Multitrack integration in East Asian trade : noodle bowl or matrix?

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2008-10
Authors
Petri, Peter A.
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Honolulu, HI: East-West Center
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Abstract
East Asian trade agreements are often described as a complicated "noodle bowl," which shows links in the region as a snarled, overlapping and intertwined mass. But this is a misleading representation--Asia's regional agreements may in fact be creating an order of a different sort, building the foundations for a stronger regional trading system. Asian trade arrangements can be more constructively seen in terms of a trade agreements matrix, in which multiple negotiations produce an orderly progression of agreements to liberalize all potential bilateral relationships and move the region toward a coherent system of freer trade. The various approaches to deeper economic integration--regional arrangements, trans-Pacific agreements, and global engagement--are complementary paths that should eventually lead to an open global trading system. East Asia is of growing importance in the global marketplace, and adopting an aggressive multitrack strategy--as the region appears to be doing--may be the fastest route toward a new global framework.
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For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/
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East Asia - Economic integration, East Asia - Foreign economic relations, Regionalism - Economic aspects - East Asia, East Asia - Commerce
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12 p.
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