Trade, Competition and Domestic Regulatory Policy: Trade Liberalisation, Competitive Markets and Property Rights Protection


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Description

Trade, Competition and Domestic Regulatory Policy presents a unique combination of analysis of both international trade and investment policies, and competition and regulatory policies. Increasingly, policymakers, businesses and the law and economics professions need to better understand how changes and policy developments in international trade and competition developed and how their interaction impacts on global business.

In addition to providing a comprehensive analysis of the attempts of international trade theory and practice to deal with tariffs, non-tariff barriers, market distortions and failures to protect various kinds of property rights, this book contains a detailed treatment of how property rights protection, including intangible property rights are a critical element of ensuring open trade and competitive markets. It examines how these rights have developed over time, and how they have been integrated into trade and competition policy.

This book will be of significant interest to students of international business, professors of economics, law and business, and policymakers at the intersection of trade, investment, competition and property rights.



Author: Shanker A. Singham, Alden F. Abbott
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 03/29/2023
Pages: 490
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.53lbs
Size: 9.21h x 6.14w x 1.01d
ISBN13: 9780367339883
ISBN10: 0367339889
BISAC Categories:
- Business & Economics | Economics | General
- Business & Economics | Development | Economic Development

About the Author

Shanker A. Singham is one of the world's leading international trade and competition lawyers/economists. He is the CEO of Competere and a former cleared advisor to the United States Trade Representative. Mr Singham is a former advisor to the Secretary of State for International Trade of the UK.

Alden Abbott is a Senior Research Fellow at the Mercatus Center, focusing on antitrust issues. Before joining Mercatus, Mr. Abbott served as the Federal Trade Commission's General Counsel from 2018 to early 2021, where he represented the Commission in court and provided legal advice to its representatives.

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