Commentaries
Samnang Chea and Hach Sok - Samnang Chea is a researcher at the Economic Institute of Cambodia, specializing in the WTO and globalization. Hach Sok is Director of the Economic Institute of Cambodia. I. The problem in context
MorePedro da Motta Veiga - CNI (Confederação Nacional da Indústria), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. I. Introduction
MoreKennedy K. Mbekeani - Senior Research Fellow, Botswana Institute for Development Policy Analysis (BIDPA). I. The problem in context Participation in the WTO
MoreJ. P. Singh - Communication, Culture and Technology Program, Georgetown University, Washington, DC.I. The problem in context
More1. Having met in order to conclude the Uruguay Round of Multilateral Trade Negotiations, representatives of the governments and of the European Communities, members of the Trade Negotiations Committee, agree that the Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization (referred to in this Final Act as the "WTO Agreement"), the Ministerial Declarations and Decisions, and the Understanding on Commitments in Financial Services, as annexed hereto, embody the results of their negotiations and form an integral part of this Final Act.
MoreNiel Joubert*
MoreAmir Muhammed and Wajid H. Pirzada* I. The problem in context
MoreChakriya Bowman* I. The problem in context
MoreLim Chze Cheen* As Malaysia begins to position itself strategically in the knowledge-based economy, the services sector has been earmarked as its next engine of growth. This idea, in its rudimentary form at least, has been bounced around the discussion circles of policy-makers, policy scholars and various other intellectuals involved in influencing national policy for more than a decade now. Indeed, the importance of the services sector to further Malaysia’s economic growth has been increasingly highlighted in the country’s various development plans.
MoreJunsok Yang* I. The problem in context
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