Net Gains: Linking Fisheries Management, International Trade and Sustainable DevelopmentIUCN, 2000 - 94 pages Discusses the linkages between trade, environment and sustainable development in the marine capture fisheries sector. |
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Page 47
... processed products from developing countries ( FAO , 1998b : 2 ) . Similarly , US import duties remain high on some goods depending on the degree of processing . A related concern for developing countries is the effective rate of ...
... processed products from developing countries ( FAO , 1998b : 2 ) . Similarly , US import duties remain high on some goods depending on the degree of processing . A related concern for developing countries is the effective rate of ...
Page 48
... processed or processed fish products induce allocative inefficiencies both in the country imposing the tariffs , and in the ... processing industry in developed countries , could lower the price and increase the variety of fish products ...
... processed or processed fish products induce allocative inefficiencies both in the country imposing the tariffs , and in the ... processing industry in developed countries , could lower the price and increase the variety of fish products ...
Page 91
... processing industry , in the view of raising its exports of canned products such as canned tuna and canned salmon and other processed fish . Despite unchanged high tariffs applied on these products by importing countries such as the USA ...
... processing industry , in the view of raising its exports of canned products such as canned tuna and canned salmon and other processed fish . Despite unchanged high tariffs applied on these products by importing countries such as the USA ...
Contents
Acronyms | 2 |
Introduction | 8 |
Dimensions of the Global Fisheries Crisis | 17 |
4 other sections not shown
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action agreements applied assessment Atlantic benefits bluefin tuna capacity catch Chapter CITES coastal Commission Committee communities concerns Conference conservation considered consumer costs demand depend developing countries discussion domestic eco-labelling economic effective efforts employment ensure environmental example export fish products fish stocks fisheries management fisheries resources fisheries sector fishery products fleets food security foreign GATT Geneva global governments harvesting ICCAT impacts implementation important improve increase industry Institute international trade issues IUCN labelling limit marine Members multilateral natural negotiations noted objectives opportunities organisations overfishing particular percent policies possible potential practices principles problems processing promote protection rates recent reduce regimes regional regulations Report requirements responsible restrictions role rules schemes seas Shrimp significant social species standards subsidies sustainable development sustainable fisheries tariff technical Trade and Environment trade liberalisation trade measures United vessels waters World