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Jordan’s barter

by Riad Al-Khouri

The setting up of the World Trade Organization (WTO) in the mid-1990s was supposed to have put the world economy on the path to multilateral trade liberalization. Yet, bilateral and regional free trade agreements (FTAs) have proliferated over the last decade or so. In the 1990s, the European Union (EU) was a main proponent of bilateral accords. With the start of the Doha Round in 2001, however, the Europeans focused on the multilateral level, whereas the United States embarked on a major drive for regional and bilateral FTAs. Yet in 2006, with the Doha talks stalling, the EU developed a new strategy emphasizing bilateral free trade accords. While the EU and the US are among the more active players in this process of making trade agreements, others are similarly engaged. Jordan provides the leading example of bilateral and regional trade liberalization since the late 1990s. Regarding trade agreements with the

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