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- Rigged Rules and Double Standards
Rigged Rules and Double Standards
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Synopsis
Trade is one of the most powerful forces linking our lives, and a source of unprecedented wealth. Yet millions of the world's poorest people are being left behind. Increased prosperity has gone hand in hand with mass poverty. Already obscene inequalities between rich and poor are widening. World trade could be a powerful motor to reduce poverty, and support economic growth, but that potential is being lost. The problem is not that international trade is inherently opposed to the needs and interests of the poor, but that the rules that govern it are rigged in favour of the rich. If Africa, East Asia, South Asia, and Latin America were each to increase their share of world exports by one per cent, the resulting gains in income could lift 128 million people out of poverty. In Africa alone, this would generate USD70bn - approximately five times what the continent receives in aid. In their rhetoric, governments of rich countries constantly stress their commitment to poverty reduction. Yet in practice rigged rules and double standards lock poor people out of the benefits of trade, closing the door to an escape route from poverty. Reform of world trade is only one of the requirements for ending the deep social injustices that pervade globalisation. Action is also needed to reduce inequalities in health, education, and the distribution of income and opportunity, including those inequalities that exist between women and men. However, world trade rules are a key part of the poverty problem; fundamental reforms are needed to make them part of the solution. Oxfam's campaign, Make Trade Fair, aims to change world trade rules so that trade can make a real difference in the fight against global poverty. This report gives comprehensive research findings and analysis, presenting a powerful case for changes in trade laws, and a reform agenda to make these changes happen.
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Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Foreword
Executive summary
Introduction
Chapter 1
Trade and globalisation in the twenty-first century
Chapter 2
Trade as a force for poverty reduction
Chapter 3
Left behind: poor countries and poor people in the international trading system
Chapter 4
Market access and agricultural trade: the double standards of rich countries
Chapter 5
Trade liberalisation and the poor
Chapter 6
Primary commodities - trading into decline
Chapter 7
Transnational companies: investment, employment, and marketing
Chapter 8
International trade rules as an obstacle to development
Chapter 9
Making trade work for the poor
Notes
References
List of background research papers
Acronyms
Oxfam international addresses -
Details
Sub Title No Author Kevin Watkins Editor No Width (mm) 208mm Height (mm) 297mm Thickness (mm) 17mm Number of Pages 272 Number of Illustrations No Format Paperback / softback
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