Articles by language
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Articles by language

  • 25-Oct-2005 China Daily
    Free trade pact with Chile on horizon
    China and Chile launched the fifth round of talks towards a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) yesterday in Beijing, and hopes to be the last round of negotiations for a formal agreement.
  • 25-Oct-2005 Daily Times
    Pakistan to sign FTA with GCC soon
    Pakistan will soon sign free trade agreement with the member countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), a senior official at the ministry of commerce told the Daily Times on Monday.
  • 25-Oct-2005 Scoop
    Chambers agree to promote a Korea-New Zealand FTA
    Wellington Regional Chamber of Commerce President Simon Arnold and his counterpart from the Busan Chamber of Commerce and Industry last week signed an agreement committing both Chambers to promote to their respective Governments the advantages of an FTA between Korea and New Zealand.
  • 25-Oct-2005 Prensa Latina
    Ecuador hesitant over FTA with US
    Chief Ecuadorian negotiator for the Free Trade Treaty with the US, Manuel Chiriboga, affirmed in a press conference Monday that the next negotiation round will determine whether or not it goes into effect in November.
  • 25-Oct-2005 MCOT
    FTA negotiators fear financial sector liberalisation could trigger capital outflow
    Dr. Narongchai Akraseranee, chairman of the Working Group on FTA Negotiations, reaffirms that Thailand will not speed up the opening of its financial sector because domestic players are not ready for such competition. The Working Group is also concerned about possible capital outflows once liberalisation frees up deposit transactions.
  • 25-Oct-2005 stuff
    NZ-US relations: the factors that bind us
    A US-New Zealand FTA remains the ultimate prize.
  • 25-Oct-2005
    A Trans-Pacific Strategic Economic Partnership (SEP): a case study report with a Chilean perspective
    One of the main consequences of globalization has been the expansion of international trade. Bringing down trade barriers and witnessing the alleged ongoing deregulation of the global market seems to be a picture that many find quite alluring.
  • 24-Oct-2005 Bangkok Post
    Snag hit on services: Bilateral FTA talks now at halfway point
    Thailand is unlikely to gain much benefit from service sector liberalisation in a free trade area (FTA) agreement with the United States, a Thai trade negotiator says as the talks reach their halfway point.
  • 23-Oct-2005 MIA
    Macedonia, Serbia/Montenegro sign free trade agreement
    Macedonian Minister of Economy Fatmir Besimi and Serbia/Montenegro Minister on International Economic Relations Predrag Ivanovic signed Friday a Free Trade Agreement, which envisages full liberalization of trade between Macedonia and Serbia/Montenegro.
  • 23-Oct-2005 Daily Times
    India, Mauritius to sign preferential trade pact
    Mauritius and India are expected to sign a preferential trade agreement (PTA) next week to boost the island’s exports and provide India with the opportunity to tap into African markets.
  • 23-Oct-2005 People’s Daily
    China, ASEAN march towards world’s 3rd largest FTA
    With a fast growing trade volume, China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) are trying to show the world that the planned free trade area will be an accelerator for regional economy.
  • 23-Oct-2005 The Age
    ASEAN talks hit a trade barrier
    Australia and New Zealand want a comprehensive free trade agreement with ASEAN, but some ASEAN nations have no competition policy, and reject any negotiations on intellectual property and government procurement.
  • 21-Oct-2005 APRN
    As the TNCs catch you: An analysis of the liberalization of biotechnological products in the Thai-US FTA
    One of the books the Thai Prime Minister suggested his cabinet members read was “As the Future Catches You” by Juan Enriquez, a Mexican writer. The book’s contents relate to the fact that countries need to catch up with the development of biotechnology. Otherwise they will be alienated and left behind.
  • 21-Oct-2005 IPS
    UNESCO adopts convention to protect diversity
    The United Nations cultural body adopted an international treaty Thursday to protect cultural diversity. This a moral victory, but the real test is whether developing countries will resist US pressure to commit their audiovisual and information services to bilateral trade agreements.
  • 21-Oct-2005 Dominican Today
    American Chamber warns of urgent measures prior to Free Trade
    The American Chamber of Commerce yesterday submitted to both chambers of Congress a number of administrative and legislative measures that the country should adopt, within the framework of the Free Trade Agreement with the United States and Central America (DR-CAFTA), while warning that all imported products must be treated with the same guidelines as local goods.
  • 21-Oct-2005 AME Info
    General Motors applauds successful US-Oman Free Trade Agreement
    General Motors, the world’s largest vehicle manufacturer, applauds the successful conclusion of negotiations to create a US-Oman Free Trade Agreement.
  • 20-Oct-2005 stuff
    Peters to oppose FTA with China
    New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters says he will continue to oppose a free trade agreement with China, although it is government policy to negotiate one.
  • 20-Oct-2005 JoongAng Daily
    Screen quota defenders rally for Unesco draft
    The long-running dispute over Korea’s screen quota system is moving onto new ground: the quota’s supporters are rallying around the final draft of a Unesco convention that would exclude the cultural industries in all of the organization’s member states from free trade agreements or World Trade Organization bylaws.
  • 20-Oct-2005 South Centre
    The dynamics of regional trading arrangements
    There has been a spate of trade agreements signed between countries in recent years - from the same region and even beyond. And this may not necessarily have to do with the fact that it has been a tough going for the multilateral trading system. Regionalism may have its own dynamics.
  • 19-Oct-2005
    Romanian lawyers won an USD 353m international arbitration case against an US investor
    Romania has won at the International Court of Arbitration in Washington, the case brought by the American company Noble Ventures that contested the Romanian state actions in the privatization process of Resita Steel Plant (CSR).