Trade, Growth and Poverty Reduction: Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small States in the Global Economic System
Synopsis
Why have the least developed countries, and other poorer countries, failed to grow as fast as other economies during the recent period of globalisation?
Professor Srinivasan explores the broad links between growth in income, globalisation, and poverty reduction. He argues that past domestic and international policies have failed to serve the interests of the poorest countries, and suggests that the current array of international institutions, in their unreformed state, are ill-suited to bring about the changes required.
Finally he makes recommendations on needed reforms to the institutions that manage the global economic system.
Chapters
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Acknowledgements
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Acronyms
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Overview
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Introduction
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Trade, Growth and Poverty Reduction
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Salient Characteristics of Least-Developed Countries
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Cooperation between Developed and Developing Countries to Strengthen the Links between Trade, Growth and Poverty Reduction
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Doha Round and the Least-Developed Countries
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Making Global Partnership for Development More Effective: Some Recommendations
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References and Index
Downloads
Published
1 July 2009
Categories
Copyright (c) 2009 Commonwealth Secretariat
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.