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How, and to what extent, do successful world market integration strategies in developing countries depend on the institutional strength of state bureaucracies and business associations? Guided by this question, this study examines the systems of interest intermediation in four South America countries and responds herein to the increasingly complex nature of trade policy. Since the creation of the WTO and the emergence of a new bustling Regionalism in the 1990s, trade policy no longer refers primarily to the level of national tariffs, but implies the close coordination among a broad set of…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
How, and to what extent, do successful world market
integration strategies in developing countries
depend on the institutional strength of state
bureaucracies and business associations? Guided by
this question, this study examines the systems of
interest intermediation in four South America
countries and responds herein to the increasingly
complex nature of trade policy. Since the creation
of the WTO and the emergence of a new bustling
Regionalism in the 1990s, trade policy no longer
refers primarily to the level of national tariffs,
but implies the close coordination among a broad set
of policy areas, covering both border and behind-the-
border measures, and parallel negotiations on
bilateral, regional and multilateral levels.
This study demonstrates, in the case of Chile, that
the successful world market integration of this
country was strongly influenced by the institutional
properties of the Foreign AffairsMinistry and the
export oriented business sector, while the
strategies followed by Argentina, Peru and Bolivia
were not as successful, mainly due the observed
institutional weakness of the state and business
sectors.
Autorenporträt
Christian Robin, Ph.D.: Study in Political Science at the University of Zurich with focus on international trade and development. Ph.D. Degree received in 2008. After several years of field work in Latin America, since 2007 Christian Robin serves as trade development advisor in the Swiss State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO).