Pursuing WTO accession: Advantages and disadvantages for South Sudan Charles Data Alemi, Jaime de Melo and Astrid R.N. Introduction1 The World Trade Organisation (WTO) is the international forum for establishing and policing the rules for international trade. Relative Advantages and Disadvantages of Retrospective and Prospective. As discussed later in the report, prospective AD systems tend to fall within three general. Relative Advantages and Disadvantages of Retrospective and Prospective Antidumping and Countervailing Duty Collection Systems.
The advantages and disadvantages of GATT are as follows:
Advantages:
i. Membership of WTO is a step towards globalisation with a potential of accelerated economic growth and gains from trade and capital flows.
ii. Even though WTO commitments demand a country’s phased movement towards liberalisation and globalisation, there is no harm per se in going this route; only, it should proceed cautiously and judiciously. A developing country’s economy should be sufficiently resilient and be ready to accept reforms if wants to grow and modernise.
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iii. In addition to strengthening traditional export markets, membership of WTO provides a better scope for exploring and developing new export markets and sources of inputs. This fact is of special importance to developing countries because development of export markets boosts growth multipliers.
Disadvantages
i. Conceptually, compatibility with WTO framework demands that the economy of a member country should be primarily market-oriented. This limitation is particularly hard for developing and poor countries which suffer from the ills of mass poverty and other similar problems.
ii. A country seeking membership of WTO does not have the choice of seeing specific components and opting out of the others.
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It cannot acquire membership of WTO without accepting all Agreements of WTO in their totality. For this reason, a member country is obliged to pursue a path of liberalisation and globalisation at a pace—and on conditions—determined by others.
iii. A developing country can hope to derive optimum benefit from its membership of WTO only by improving the performance of its economy because of the competitive environment in which it has to operate. It has to adapt quickly in order to survive in open waters.
iv. A developing country has to deal with the manoeuvres of the corporate sector of the developed countries. It must also face the reality that developed countries tend to pursue double standards, and learn to cope as best it can with uneven playing fields.
Advantages And Disadvantages Teacher
Developed countries keep raising new issues for inclusion into agenda of negotiations and these issues, instead of being advantageous to developing countries, are invariably disadvantageous to them. In other words, poorer members of WTO have to be constantly on the defensive for safeguarding their interests.