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Key Message

Trade liberalization is a major engine of economic growth, so it has great potential as a force for sustainable development. Unfortunately, the link is not automatic. Where trade policy is in conflict with environment and development policy, it can delay or even undermine the achievement of sustainable development. IISD's work on trade focuses on how we can help ensure positive outcomes.

Video


Flavia Thomé talks about the Trade Knowledge Network
(Flash Video - 1:35 min)

Team


Mark Halle· Mark Halle
Director - Trade and Investment, and European Representative
Aaron Cosbey· Aaron Cosbey
Associate and Senior Climate Change and Trade Advisor
Adil Najam· Adil Najam
Associate and Senior Fellow
Christopher Beaton· Christopher Beaton
Research Analyst/Communications Officer
Chris Charles· Chris Charles
Programme Administrator
Chris Wunderlich· Chris Wunderlich
Associate
Clarita Martinet-Fay· Clarita Martinet-Fay
Programme Officer
Fariba Di Benedetto-Achtari· Fariba Di Benedetto-Achtari
Executive Assistant
Fiona Marshall· Fiona Marshall
Associate
Flavia Thomé· Flavia Thomé
Programme Administrator
Howard Mann· Howard Mann
Associate & Senior International Law Advisor
Huihui (Helena) Zhang· Huihui (Helena) Zhang
Project Manager, China
Jason Potts· Jason Potts
Associate and Program Manager, SMART
Javed Ahmad· Javed Ahmad
Acting Communications Director and Communications Director, Global Subsidies Initiative
Oli Brown· Oli Brown
Senior Researcher and Program Manager
Oshani Perera· Oshani Perera
Programme Officer
Peter Wooders· Peter Wooders
Senior Economist
Ron Steenblik· Ron Steenblik
emeritus Director of Research
Sabrina Shaw· Sabrina Shaw
Associate; Writer/Editor Earth Negotiations Bulletin
Tara Laan· Tara Laan
Associate

International Trade

Making international trade work for sustainable development

What's New in International Trade?

  • A Sustainable Development Roadmap for the WTO
    (PDF - 3.2 MB)

    The impasse in the Doha negotiations offers both grounds for concern about the current regime's model, and the breathing space in which to thoughtfully consider how that model might better serve today's needs. This short book argues that the WTO has committed to sustainable development as one of its basic objectives, and asks what the organization would look like if that objective were rigorously pursued. The answers (that range across areas as diverse as dispute settlement, accession, trade and environment, trade and development, and the negotiation process) identify what needs to be done and what role the WTO should play. The result is a timely roadmap for helping the WTO achieve its full economic, environmental and social potential.

  • Trade and Subsidies: Undermining the trading system with public funds (PDF - 302 kb)
    In this IISD Commentary, Mark Halle describes how subsidies undermine the international trading system and its potential to help the transition to sustainable development. This article will appear in October in "Peace and Prosperity through Global Trade," a joint publication of the Evian Group and the International Chamber of Commerce.

International trade has enormous potential to foster or frustrate sustainable development. By allowing for specialization, trade can increase incomes and contribute to increased well-being. Openness to investment and trade can bring new environmentally-friendly technologies and processes.

But trade can also allow powerful global demand to deplete countries' natural resources and create increased pollution. And the benefits of trade are not always well distributed among and within nations.

In seeking positive outcomes, IISD focuses on two major themes, with a particular concern for developing countries:

Contents