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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper discussing long-standing EU sugar-exporting practices and the controversy surrounding them. The EU recently offered to end agricultural subsidies if other member nations would respond in kind. If the EU is offering to end its extensive and often background practices of subsidizing its own agricultural exports, of course it has every right to expect other WTO member countries to do the same. The articles appearing in several mainstream trade and business publications may not yet be specifically addressing the topic of sugar, but it is likely that they will be in the short-term future. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KSintlTradEUdump.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
were returned on any search for sugar dumping and the EU. The order reads as though the source is the most important item and that the topic must be
dumping, so that is the perspective in which the paper is written. An additional source addresses the sugar-dumping controversy, but it appeared in the European Report. JM-C. Introduction
The World Trade Organization (WTO) has become an international agency of true value, unlike some other well-meaning but ineffective groups. There is a
growing gap between rich countries and some developing ones, and the WTO helps to keep the field more level for all players. As
a trading bloc, the European Union (EU) acts as one entity, though it represents several European countries increasing in number in membership in the EU. As a recognized trading
entity, the EU has full access to WTO regulators and also is subject to the judgments of those same regulators. Over the past 18 months or so, WTO regulators
have had much to say about EU practices. Common Practice Under international law and WTO regulations, any country (or trading entity such as
the EU) is free to impose any type of import tariff it pleases. The inhibiting requirement is that no importing country may single out a specific product in order
to gain a trade advantage over its trading partners. As example, France may not give Australia preferred trading status in every product except Australian wines, levying inhibitory tariffs on
Australian wines for the purpose of protecting its own domestic wine industry within French borders. The method that rich countries use to get
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