Principles of free trade agreements, from GATT 1947 through NAFTA Re-Negotiated 2018 / Ralph H. Folsom, professor of law, University of San Diego, A.B. Princeton University, J.D. Yale Law School, LL. M. London School of Economics.
2019
INTERNET
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Title
Principles of free trade agreements, from GATT 1947 through NAFTA Re-Negotiated 2018 / Ralph H. Folsom, professor of law, University of San Diego, A.B. Princeton University, J.D. Yale Law School, LL. M. London School of Economics.
Published
St. Paul, MN : West Academic Publishing, [2019]
Copyright
©2019
Call Number
INTERNET
Edition
First edition.
ISBN
9781684672523 (electronic bk.)
168467252X (electronic bk.)
9781640201309
1640201300
168467252X (electronic bk.)
9781640201309
1640201300
Description
1 online resource
System Control No.
on1100419334
(WestAcademic_OCoLC)1100419334
(WestAcademic_OCoLC)1100419334
Summary
"Free trade agreements (FTAs) have dominated global trade for over a decade. This dominance is likely to continue for many years on every continent. Already, more than half of all international trade takes place under FTAs. Principles of Free Trade Agreements, from GATT 1947 through NAFTA Re-Negotiated 2018 examines the origins of free trade agreements (FTAs) and customs unions (CUs) in Article 24 of the GATT 1947 agreement. Article 24 permits but attempts to regulate their creation, an effort that failed early on. A sleeping giant for decades, FTAs were re-awakened by the path-breaking Canada-U.S. FTA of 1989. In 1994, NAFTA triggered an onslaught of hundreds of FTAs around the globe, overwhelming the impact of the establishment of the World Trade Organization in 1995. The coverage, trade rules and trade remedies of the world's FTAs are remarkably and complexly diverse. Perhaps surprisingly, the hostility of President Trump to multilateral trade agreements like TPP-12, the WTO, the EU and NAFTA 1994, caused the number of FTAs to increase. America's trade partners and competitors rushed to secure trade deals not involving the USA. TPP-11, the Japan-EU FTA, the expanded Mexico-EU FTA, and the China-driven RCEP provide excellent examples. Meanwhile, despite being characterized by President Trump as "the worst trade deal ever", the United States, Canada and Mexico completed re-negotiation of NAFTA in 2018. All of this, and more, is covered in this book. Designed for students, lawyers, government officials and people in business, the author addresses the interests not only of Americans, but also those located outside the USA who are concerned about the law and economics of free trade agreements. Active links for the e-book and downloadable versions of this Concise Hornbook are provided throughout."--Publisher website
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Source of Description
Online resource; title from PDF file page (EBSCO, viewed May 8, 2019).
Series
Available in Other Form
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
The essentials of international trade and trade law
Regulating free trade agreements
European customs union and free trade agreements
CUSFTA 1989 and NAFTA 1994
The proliferation of free trade agreements
Trump and free trade
Investor-state arbitrations under FTAs and BITs
Appendix A: Consolidated, edited text of the USMCA 2018 agreement (ratification pending as of April 2019).
Regulating free trade agreements
European customs union and free trade agreements
CUSFTA 1989 and NAFTA 1994
The proliferation of free trade agreements
Trump and free trade
Investor-state arbitrations under FTAs and BITs
Appendix A: Consolidated, edited text of the USMCA 2018 agreement (ratification pending as of April 2019).