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110530s2011 si ab sb 100 0 eng d |
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|a 9789812838490 (electronic bk.)
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|z 9812838481
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|z 9789812838483
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|a WSPC
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|a 343.087
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|a Systemic implications of transatlantic regulatory cooperation and competition
|c [edited by] Simon J. Evenett and Robert M. Stern.
|h [electronic resource] /
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|a Singapore ;
|a Hackensack, N.J. :
|b World Scientific Pub. Co.,
|c c2011.
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|a xiv, 338 p. :
|b ill., maps.
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|a World scientific studies in international economics,
|v v. 15
|x 1793-3641 ;
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|a Includes bibliographical references.
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|a ch. 1. Condemned to cooperate? 1. Introduction. 2. Economic interdependence, transatlantic cooperation, and multilateralism. 3. Contributions to this volume. 4. Concluding remarks -- ch. 2. The banking crisis : Causes, consequences and remedies. 1. The basics of banking. 2. The efficient market paradigm. 3. Are financial markets efficient? 4. Unintended consequences of regulation. 5. On causes and triggers. 6. The reaction of the authorities. 7. Short-term solutions. 8. Long-term solutions : A return to narrow banking. 9. Conclusion -- ch. 3. The political economy of transatlantic regulatory cooperation and competition : A (unofficial) view from Europe. 1. Introduction. 2. The new transatlantic economic partnership : Hype or hope? 3. New EU and a new world. 4. Prospects for the new transatlantic agenda. 5. Conclusion -- ch. 4. How hard and soft law interact in international regulatory governance : Alternatives, complements and antagonists. 1. Introduction. 2. The canonical literature on international hard and soft law : Their attributes as alternatives and their interaction as complements. 3. Theorizing international hard and soft law interaction : Power, distributive conflict and regime complexes. 4. Hard and soft law interaction as antagonists. 5. Hypotheses as to the interaction of hard and soft law instruments. 6. Conclusions -- ch. 5. EU-US regulatory cooperation and developing country trade. 1. Trade policies. 2. Market access. 3. Non-tariff measures. 4. Reducing regulatory differences and associated cost differentials. 5. Policy implications. 6. Concluding remarks -- ch. 6. Transatlantic trade, the automotive sector : The role of regulation in a global industry, where we have been and where we need to go, how far can EU-US cooperation go toward achieving regulatory harmonization? 1. Globalization. 2. Regulating a global industry. 3. Example of disparity - Surrogates for humans in crash testing. 4. Comparison of US and EU safety regulations. 5. US-EU market competition and manufacturer cooperation.
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|a 6. EU-US cooperation - The transatlantic business dialogue. 7. International harmonized research activities. 8. 1998 agreement administered by WP.29. 9. Discussion of several GTR efforts, successes and unsuccessful outcomes to date. 10. Summary of global technical regulation experience. 11. An additional initiative : A competitive automotive regulatory system for the 21st century. 12. Conclusion and recommendations to help achieve vision for the future -- ch. 7. Systemic implications of deeper transatlantic convergence in competition/antitrust policy. 1. Introduction. 2. The differing historical origins and orientations of competition policy in the US and the EU, and the process of convergence thus far. 3. The need for cooperation in principle, and the cooperation arrangements that have been implemented thus far in the transatlantic context. 4. Are current/future policy conflicts manageable through voluntary cooperation/convergence alone? and what about the world beyond the transatlantic zone? 5. Concluding remarks -- ch. 8. Transatlantic regulatory cooperation on chemicals - An idealist's dream? 1. Introduction. 2. The chemical industry's input to regulatory cooperation : The race against REACH within a declining and re-emerging TABD. 3. Regulatory cooperation on chemicals in the context of the transatlantic economic council. 4. Conclusions : How to achieve a barrier free transatlantic market -- ch. 9. Transatlantic regulatory cooperation on accounting standards : A 'varieties of capitalism' perspective. 1. The puzzle : Successful transatlantic regulatory cooperation on accounting standards. 2. Convergence in substantial terms : A variety of capitalism perspective on accounting standards. 3. Convergence in institutional terms : From national representation to the rule of experts. 4. The politics of transatlantic convergence on a US regulatory model. 5. The broader picture : Towards global convergence on the liberal regulatory model? 6. Conclusion -- ch. 10. Transatlantic regulatory competition and cooperation in pharmaceuticals. 1. Introduction. 2. Regulatory differences in the United States and European Union. 3. Evolution of regulatory cooperation. 4. A concluding assessment.
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|a Regulations and enforcement decisions that at first appear to have only a domestic impact can have substantial spillover effects on other nations' economies. Experience has shown time and again that there is no reason to expect that these effects are confined to jurisdictions at the same level of development. Governments on both sides of the Atlantic recognize this, yet their responses in many policy areas are not aligned - sometimes deliberately so. This creates a complex regulatory landscape that appears to be the product of both cooperation and competition, and which can only be fully understood by looking through a number of disciplinary lenses. Drawing on some of the best legal, economic and political science expertise from both sides of the Atlantic, as well as on the knowledge of officials and private practitioners with experience in both industrialized and developing countries, this timely book assesses the systemic, global implications of transatlantic regulatory cooperation and competition. Insights from thematic papers are integrated with those from sector-specific analyses, and a rich set of implications for policymakers, business and civil society is offered.
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|a Electronic reproduction.
|b Singapore :
|c World Scientific Publishing Co.,
|d 2011.
|n System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader.
|n Mode of access: World Wide Web.
|n Available to subscribing institutions.
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|a Foreign trade regulation
|v Congresses.
|z United States
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|a Foreign trade regulation
|v Congresses.
|z European Union countries
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|a European Union countries
|v Congresses.
|x Foreign economic relations
|z United States
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|a United States
|v Congresses.
|x Foreign economic relations
|z European Union countries
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|a Electronic books.
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|a Evenett, Simon J.
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|a Stern, Robert M.
|d 1927-
|q (Robert Mitchell),
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|a World Scientific (Firm)
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|z 9812838481
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|z 9789812838483
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|a World scientific studies in international economics ;
|v v. 15.
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|u https://ezaccess.library.uitm.edu.my/login?url=http://www.worldscientific.com/worldscibooks/10.1142/7172#t=toc
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