1st Edition

Trade and Developing Countries

By Kathryn Morton, Peter Tulloch Copyright 1977
    376 Pages
    by Routledge

    376 Pages
    by Routledge

    This reissue, initially published in 1977, is an introduction to contemporary trading positions and problems of developing countries. The authors examine the main export options of Third World countries and consider the roles of the key international organisations – GATT, UNCTAD, etc – and those of national governments and foreign investors.

    The authors complete their review with an examination of the way in which numbers of developing countries have tried to diversify their trade relations, particularly by creating Third World trading groups. Contemporary economic difficulties and their impact upon the Third World is also discussed, with the authors displaying a guarded optimism about real changes in world economic relations, citing factors such as the spread of trade among developing countries and the increase processing of raw materials as potential for the wider participation of developing countries in international trade.

    1. Trade and Development  2. The Institutional Background  3. Commodity Trade and Economic Development  4. Competing Agricultural Goods: Food, Fodder and Farm Policies  5. Ldcs and the Export of Manufactured Goods  6. Direct Foreign Private Investment and Ldcs' Trade  7. Finance and International Trade  8. Economic Co-operation and Trade Among Developing Countries  9. A New International Economic Order and Ldcs' Trade

    Biography

    Kathryn Morton, Peter Tulloch