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The author presents substantial case studies of the effect of the abolition of
quotas on global trade in this sector. Concentrating mainly on China and
Pakistan but also examining India, Indonesia, Vietnam, and seven other Asian
T&C manufacturing countries, he contrasts post-abolition reality with
pre-abolition predictions of the impact of abolishing quotas, and details the
continuing distortion caused by tariffs, non-tariff barriers and through trade
remedies such as safeguards and anti-dumping. All of the analysis is supported
by the judicious use and interpretation of extensive statistics, compelling
arguments, and interviews with entrepreneurs and trade officials in Pakistan
(as a case study of a country predicted to be a major beneficiary of quota
expiry).
Among the many crucial issues at the heart of the subject matter the author
considers the following:
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the centrality of the quota system in the historical development of Asian T&C
trade;
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the impact of rules of origin;
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preferential trade regimes;
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impact on outward production processing operations;
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role of large retailers and their influence on trade flows;
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human rights, employment, and social issues; and
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opening or restricting domestic markets of developed countries to imports from
developing countries.
This area of international trade is expected to undergo numerous changes as
countries adapt themselves to freer trading in T&C. For its incisive analysis
of developing countries’ perspective – and for its extensive statistical and
case-study supplement to theoretical analyses – this study of current
developments and future directions is of strong interest to trade law experts,
industry representatives, trade policy makers, scholars of trade policy, and
everyone with a specific interest in textiles and clothing trade.