International Trade in Services : New Trends and Opportunities for Developing Countries
Keywords
ENVIRONMENTALTRANSPORT SECTORS
FAMILIES
PREFERENTIAL
MARKET ACCESS
DOMESTIC REGULATION
NATURAL MONOPOLIES
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
MARKET FAILURES
NEGATIVE EXTERNALITIES
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
SERVICES RESTRICTIONS
INCOME
FRAUD
MODES OF SUPPLY
MARKET SHARE
DEREGULATION
DOMESTIC ECONOMY
PRIVACY
BEST PRACTICES
REGULATORY AUTHORITY
QUALITY STANDARDS
FOREIGN PROVIDERS
SERVICES TRADE
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
BANK MANAGEMENT
FINANCIAL SYSTEM
MEDIA
LOCAL BANK
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
DOMESTIC PROVIDERS
CAPITAL MOBILITY
BEST PRACTICE
MULTILATERAL TRADING SYSTEM
MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES
SERVICE SECTOR
COMPLETE LIBERALIZATION
CONFIDENCE
SURGERY
ECONOMIC GROWTH
AUDITORS
PUBLIC HEALTH
ADVERSE SELECTION
FOREIGN PROFESSIONALS
FOREIGN MARKET
BUSINESS RISK
CARTELS
CROSS-BORDER TRADE
BANKING SERVICES
TAX
SERVICES SECTOR
ABUSE
WTO
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
MIGRANTS
DECISION MAKING
COMPLAINT
BUSINESS PRACTICES
WORKERS
OUTSOURCING
COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
FOREIGN COMPANY
DOMESTIC SUPPLIERS
MARKET STRUCTURE
WORLD TRADE
LAWYERS
FOREIGN PARTICIPATION
ENGINEERING SERVICES
INTERNATIONAL TRANSACTIONS
IMPROVED MARKET ACCESS
CONSUMER PROTECTION
WELFARE GAINS
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
ENHANCED COMPETITION
SOCIAL SAFETY NETS
MORAL HAZARD
DOMESTIC REGULATIONS
MARKET LIBERALIZATION
TRANSACTION COSTS
REGIONAL TRADE
DISTRIBUTION SERVICES
URBANIZATION
HEALTH CARE
NATURAL RESOURCES
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
JUSTICE
NATIONAL TREATMENT
EDUCATIONAL SERVICES
FOREIGN AFFILIATES
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFERS
COMMERCIAL PRESENCE
CONSUMPTION ABROAD
GATS
NEW MARKETS
SERVICE TRANSACTIONS
FREE TRADE
AUDITS
MARKET ACCESS OPPORTUNITIES
SERVICE SECTORS
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
HOME COUNTRIES
BONDS
FINANCIAL SERVICE
SERVICE ACTIVITIES
TRANSPARENCY
LIABILITY
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
REMEDY
REGULATORS
REGULATORY BARRIERS
COPYRIGHT CLEARANCE
ECONOMIC POINT OF VIEW
UNIVERSAL ACCESS
RETAIL SERVICES
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
SERVICES SUPPLIER
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
CORRUPTION
SERVICES LIBERALIZATION
ADVERSE EFFECTS
TRADE RESTRICTIONS
PATIENTS
SOCIAL POLICY
SOLICITATION
SERVICE QUALITY
PHYSICIANS
INTANGIBLE
SOCIAL SERVICES
CONSUMER CHOICE
LABOR COSTS
INTANGIBLE ASSETS
BINDING CONSTRAINTS
EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS
COST STRUCTURE
FINANCIAL STABILITY
RECOGNITION AGREEMENTS
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
PRESENCE OF NATURAL PERSONS
MARKETING
SERVICE DELIVERY
PREFERENTIAL TREATMENT
GOOD GOVERNANCE
DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
PUBLIC GOOD
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
BUSINESS SERVICES
PROCUREMENT
ACCOUNTING
MULTINATIONAL
COMPETITION PRINCIPLES
PROPERTY RIGHTS
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
FINANCIAL FLOWS
DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN MARKETS
SERVICE SUPPLY
COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
PATIENT
FOREIGN OWNERSHIP
COPYRIGHT CLEARANCE CENTER
SKILLED LABOR
MARKET DEVELOPMENT
INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN SERVICES
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
ASSETS
DOMESTIC SUPPLY
POLICY MAKERS
LABOR FORCE
FREE TRADE AGREEMENT
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
HEALTH SERVICES
DEPOSIT
INFORMATION ASYMMETRIES
ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES
NURSING
HUMAN CAPITAL
CONNECTIVITY
SKILLED WORKERS
WORLD ECONOMY
UNEMPLOYMENT
PROVISION OF SERVICES
DEVELOPING COUNTRY
TRANSPORT SERVICES
SERVICE SUPPLIERS
SERVICES SECTORS
CAPITAL CONSTRAINTS
SOCIAL OBJECTIVES
SERVICE SUPPLIER
COMMERCIAL SERVICES
ECONOMICS
SERVICE PROVIDER
CONSTRUCTION SERVICES
DOMESTIC COMPETITION
INITIATIVE
PUBLIC POLICY
FOREIGN SUPPLIERS
TRADING PARTNERS
NURSES
DOMESTIC MARKET
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
MOVEMENT OF NATURAL PERSONS
PRODUCERS
COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGIES
FINANCIAL SERVICES
SERVICES TRANSACTIONS
FOREIGN CAPITAL
TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS
TRADING SERVICES
MIGRATION
FOREIGN COMPANIES
ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/2476Abstract
International trade in services also provides an assessment of how policy makers can further bolster their service industries by leveraging the changes prompted by technological advancements. The book provides policy recommendations that include the reduction of barriers to services trade across all sectors and the promotion of health- and environment-related development policies that should be promoted in parallel with a burgeoning services market. The first recommendation is considered the most important, because it focuses on the need to ensure trade openness, which helps ensure the access to services and promotes the quality of services provision through foreign and domestic competition. Moreover, the issue of temporary movement of labor is another focus of this book, given that it is one of the most important means of service exports for developing countries. This is an issue that is considered technically complex and politically sensitive because of its political and security implications. The book examines mechanisms that have been used by various countries to liberalize the temporary movement of persons and concludes that regardless of the negotiating forum- multilateral, regional, or bilateral-the policy making results on temporary movement of labor are, so far, modest and limited to a small range of categories. However, it proposes alternative ways to move forward that require further analysis by countries and relevant international organizations, including the World Bank.Date
2012-03-19Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/2476978-0-8213-8353-7
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/2476
Copyright/License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
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International Trade in Services :
 New Trends and Opportunities for Developing CountriesStern, Robert M.; Sáez, Sebastián; Cattaneo, Olivier; Engman, Michael (World Bank, 2012-03-19)International trade in services also
 provides an assessment of how policy makers can further
 bolster their service industries by leveraging the changes
 prompted by technological advancements. The book provides
 policy recommendations that include the reduction of
 barriers to services trade across all sectors and the
 promotion of health- and environment-related development
 policies that should be promoted in parallel with a
 burgeoning services market. The first recommendation is
 considered the most important, because it focuses on the
 need to ensure trade openness, which helps ensure the access
 to services and promotes the quality of services provision
 through foreign and domestic competition. Moreover, the
 issue of temporary movement of labor is another focus of
 this book, given that it is one of the most important means
 of service exports for developing countries. This is an
 issue that is considered technically complex and politically
 sensitive because of its political and security
 implications. The book examines mechanisms that have been
 used by various countries to liberalize the temporary
 movement of persons and concludes that regardless of the
 negotiating forum- multilateral, regional, or bilateral-the
 policy making results on temporary movement of labor are, so
 far, modest and limited to a small range of categories.
 However, it proposes alternative ways to move forward that
 require further analysis by countries and relevant
 international organizations, including the World Bank.
-
Regulatory Cooperation, Aid for Trade and the General Agreement on Trade in ServicesHoekman, Bernard; Mattoo, Aaditya (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2012-06-08)This paper discusses what could be done
 to expand services trade and investment through a
 multilateral agreement in the World Trade Organization. A
 distinction is made between market access liberalization and
 the regulatory preconditions for benefiting from market
 opening. The authors argue that prospects for multilateral
 services liberalization would be enhanced by making national
 treatment the objective of World Trade Organization services
 negotiations, thereby clarifying the scope of World Trade
 Organization commitments for regulators. Moreover,
 liberalization by smaller and poorer members of the World
 Trade Organization would be facilitated by complementary
 actions to strengthen regulatory capacity. If pursued as
 part of the operationalization of the World Trade
 Organization's 2006 Aid for Trade taskforce report, the
 World Trade Organization could become more relevant in
 promoting not just services liberalization but, more
 importantly, domestic reforms of services policies.
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Services Trade Liberalization and Regulatory Reform : Re-invigorating International CooperationHoekman, Bernard; Mattoo, Aaditya (2011-01-01)Trade and investment in services are
 inhibited by a range of policy restrictions, but the best
 offers so far in the Doha negotiations are on average twice
 as restrictive as actual policy. They will generate no
 additional market opening. Regulatory concerns help explain
 the limited progress. This paper develops two proposals to
 enhance the prospects for both liberalization of services
 trade and regulatory reform. The first is for governments to
 create mechanisms ("services knowledge platforms")
 to bring together regulators, trade officials, and
 stakeholders to discuss services regulatory reform. Such
 mechanisms could identify reform priorities and
 opportunities for utilization of "aid for trade"
 resources, thereby putting in place the preconditions for
 future market opening. The second proposal is for a new
 approach to negotiations in the World Trade Organization,
 with a critical mass of countries that account for the bulk
 of services production agreeing to lock-in applied levels of
 protection and pre-committing to reform of policies
 affecting foreign direct investment and international
 movement for individual service providers -- two areas where
 current policy is most restrictive and potential benefits
 from liberalization are greatest. If these proposals cannot
 be fully implemented in the Doha time frame, then any Doha
 agreement could at least lay the basis for a forward-looking
 program of international cooperation along the proposed lines.