Trade policy making in Latin America: a compared analysis

Includes bibliography

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Sáez, Sebastián
Otros Autores: NU. CEPAL
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: ECLAC 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/11362/4397
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
id oai-11362-4397
record_format dspace
spelling oai-11362-43972020-03-04T19:57:23Z Trade policy making in Latin America: a compared analysis Sáez, Sebastián NU. CEPAL Japón. Gobierno NU. CEPAL. División de Comercio Internacional e Integración EXPORTACIONES IMPORTACIONES LIBERALIZACION DEL INTERCAMBIO POLITICA COMERCIAL POLITICA DEL COMERCIO EXTERIOR REFORMA ECONOMICA TOMA DE DECISIONES ADMINISTRACION PUBLICA DECISION-MAKING ECONOMIC REFORM EXPORTS FOREIGN TRADE POLICY IMPORTS TRADE LIBERALIZATION TRADE POLICY PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Includes bibliography This paper examines the way trade policy is formulated in a representative set of Latin American countries. Despite the fact that the economic reform process in Latin America has been substantial, the benefits of the reforms are under question. Some claim that part of the current disenchantment with structural reforms, including trade policy, in Latin America may be due to the fact that the quality of policies and of policy implementation has been tainted by structural characteristics of policymaking processes. In recent years, the interest has arisen to know and understand how decisions on trade policy are taken in Latin America. This case is a mixture of schemes, which are more or less applicable depending on the actors involved internationally (multilateral, plurilateral or bilateral processes), how deep is the democratic tradition of the country in question and what is the level of organisation and complexity of the civil society. Bureaucracies in Latin America play a major role in designing and orienting the decisions on trade policy. On the other hand, the Legislative Power assumes an important role in the final stage, when it must accept or reject the terms of negotiations. Finally, co-ordination and consultation mechanisms within the public sector —and between it and other relevant players, such as the Legislative Power and the civil society— are weak. 2014-01-02T15:28:31Z 2014-01-02T15:28:31Z 2005-11 Texto Documento Completo 9211215668 http://hdl.handle.net/11362/4397 LC/L.2410-P en Serie Comercio Internacional 55 application/pdf AMERICA LATINA LATIN AMERICA ECLAC
institution Cepal
collection Cepal
language English
topic EXPORTACIONES
IMPORTACIONES
LIBERALIZACION DEL INTERCAMBIO
POLITICA COMERCIAL
POLITICA DEL COMERCIO EXTERIOR
REFORMA ECONOMICA
TOMA DE DECISIONES
ADMINISTRACION PUBLICA
DECISION-MAKING
ECONOMIC REFORM
EXPORTS
FOREIGN TRADE POLICY
IMPORTS
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
TRADE POLICY
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
spellingShingle EXPORTACIONES
IMPORTACIONES
LIBERALIZACION DEL INTERCAMBIO
POLITICA COMERCIAL
POLITICA DEL COMERCIO EXTERIOR
REFORMA ECONOMICA
TOMA DE DECISIONES
ADMINISTRACION PUBLICA
DECISION-MAKING
ECONOMIC REFORM
EXPORTS
FOREIGN TRADE POLICY
IMPORTS
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
TRADE POLICY
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
Sáez, Sebastián
Trade policy making in Latin America: a compared analysis
description Includes bibliography
author2 NU. CEPAL
author_facet NU. CEPAL
Sáez, Sebastián
format Texto
author Sáez, Sebastián
author_sort Sáez, Sebastián
title Trade policy making in Latin America: a compared analysis
title_short Trade policy making in Latin America: a compared analysis
title_full Trade policy making in Latin America: a compared analysis
title_fullStr Trade policy making in Latin America: a compared analysis
title_full_unstemmed Trade policy making in Latin America: a compared analysis
title_sort trade policy making in latin america: a compared analysis
publisher ECLAC
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11362/4397
work_keys_str_mv AT saezsebastian tradepolicymakinginlatinamericaacomparedanalysis
_version_ 1718435066077511680