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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper looks at the trade policies and trading environment within Denmark. The paper starts looking at the approach to free trade which is adopted in Denmark, determines who Denmark’s most important trading partners are, looks at the value of the kroner against the dollar and considers the anti-corruption environment within the country. The bibliography cites three sources. The bibliography cites 5 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TS14_TEdenmarkt.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
of $349.7 billion at the official exchange rate (CIA, 2009). The trade policies of Denmark are highly supportive of the concept of free trade, and facilitate free trade. According
to the World Bank Denmark is ranked 25th in terms of trade policy after the 125 countries (World Bank, 2009). The international trade policies which are adopted a highly aligned
to the EU, which is a single market and implements harmonized trade policies, both between members, and between EU members and nonunion members. Therefore, there no unilateral to trade
barriers implemented against the US by Denmark, however, is the countrys plot of the European Union there is the implementation of the common trade tariffs which are implemented on courts
to topple into the EU from any non-EU country (World Bank, 2009). The neighborhood is typically between 5% and 14% on industrial goods, the same level as the US
would have to pay on any goods that were being exported into any other EU country (World Bank, 2009). As part of the EU there are also further trade
restrictions on groups which are covered by the Common Agricultural Policy, such as olive oil, beef, grains and rice, in which there are duties on it is payable. James
the common agricultural policy is to equalize prices between goods which are imported into the EU, and those within the EU (World Bank, 2009).
With the high level of integration with the European Union is unsurprising that its major trading partners are within that region with $114.9 billion in exports and $116.4 billion
in imports. The main trading partner is Germany, which in 2008 takes 17.9% of the countrys exports, followed by Sweden at 14.5%, United Kingdom and 8.3%, Norway at 5.7%,
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