Coop UQAM | Coopsco

Créer mon profil | Mot de passe oublié?

Magasiner par secteur

Matériel obligatoire et recommandé

Voir les groupes
Devenir membre

Nos partenaires

UQAM
ESG UQAM
Réseau ESG UQAM
Bureau des diplômés
Centre sportif
Citadins
Service de la formation universitaire en région
Université à distance
Société de développement des entreprises culturelles - SODEC
L'institut du tourisme et de l'hotellerie - ITHQ
Pour le rayonnement du livre canadien
Presses de l'Université du Québec
Auteurs UQAM : Campagne permanente de promotion des auteures et auteurs UQAM
Fondation de l'UQAM
Écoles d'été en langues de l'UQAM
Canal savoir
L'économie sociale, j'achète
Millénium Micro



Recherche avancée...

Negotiating Freer Trade


Éditeur : Wilfrid Laurier University Press
ISBN numérique PDF: 9780889208230
Parution : 2006
Catégorisation : Livres numériques / Autre / Autre / Autre.

Formats disponibles

Format Qté. disp. Prix* Commander
Numérique PDF
Protection filigrane***
Illimité Prix : 42,95 $
x

*Les prix sont en dollars canadien. Taxes et frais de livraison en sus.
***Ce produit est protégé en vertu des droits d'auteurs.




Description

On November 17, 1938, Great Britain, the United States, and Canada, after four years of discussion and manoeuvre, signed two wide–ranging and interlocking trade agreements. A few large elements dominated the talks. The Americans wanted to breach the walls of the British imperial preferential tariff system. The British were anxious to retain markets and political support in the British dominions and the Baltic, while protecting their domestic agriculture and improving political relations with the United States. Canada, whose acquiescence and co–operation were necessitated by the pre–existing network of trade agreements, hoped to win new export markets, to retain old ones, and to achieve international political tranquility through economic means. Although the negotiations began with a mixture of lofty and ignoble motives, in the end the latter predominated.

The authors have drawn on archival and statistical materials in all three countries to provide a clear and detailed account of the economic context of the mid–1930s, the process of negotiations, the issues, and the political and economic significance, both then and now, of the final agreements. Their work is a valuable case–study of the problems that face any country that tries to negotiate freer trade. It is therefore full of contemporary resonance and relevance, and will be of interest to students of and specialists in modern history (European, British, and North American), international relations, and international economic policy.