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Development Centre Seminars
Towards Arab and Euro-Med Regional Integration
Edited by Sébastien Dessus, Julia Devlin, Raed Safadi. Published by : OECD Publishing
Version: Print (Paperback) + Free PDF
Price:   €54 | $69 | £33 | ¥5400 | 
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Imprint:  OECD Development Centre Availability: Available  Publication date:  20 Dec 2001  Language: English  Pages: 268  Tables: 55  Charts: 30  ISBN: 9789264196889  OECD Code: 412001091P1 
 

Other Versions & Languages | Table of contents

The path towards Arab and Euro-Mediterranean integration is challenging for all countries involved but the potential long term benefits are substantial. Multilateral trade initiatives which run parallel to "open" regional integration with the European Union and among Arab states can generate higher economic growth by promoting free trade in goods, services and assets between developed and developing countries. However these agreements have profound implications for Arab states in the region raising old and new issues in the political economy of regional co-operation and development. The body of evidence presented suggests that if these regional trade arrangements combined, allow for "deeper" forms of integration, competitiveness and cohesion can improve well beyond the Eastern and Southern borders of the EU.

Poverty reduction through economic growth is becoming a more urgent shared objective at this time of crisis and represents another potential long term benefit from deeper Euro-Med and Arab integration. In negotiating free trade agreements the EU must therefore strive to make such agreements as equitable as possible; in implementing them, partner countries must focus reform efforts to ensure their efficacy. Arab and Euro-Mediterranean integration can ideally maximise benefits for all countries involved, in spite of signficant legal, institutional and administrative hurdles that will have to be overcome to make such relationships workable.

The new issues examined in this book (the dynamics of open regionalism, the expansion of domestic markets from increased FDI and monetary stability, and the optimal mix of regional trade agreements) build on conclusions from previous studies regarding modest gains from shallow integration. Deeper regional agreements can be good for growth and stability in a region which has experienced very little of both in recent years.


Other languages:  French (Available)

Other Versions:  E-book - PDF Format


Table of contents:

Forewrod by Kemal Dervis, Jorge Braga de Macedo, and Heba Handoussa
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1. Introduction and Overview by Julia Devlin and Raed Safadi
Part One: The Dynamics of Open Regionalism in the Middle East and North Africa (Mena)
Chapter 2. Dynamic Aspects of Euro-Mediterranean Agreements for the Middle East and North African Economies by Robert M. Stern
Chapter 3. The Nature of Euro-Mediterranean Trade and the Prospects for Regional Integration by Agnes Chevallier and Michael Freudenberg
Part Two: Expanding Domestic Markets and Liberalisation under Euro-Med Agreements (EMAs)
Chapter 4. Foreign Direct Investment, the European Mediterranean Agreements and Integration between Middle East and North African Countries by Mohamed El Hedi Lahouel
Chapter 5. The Euro and Southern Mediterranean Currencies by Agnes Benassy-Quere and Amina Lahreche-Revi
Chapter 6. Trade Liberalisation and the Poor: A Dynamic Rural-Urban General Equilibrium Analysis of Morocco by Hans Lofgren, Moataz El-Said, and Sherman Robinson
Chapter 7. The Liberalisation of Tunisian Agriculture and the European Union: A Prospective Analysis by Mohamed Abdelbasset Cheminqui and Sebastien Dessus
Part Three: The Optimal Mix of Regional Trade Agreements (RTAs)
Chapter 8. Overlapping Free Trade Agreements in the Middle East and North Africa: Economic Incentives and Effects in Egypt by Bernard Hoekman, Denise Konan, and Keith Maskus
Chapter 9. Testing the Waters: Arab Integration, Competitiveness, and the Euro-Med Agreements by Julia Devlin and John Page
Chapter 10. Linkages between Euro-Mediterranean and Arab Free Trade Agreements by Jamel E. Zarrouk
List of Contributors
Bibliography

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