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Yes, we need to reduce dishonesty and corruption among our corporations, but we should look to our political class as well.
This book analyzes tariff concessions in the Uruguay Round and implications for international trade.
Regulations for international trade in the service sectors (for instance, cross-border transactions by banks, insurance companies, the legal profession, accounting, telecommunications) were first negotiated in the Uruguay Round (1986-1994). At the end of that round, many observers argued that only a skeletal framework had been constructed for services and...
The Legatum Institute's Prosperity Index helps answer the question of how to promote prosperity in Latin America.
Over the past five years, Latin American politics has lurched decidedly to the left. Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Uruguay, and Venezuela now all have left-leaning presidents, and left-leaning candidates are serious contenders in the forthcoming Mexican and Peruvian presidential elections.
Panelists at this event will discuss the underlying reasons for Latin...
The inability to reach consensus has been a central obstacle to a Doha agreement in the World Trade Organization, so it is worthwhile to consider alternative paths to advance without complete agreement from all 153 members of the WTO.
One of the main goals of the new World Trade Organization (WTO) dispute settlement system, established during the Uruguay Round, was to diminish the power disparities between large developed economies and smaller developing ones by giving the less developed countries a more accessible forum to air their trade grievances.
...Roger F. Noriega discusses the issues that are likely to drive U.S.-Latin American relations in 2010.





