• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: Initial Conditions and Incentives for Arab Economic Integration : Can the European Community's Success be Emulated?
  • Contributor: Hoekman, Bernard [Author]; Messerlin, Patrick [Author]
  • Published: World Bank, Washington, DC, 2002
  • Published in: Policy Research Working Paper ; No. 2921
  • Extent: 1 Online-Ressource
  • Language: English
  • Keywords: EXTERNAL PROTECTION ; EXTERNAL TARIFF ; EXTERNAL TRADE ; EXTERNAL TRADE POLICY ; FACTORS OF PRODUCTION ; FINANCIAL SUPPORT ; FOREIGN POLICY ; FREE TRADE ; FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS ; FREE TRADE AREA ; FUELS ; GDP ; GDP PER CAPITA ; GOVERNMENTAL COOPERATION ; GRAVITY MODEL ; HARMONIZATION ; HIGH TARIFFS ; IMPORT BARRIERS ; IMPORT PRICES ; IMPORTS ; INCOME ; INCOME DIFFERENCES ; INDUSTRIAL POLICIES ; INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS ; [...]
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: European Union
    Middle East
    Middle East and North Africa
    North Africa
    English
    en_US
  • Description: The authors compare the European Community's "trade fundamentals" prevailing in the 1960s with those applying in Arab countries today. The fundamentals differ significantly-Arab countries trade much less with each other than EC members did, and the importance of such trade in GDP varies greatly. This suggests that a viable Arab integration strategy must follow a path that differs from the preferential trade liberalization-led approach implemented by the European Community. An alternative is to complement long-standing attempts to liberalize merchandise trade with an effort that revolves around service sector reforms and liberalization. This may prove to be an effective mechanism to support reforms as, in principle, there is a major constituency in each Arab country that has an interest in improving the performance of services-the natural resource-based and manufacturing sectors. A key condition for such an approach to be feasible is that Arab cooperation helps overcome political economy resistance to national, unilateral action, or, generates direct gains from cooperation in specific policy areas. The EC experience suggests that a services-based integration strategy will be complex and must be carefully designed and sequenced. Given the importance of services-related trade and logistics transactions costs, a first step might focus on bringing such costs down through a concerted joint effort
  • Access State: Open Access