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  2. General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_and_differential...

    Special and differential treatment (S&D) is a set of GATT provisions (GATT 1947, Article XVIII) that exempts developing countries from the same strict trade rules and disciplines of more industrialized countries. [31] That is, developed countries will treat developing countries differently.

  3. Doha Development Round - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doha_Development_Round

    The aim was to put less developed countries' priorities at heart. The needs of the developing countries were the core reasons for the meeting. The major factors discussed include trade facilitation, services, rules of origin and dispute settlement. Special and differential treatment for the developing countries were also discussed as a major ...

  4. Non-Agricultural Market Access - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-Agricultural_Market_Access

    The Non-Agricultural Market Access (NAMA) negotiations of the World Trade Organization are based on the Doha Declaration of 2001 that calls for a reduction or elimination in tariffs, particularly on exportable goods of interest to developing countries. NAMA covers manufacturing products, fuel and mining products, fish and fish products, and ...

  5. Most favoured nation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Most_favoured_nation

    GATT members recognized in principle that the "most favoured nation" rule should be relaxed to accommodate the needs of developing countries, and the UN Conference on Trade and Development (established in 1964) has sought to extend preferential treatment to the exports of the developing countries. [6]: fol.93

  6. Enabling clause - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enabling_clause

    The enabling clause permits developed countries to discriminate between different categories of trading partners (in particular, between developed, developing and least developed countries) which would otherwise violate Article I of the GATT which stipulates that no GATT contracting party must be treated worse than any other (this is known as ...

  7. Common But Differentiated Responsibilities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_But_Differentiated...

    The US has suggested that developing countries are not doing enough to satisfy their share of 'common responsibility for the problem' of climate change. Developing countries, however, argued that their carbon emissions are essential to their survival, while those of the developed countries are 'luxury emissions.' [14]

  8. National treatment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_treatment

    The conflict between national treatment and minimum standards has mainly played out between industrialized and developing nations, in the context of expropriations. Many developing nations, having the power to take control over the property of their own citizens, wished to exercise it over the property of aliens as well. [citation needed]

  9. Global System of Trade Preferences among Developing Countries

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_System_of_Trade...

    In 1971 a Protocol on Trade Negotiations among Developing Countries (PTN) [6] was agreed under the auspices of the Trade Negotiations Committee of Developing Countries and signed by 16 countries (Brazil, Chile, Egypt, Greece, India, Israel, Korea, Pakistan, Peru, Spain, Tunisia, Türkiye, Uruguay, Yugoslavia, Mexico and the Philippines ...