The WTO, agriculture and sustainable development
Wohlmeyer, Heinrich ; Quendler, Theodor
Greenleaf Publishing - Sheffield
2002
424 p.
agricultural sector ; economic impact ; forestry ; globalization ; sustainable development ; WTO
Trade
English
Bibliogr.;Charts
1-874719-45-4
09-34346
"...And yet the concept of sustainability is referred to only tangentially in the existing WTO agenda. The WTO, Agriculture and Sustainable Development argues that, without a formal recognition of this failing, the premise that free trade is inherently advantageous for all countries is a falsehood. Further, unfettered liberalisation is unsustainable and a social and environmental multilateral framework must be agreed to reinterpret or adapt a host of WTO regulations that are at odds with sustainable development. The core problem is that, under the current system, import duties can only be differentiated by direct goods and services and not by their means of production—sustainable or otherwise. Therefore, a range of environmental policy measures in the agricultural sector, such as the consideration of product life-cycles, the internalisation of external costs and a coupling of trade liberalisation with ecological obligations are proposed by the authors. In addition, they argue that unsustainable economic short-termism must be curbed and the use of the stick of trade sanctions and the carrot of financial benefits for good environmental performance be permitted to promote sustainable agricultural practices...."
Paper
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