Trade
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Item A political support model of tarief liberalization(1891) Pahre, RobertThis paper proposes a formal model of trade policy and tariff reciprocity encompassing variables from both domestic and international levels of analysis. It shows first the domestic political foundations of tariff reciprocity agreements. The model also makes predictions about how a country's tariffs will respond to international economic change and how domestic determines one state's reactions to the policy changes of another country. Many of these predictions depend critically on the presence or absence of tariff agreementsItem Asian studies on international economic relations co-sponsors : ICRIER and Marga institute(Marga Institute, 1969)Item Hoe the FEEC scheme come to be introduced(1970) Tilakaratna, W.M.Item GATT and environment(1972) Sorsa, PirittaItem Policy of the government of Sri lanka (Ceylon) on private foreign investment(The Ministry of Planning and Employment, Sri Lanka, 1972-06)Item Multinational corporations and the third world: the case of Japan and Southeast Asia(1973) Welnstein, Franklin B.Item Foreign commerce and solidarity contracts(1979) Chadha, I.S.; Tulloch, PeterItem Report of the Asian regional seminar in preparation for UNCTD V(Marga Institute, 1979-02)Item Report of Asian regional workshop on UNCTAD studies for the eighties(Marga Institute, 1979-11)Item The experience and lessons of Asia's superrt exporters(1980) Krueger, Anne OItem The timing and sequencing of a trade liberalization policy(1983-09) Michaely, MichaelItem Advertising a signal(1984) Kihlstrom, Richard E; Riordan, Michael HItem Beyond export-led growth(1984) Adelman, IrmaIn light of the adverse conditions in the current international economic environment, this paper reassesses the feasibility of continuing to rely on manufacturing export-led growth as the major development dynamic for most LDCs during the next decade. This paper argues that after the initial stages of industrial development, the emphasis in policy toward agriculture should shift from surplus extraction to surplus creation and to the generation of demand linkages with the rest of the economy. The author compares the relative merits of two alternative open development strategies - export-led industrialization and agricultural demand-led industrialization (ADLI) - by means of several simulation experiments. The experiments are performed with a computable general equilibrium model of a small,low income, semi-industrail, open economy which is a stylization of South Korea of 1963. They are carried cut in an international environment assumed to represent the next decade based on a rate of growth of international demand for imports of about half the 1960-73 rate. The results support the ADLI approach on all counts.Item Tea production in Sri Lanka: future outlook and mechanisms for enhancing sectoral performance(1984-07) Bandaranaike, R.DiasItem Commitee on studies for cooperation in development in South Asia (CSCD)(1984-10) Mohan, BrijItem Impact of the involvement of Thai gem traders in Sri Lanka's Gem industry(1984-12) Waidyanatha, W.G.S.Item Gains from export oriented industrialization in developing countries(Free University press, 1985) Verbruggen, Harmen