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040 _cCR-SiIICA
041 _aeng
_beng
090 _aIICA-E71 40
100 _981397
_aJohnson, R.S.
110 _912790
_aInternational Policy Council on Agriculture Food and Trade, Washington, D.C. (EUA)
110 _912790
_aInternational Policy Council on Agriculture, Food and Trade, Washington, D.C. (EUA)
111 _932786
_a21. IPC Plenary Meeting and Seminar on the FTAA, APEC and Agricultural Trade Reform
_cWashington, D.C. (EUA)
_d21-21 May 1998
245 _aSetting the agenda for the next agricultural negotiation
245 _aProceedings
260 _aWashington, D.C. (EUA)
_c1998
270 _a*CIDIA, San José (Costa Rica)
300 _ap. 35-49
520 _aThe paper looks at three possible answers. The agenda and impetus may come from: another crisis in the agricultural trading system; perceptions of new trading opportunities, or the emergence of a global food system that needs clarification and ratification through further negotiations. It concludes that betting on a crisis is too uncertain. Banking on changing interests and perceptions is a possibility for some commodities but unlikely for all. Consolidating the emerging global food market into a global open food system seems the most likely and promosing avenue to reform, extending developments in trading arrangements and investment patterns that have been occurring since the Uruguay Round began
650 _9163358
_aRONDA URUGUAY
650 _9153040
_aLIBERALIZACION DEL INTERCAMBIO
650 _9156516
_aOMC
650 _iTRADE LIBERALIZATION
650 _iWTO
650 _fLIBERALISATION DES ECHANGES
650 _fOMC
901 _aE71
_b26219
903 _aV
904 _aIICA
905 _aC
907 _a*CIDIA, San José (Costa Rica)
908 _aB
909 _aAMS
912 _aeng
942 _cSER
942 _cIMP
999 _c20772
_d20772