By the time Britain finally exits the EU, or indeed seeks to reverse the process, the architecture of international trade and economy may have changed dramatically. Not only is the framework of the EU coming under acute pressure, but the unilateral action by the US administration to impose sanctions on steel and aluminium imports from Mexico, Canada, and the EU, threatens to jeopardise the long-established integrity of the World Trade Organisation (WTO)
Given the US tariffs on steel and aluminium and further tariff threats, the transatlantic trade rela...
On June 23, 2016, Britain marked the exit from the European Union. The result led to a permanent clo...
The British decision to withdraw from the European Union makes it necessary to renegotiate trade rel...
By the time Britain finally exits the EU, or indeed seeks to reverse the process, the architecture o...
In mid-December 2022, a World Trade Organization (WTO) dispute settlement panel ruled that tariffs o...
Six months after the Doha agreement on a new round of talks to liberalise world trade, tension is mo...
Since the creation of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) in 1947 and its replacement ...
Just three decades after the fall of the Berlin Wall signifying the end of Cold War aggression and t...
In this paper the authors explore what the EU’s strategic reaction should be to US diminishing giant...
Jacques Pelkmans reminds the EU and its WTO partners that trust and the global public good of a rule...
For a global player like the EU, it must adequately respond to US unilateral actions and not give in...
The global revival of economic nationalism and protectionism poses a serious threat to the internati...
Leaving the EU will matter a great deal for trade, writes Pierre-Louis Vézina. He argues that in tim...
With his reckless imposition of import tariffs, President Trump has set in motion a nightmare scenar...
The United States is at war with free trade. In the past year, the Trump Administration’s steel and ...
Given the US tariffs on steel and aluminium and further tariff threats, the transatlantic trade rela...
On June 23, 2016, Britain marked the exit from the European Union. The result led to a permanent clo...
The British decision to withdraw from the European Union makes it necessary to renegotiate trade rel...
By the time Britain finally exits the EU, or indeed seeks to reverse the process, the architecture o...
In mid-December 2022, a World Trade Organization (WTO) dispute settlement panel ruled that tariffs o...
Six months after the Doha agreement on a new round of talks to liberalise world trade, tension is mo...
Since the creation of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) in 1947 and its replacement ...
Just three decades after the fall of the Berlin Wall signifying the end of Cold War aggression and t...
In this paper the authors explore what the EU’s strategic reaction should be to US diminishing giant...
Jacques Pelkmans reminds the EU and its WTO partners that trust and the global public good of a rule...
For a global player like the EU, it must adequately respond to US unilateral actions and not give in...
The global revival of economic nationalism and protectionism poses a serious threat to the internati...
Leaving the EU will matter a great deal for trade, writes Pierre-Louis Vézina. He argues that in tim...
With his reckless imposition of import tariffs, President Trump has set in motion a nightmare scenar...
The United States is at war with free trade. In the past year, the Trump Administration’s steel and ...
Given the US tariffs on steel and aluminium and further tariff threats, the transatlantic trade rela...
On June 23, 2016, Britain marked the exit from the European Union. The result led to a permanent clo...
The British decision to withdraw from the European Union makes it necessary to renegotiate trade rel...