Trade monitoring
Report by Uruguay
The period 2006-2010 was a period of high and sustained growth for the Uruguayan economy, which exceeded its potential growth rate - estimated at 4 per cent annually - during five of the six years. GDP grew at an average rate of 6.2 per cent, far surpassing the historical averages. As a result, per capita GDP doubled during the period, reaching 11,996 dollars in 2010. This trend was maintained throughout the period and was not reversed by the global crisis of 2009: although the GDP growth rate fell to 2.6 per cent, it recovered significantly in the following year. The Government expects the growth rate to exceed its potential rate once again in 2011. All along, the main driving force behind this growth was domestic demand.
Acknowledgements
The World Trade Report 2007 was prepared under the general direction of Deputy Director-General Alejandro Jara. Patrick Low, Director of the Economic Research and Statistics Division, led the team responsible for writing the Report. The principal authors of the Report were Marc Bacchetta, K. Michael Finger, Matthias Helble, Marion Jansen, Alexander Keck, Mark Koulen, Pete Pedersen, Roberta Piermartini, Simon Schropp and Robert Teh. Trade statistics information was provided by the Statistics Group of the Economic Research and Statistics Division, coordinated by Hubert Escaith, Julia de Verteuil, Andreas Maurer and Jürgen Richtering. Karen McCusker contributed a subsection on restrictions to safeguard the balance of payments in developing countries.
Introduction
Le Mécanisme d’examen des politiques commerciales (MEPC) a été établi à titre expérimental par les parties contractantes du GATT en avril 1989. Il est devenu un élément permanent de l’Organisation mondiale du commerce en vertu de l’Accord de Marrakech qui a institué cette organisation en janvier 1995.
Una Organización universal
Seychelles se adhirió a la OMC en abril de 2015 y unos meses más tarde, en noviembre, lo hizo Kazajstán. Los conjuntos de documentos de la adhesión del Afganistán y Liberia fueron aprobados en diciembre de 2015 en la Décima Conferencia Ministerial de la OMC.
Comercio y medio ambiente
En 2016, el Comité de Comercio y Medio Ambiente (CCMA) examinó una amplia gama de cuestiones ambientales relacionadas con el comercio, entre ellas, el cambio climático, la reforma de las subvenciones a los combustibles fósiles, la gestión de los productos químicos y los desechos, el comercio de fauna y flora silvestres, la silvicultura y la pesca. También se facilitó al Comité información actualizada sobre la Base de Datos sobre Medio Ambiente (BDMA) de la OMC, las disposiciones ambientales de los acuerdos comerciales regionales (ACR) y las negociaciones relativas al Acuerdo sobre Bienes Ambientales.
Foreword
This book is the outcome of joint work by the Secretariats of UNCTAD and the WTO. Its six chapters were written collaboratively by academics and staff of the two organizations. The volume aims to help researchers and policy-makers expand their knowledge of quantitative economic methods and data sources for trade policy analysis. The need for the book is based on the belief that good policy needs to be backed by good analysis. By bringing together the most widely used approaches for trade policy analysis in a single volume, the book allows the reader to compare methodologies and to select the best-suited to address the issues of today.
Organization, secretariat and budget
The World Trade Organization came into being in 1995, as the successor to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), which had been established (1947) in the wake of the Second World War. The WTO’s main objective is the establishment of rules for Members’ trade policy which help international trade to expand with a view to raising living standards. These rules foster non-discrimination, transparency and predictability in the conduct of trade policy.
Impact of trade on labour market outcomes
This section looks at the empirical evidence on the effect of trade on wages and employment and addresses the following key questions: what is the evidence of the impact of import competition and offshoring on the level of wages and employment? What is the impact of increased market access for exports and the availability of cheaper imported inputs on employment? How can varied empirical evidence across countries be reconciled? How does the functioning of the labour market affect outcomes? How large are trade-induced adjustment costs? This section focuses particularly on wages and employment because research on other dimensions of labour markets, such as employment stability and security, is much less developed due to lack of cross-country data and thus does not allow for a comparison of how trade and technology play out on these other variables.
Remerciements
Le Rapport sur le commerce mondial 2007 a été rédigé sous la supervision d’Alejandro Jara, Directeur général adjoint. Patrick Low, Directeur de la Division de la recherche économique et des statistiques, a dirigé l’équipe chargée de la rédaction. Les principaux auteurs du rapport sont Marc Bacchetta, K. Michael Finger, Matthias Helble, Marion Jansen, Alexander Keck, Mark Koulen, Pete Pedersen, Roberta Piermartini, Simon Schropp et Robert Teh. Les statistiques commerciales ont été fournies par les statisticiens de la Division de la recherche économique et des statistiques, dont les travaux ont été coordonnés par Hubert Escaith, Julia de Verteuil, Andreas Maurer et Jürgen Richtering. Karen McCusker a rédigé le paragraphe traitant des restrictions destinées à protéger l’équilibre de la balance des paiements dans les pays en développement.
Introduction
The Trade Policy Review Mechanism (TPRM) was first established on a trial basis by the GATT contracting parties in April 1989. The Mechanism became a permanent feature of the World Trade Organization under the Marrakesh Agreement which established the WTO in January 1995.
Report by El Salvador
Since its last trade policy review, EI Salvador has made considerable progress on the economic front and has continued to consolidate its strategy of appropriate integration in international trade through active participation in the trade negotiation processes and through policies aimed at attracting foreign direct investment.

