Yan;
2012
Availability: Link Link

6. China's Pattern of Trade and Growth after WTO Accession : Lessons for Other Developing Countries

abstract

World Trade Organization (WTO) accession marked a new beginning for China's economic, legal and institutional reforms and rapid integration with the rest of the world. The purpose of this paper is to review China's post-WTO transition experience, synthesize and update studies on China's pattern of trade and structural transformation, and provide both positive and negative lessons for other developing countries. The paper has broadly reviewed the latest policy changes after China's WTO accession, and literatures on China's trade and economic development issues in order to understand the Chinese success and its speciality, and draw some useful lessons for both China's decision-makers and other developing countries. There are two main findings: first, market liberalization alone is not sufficient, and economic system reform and the liberalization are closely related and complement and promote each other. Second, experimentations via special economic zones (SEZs) and opening to foreign direct investment (FDI), which facilitated and supported cluster development and learning-by-doing, are needed for industrial upgrading and export competitiveness.

Zhao, Longyue; Wang, Yan;
2009
Availability: Link

7. Trade remedies and non-market economies : economic implications of the first US countervailing duty case on China

Zhao, Longyue; Wang, Yan;
2008
Availability: The PDF logo

8. Trade Remedies And Non-Market Economies : Economic Implications of The First US Countervailing Duty Case On China

abstract

In 2007, the United States Department of Commerce altered a 23-year old policy of not applying the countervailing duty law to non-market economies, and initiated eight countervailing and antidumping duty investigations on Chinese imports. The change brings heated debate on trade remedy policies and issues of non-market economies. This study focuses on the first countervailing duty case on imported coated free sheet paper from China and analyzes the implications of this test case for United States-China bilateral trade, and industrial policies in transitioning market economies. The paper also provides a brief review of the economics of subsidies, World Trade Organization rules on subsides and countervailing measures, and United States countervailing duty laws applied to non-market economies. While recently acceded countries should review their domestic development policies from the perspective of economic efficiency and comply with the World Trade Organization rules, it is also important to further clarify the issues of non-market economies under the multilateral trading system, and pay keen attention to the rules negotiations in the current World Trade Organization Doha Development Round

Zhao, Longyue; Zhao, Longyue; Wang, Yan;
2008
Availability: Link

9. China's emerging regional trade policy

Longyue, Zhao; Malouche, Mariem; Newfarmer, Richard;
2008

10. China's pattern of trade and growth after WTO accession : Lessons for other developing countries

Zhao, Longyue; Wang, Yan;
2009
Type: review-article;
Availability: Link

The information on the author is retrieved from: Entity Facts (by DNB = German National Library data service), DBPedia and Wikidata

Juan Julio Wicht Rossel


Alternative spellings:
Juan Julio Wicht

B: 1932
Biblio: geb. Salaverry, Perú. 1963: ord. sacerdote SJ, lic. en Filosofía, Teol. y Economía, Ph.D. en Economía (Harvard). 1998: Catedr. de Economía, Univ. del Pacífico

External links

  • Gemeinsame Normdatei (GND) im Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek
  • NACO Authority File
  • Virtual International Authority File (VIAF)
  • International Standard Name Identifier (ISNI)


  • Publishing years

    1
      1999

    Series