Product standards for internationally integrated goods markets
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Author
Publication
1995 - Brookings Institution, Washington, D.C, District of Columbia
Language
English
Word Count
58,750 words, Guess
Page Count
235 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL1116075M
- ISBN-100815782969
- OCLC Control Number31656026
- OCLC Control Numberproductstandards00alan
- Library of Congress Control Number94042146
and 1 more
- Goodreads4004055
Classifications
- DDC382/.5
- LCCHF1430 .S95 1995
Description
Product standards, regulations, and conformity assessment procedures are important and necessary, but they also at times threaten the free flow of goods in international markets and the competitive positions of many exporters, including those in the United States. The barriers to trade that may result from product standards and regulations may be inadvertent or deliberate. The problem cuts across a wide array of industries, from motor vehicles to computers to televisions to food and beverages. This book, part of the Brookings Integrating National Economies series, is the first to blend careful economic and legal analysis of technical barriers. Alan O. Sykes illustrates how standards and regulations create trade barriers, explores the extent of the problem, and considers the possible policy responses. The effects of technical barriers are hard to measure. They are often hidden in the costs of modifying a product to meet a standard or regulation, in the costs of testing and certification procedures, and in the ways that noncompliance with a standard may affect consumer purchasing decisions. Sykes identifies why heterogeneity in standards and regulations may arise across jurisdictions and assesses the desirability of eliminating it in various settings. Sykes also presents an extensive and insightful overview of current international efforts to police technical barriers in the WTO/GATT system, in the European Union, in the U.S. federal system, and in NAFTA. He shows how least-restrictive means principles and their corollaries can do much to reduce technical barriers, while stopping short of impinging on the legitimate exercise of national sovereignty. Efforts to harmonize international policies and set common standards and regulations have been under way for decades. Sykes evaluates the harmonization activities of institutions such as the International Organization for Standardization, the Codex Alimentarius, and the European Commission. The final chapter assesses the adequacy of existing efforts to address technical barriers, suggesting where further progress might be made, and discusses the special problems of developing countries.
Subjects
Topics
Series Statement
- Integrating national economies
Other Editions
- Product standards for internationally integrated goods markets
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