A General Theory of Trade and Competition: Trade Liberalisation and Competitive MarketsGeneral Theory of Trade... is the first academic or practitioner text book to establish a general theory of trade and competition and attempts to bring these two disciplines back together. Shanker Singham demonstrates that there is indeed a powerful interface between these two areas and that by understanding this interface practitioners, be they in governments, companies or law and economics firms can succeed in trade negotiations as well as build up support for free trade principles in a time when they are being increasingly challenged. By noting that consumer welfare is enhanced where trade liberalization is accompanied by competitive markets and property rights protection, the author articulates an overall vision in which future policymakers can frame a different kind of trade debate. |
Contents
Foreword | 7 |
Purpose of Trade Liberalisation and Competitive Markets | 13 |
Introduction to Institutions Underpinning Global Trade and Regulation | 51 |
The Role of Consumer Welfare in Competition Implementation and Enforcement 75 | 119 |
A Temporary Fix But A Constitutional | 141 |
A Trade Negotiation and Programme Case Study | 177 |
Chapter7 StateTrading Enterprises Beginnings of a Consumer Welfare Test | 201 |
The Role of Property Rights in Building | 223 |
General Introduction | 333 |
Electricity and | 341 |
Telecommunications | 365 |
Financial Services | 397 |
Impact of the New Media Economy | 435 |
Postal Services | 473 |
Distortions in Distribution Sector | 499 |
Some Suggestions | 537 |
The Triple Interface Between Intellectual Property Competition and Trade 265 | 283 |
PART 3 | 296 |
About the Author | 551 |
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Common terms and phrases
activity actually agency agreement allow analysis anti-competitive antitrust applied approach areas Article Bank behaviour benefits cent Chapter Commission commitments Communities companies compete competition competitors concerns considered consumer welfare context cost countries Court deal Dealer decision discussed distort distribution domestic economic effects efficiency enhancing ensure European example export fact firms foreign GATT impact important increase industry innovation intellectual property interests investment issue Japan lead less licensing limited look lower means measure monopoly natural negotiations noted notion obligations operate panel particular party patent position postal potential practices principle privatisation problem property rights protection provides question reason reduce regulation regulatory remedy Report restrictions result rules sector significant specific sugar tariff telecoms trade treatment violation