Initial Conditions and Incentives for Arab Economic Integration : Can the European Community's Success be Emulated?

The authors compare the European Community's "trade fundamentals" prevailing in the 1960s with those applying in Arab countries today. The fundamentals differ significantly-Arab countries trade much less with each other than EC membe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hoekman, Bernard, Messerlin, Patrick
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2014
Subjects:
GDP
OIL
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/10/2050411/initial-conditions-incentives-arab-economic-integration-can-european-communitys-success-emulated
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19233
id okr-10986-19233
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic AGRICULTURAL PRODUCE
AGRICULTURE
BENCHMARKS
BILATERAL AGREEMENTS
BILATERAL TRADE
BORDER MERGERS
CAPITAL MARKET
CARTEL
CARTELS
COAL
COLLUSION
COMMERCIAL POLICY
COMMON MARKET
COMMON TARIFF
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES
CONSUMERS
CONVERGENCE
CREDIBLE TARIFF REMOVAL
CURRENCY
CUSTOMS
CUSTOMS UNION
CUSTOMS UNIONS
DEVELOPMENT
DIMINISHING RETURNS
DISCRIMINATORY TRADE AGREEMENTS
DOMESTIC INTERESTS
DOMESTIC MARKETS
DOMESTIC REFORMS
DOMESTIC REGULATION
ECONOMIC COMMUNITY
ECONOMIC COOPERATION
ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY
ECONOMIC FACTORS
ECONOMIC IMPACT
ECONOMIC INTEGRATION
ECONOMIC POLICIES
ECONOMIC POWER
ECONOMIC PROCESS
ECONOMIC SIZE
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
ELIMINATION OF TARIFFS
EMPLOYMENT
EMPLOYMENT POLICY
EXCESS SUPPLY
EXPORT MARKETS
EXPORT SHARES
EXPORT STRUCTURE
EXPORT SUBSIDIES
EXPORTS
EXTERNAL PROTECTION
EXTERNAL TARIFF
EXTERNAL TRADE
EXTERNAL TRADE POLICY
FACTORS OF PRODUCTION
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
FOREIGN POLICY
FREE TRADE
FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS
FREE TRADE AREA
FUELS
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
GOVERNMENTAL COOPERATION
GRAVITY MODEL
HARMONIZATION
HIGH TARIFFS
IMPORT BARRIERS
IMPORT PRICES
IMPORTS
INCOME
INCOME DIFFERENCES
INDUSTRIAL POLICIES
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS
INDUSTRY TRADE
INTEREST GROUPS
INTERNAL MARKET
INTERNAL TRADE
INTERNAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INTRA-REGIONAL TRADE
LABOR FORCE
LABOR MARKETS
LEGISLATION
LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE
LOW TARIFFS
MARKET SEGMENTATION
MARKET SEGMENTING
MARKET SHARE
MARKET SIZE
MEMBER COUNTRY
MEMBER STATE
MEMBER STATES
MERCHANDISE TRADE
MONETARY POLICY
MULTILATERAL NEGOTIATING
MUTUAL RECOGNITION
MUTUAL TRADE
NATIONAL LAWS
NATIONAL LEGISLATION
NATIONAL POLICIES
NATIONAL REGULATIONS
NATURAL RESOURCES
OIL
OIL EXPORTERS
OIL PRICE
OIL SECTOR
PARTNER COUNTRY
POLICY HARMONIZATION
POLICY INTEGRATION
POLICY MAKERS
POLITICAL ECONOMY
PREFERENTIAL BASIS
PREFERENTIAL TRADE
PREFERENTIAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION
PRICE SUPPORTS
PRIVATE SECTOR
PROCESS OF INTEGRATION
PRODUCERS
PRODUCT CATEGORIES
PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION
PRODUCT MARKETS
PRODUCTION COSTS
PRODUCTION PROCESS
PRODUCTIVITY
PROFESSIONAL QUALIFICATIONS
PROFIT MAXIMIZATION
PROTECTIONIST POLICIES
PROTECTIVE TARIFFS
PUBLIC HEALTH
PUBLIC INTEREST
PUBLIC SAFETY
RATES OF PROTECTION
REGIONAL COOPERATION
REGIONAL INTEGRATION
REGIONAL TRADE
REGULATORY AREAS
REGULATORY ISSUES
REGULATORY OBJECTIVES
REGULATORY REGIMES
RESTRICTIVE BUSINESS PRACTICES
SAFETY STANDARDS
SHARE OF WORLD EXPORTS
SOCIAL SECURITY
SOCIAL SECURITY COSTS
SPECIALIZATION
TARIFF LINES
TARIFF SCHEDULE
TARIFF SCHEDULES
TRADE
TRADE AGREEMENTS
TRADE ARRANGEMENTS
TRADE BARRIERS
TRADE CLASSIFICATION
TRADE COSTS
TRADE DEPENDENCE
TRADE FACILITATION
TRADE FLOW
TRADE FLOWS
TRADE INTENSITY
TRADE INTENSITY INDICES
TRADE LIBERALIZATION EFFORTS
TRADE PATTERNS
TRADE POLICIES
TRADE POLICY
TRADE POLICY INSTRUMENTS
TRADE REFORM
TRADE RESTRICTIONS
TRADE VOLUMES
TRADING PARTNERS
TRANSACTION COSTS
TRANSACTIONS COSTS
TRANSITION PERIODS
UNILATERAL ACTION
VALUE OF TRADE
VOLUME OF TRADE
WAGES
WORLD ECONOMY
WORLD MARKET
WORLD MARKETS
WORLD PRICES
WORLD TRADE
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL PRODUCE
AGRICULTURE
BENCHMARKS
BILATERAL AGREEMENTS
BILATERAL TRADE
BORDER MERGERS
CAPITAL MARKET
CARTEL
CARTELS
COAL
COLLUSION
COMMERCIAL POLICY
COMMON MARKET
COMMON TARIFF
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES
CONSUMERS
CONVERGENCE
CREDIBLE TARIFF REMOVAL
CURRENCY
CUSTOMS
CUSTOMS UNION
CUSTOMS UNIONS
DEVELOPMENT
DIMINISHING RETURNS
DISCRIMINATORY TRADE AGREEMENTS
DOMESTIC INTERESTS
DOMESTIC MARKETS
DOMESTIC REFORMS
DOMESTIC REGULATION
ECONOMIC COMMUNITY
ECONOMIC COOPERATION
ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY
ECONOMIC FACTORS
ECONOMIC IMPACT
ECONOMIC INTEGRATION
ECONOMIC POLICIES
ECONOMIC POWER
ECONOMIC PROCESS
ECONOMIC SIZE
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
ELIMINATION OF TARIFFS
EMPLOYMENT
EMPLOYMENT POLICY
EXCESS SUPPLY
EXPORT MARKETS
EXPORT SHARES
EXPORT STRUCTURE
EXPORT SUBSIDIES
EXPORTS
EXTERNAL PROTECTION
EXTERNAL TARIFF
EXTERNAL TRADE
EXTERNAL TRADE POLICY
FACTORS OF PRODUCTION
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
FOREIGN POLICY
FREE TRADE
FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS
FREE TRADE AREA
FUELS
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
GOVERNMENTAL COOPERATION
GRAVITY MODEL
HARMONIZATION
HIGH TARIFFS
IMPORT BARRIERS
IMPORT PRICES
IMPORTS
INCOME
INCOME DIFFERENCES
INDUSTRIAL POLICIES
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS
INDUSTRY TRADE
INTEREST GROUPS
INTERNAL MARKET
INTERNAL TRADE
INTERNAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INTRA-REGIONAL TRADE
LABOR FORCE
LABOR MARKETS
LEGISLATION
LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE
LOW TARIFFS
MARKET SEGMENTATION
MARKET SEGMENTING
MARKET SHARE
MARKET SIZE
MEMBER COUNTRY
MEMBER STATE
MEMBER STATES
MERCHANDISE TRADE
MONETARY POLICY
MULTILATERAL NEGOTIATING
MUTUAL RECOGNITION
MUTUAL TRADE
NATIONAL LAWS
NATIONAL LEGISLATION
NATIONAL POLICIES
NATIONAL REGULATIONS
NATURAL RESOURCES
OIL
OIL EXPORTERS
OIL PRICE
OIL SECTOR
PARTNER COUNTRY
POLICY HARMONIZATION
POLICY INTEGRATION
POLICY MAKERS
POLITICAL ECONOMY
PREFERENTIAL BASIS
PREFERENTIAL TRADE
PREFERENTIAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION
PRICE SUPPORTS
PRIVATE SECTOR
PROCESS OF INTEGRATION
PRODUCERS
PRODUCT CATEGORIES
PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION
PRODUCT MARKETS
PRODUCTION COSTS
PRODUCTION PROCESS
PRODUCTIVITY
PROFESSIONAL QUALIFICATIONS
PROFIT MAXIMIZATION
PROTECTIONIST POLICIES
PROTECTIVE TARIFFS
PUBLIC HEALTH
PUBLIC INTEREST
PUBLIC SAFETY
RATES OF PROTECTION
REGIONAL COOPERATION
REGIONAL INTEGRATION
REGIONAL TRADE
REGULATORY AREAS
REGULATORY ISSUES
REGULATORY OBJECTIVES
REGULATORY REGIMES
RESTRICTIVE BUSINESS PRACTICES
SAFETY STANDARDS
SHARE OF WORLD EXPORTS
SOCIAL SECURITY
SOCIAL SECURITY COSTS
SPECIALIZATION
TARIFF LINES
TARIFF SCHEDULE
TARIFF SCHEDULES
TRADE
TRADE AGREEMENTS
TRADE ARRANGEMENTS
TRADE BARRIERS
TRADE CLASSIFICATION
TRADE COSTS
TRADE DEPENDENCE
TRADE FACILITATION
TRADE FLOW
TRADE FLOWS
TRADE INTENSITY
TRADE INTENSITY INDICES
TRADE LIBERALIZATION EFFORTS
TRADE PATTERNS
TRADE POLICIES
TRADE POLICY
TRADE POLICY INSTRUMENTS
TRADE REFORM
TRADE RESTRICTIONS
TRADE VOLUMES
TRADING PARTNERS
TRANSACTION COSTS
TRANSACTIONS COSTS
TRANSITION PERIODS
UNILATERAL ACTION
VALUE OF TRADE
VOLUME OF TRADE
WAGES
WORLD ECONOMY
WORLD MARKET
WORLD MARKETS
WORLD PRICES
WORLD TRADE
Hoekman, Bernard
Messerlin, Patrick
Initial Conditions and Incentives for Arab Economic Integration : Can the European Community's Success be Emulated?
geographic_facet Middle East and North Africa
North Africa
Middle East
European Union
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2921
description The authors compare the European Community's "trade fundamentals" prevailing in the 1960s with those applying in Arab countries today. The fundamentals differ significantly-Arab countries trade much less with each other than EC members did, and the importance of such trade in GDP varies greatly. This suggests that a viable Arab integration strategy must follow a path that differs from the preferential trade liberalization-led approach implemented by the European Community. An alternative is to complement long-standing attempts to liberalize merchandise trade with an effort that revolves around service sector reforms and liberalization. This may prove to be an effective mechanism to support reforms as, in principle, there is a major constituency in each Arab country that has an interest in improving the performance of services-the natural resource-based and manufacturing sectors. A key condition for such an approach to be feasible is that Arab cooperation helps overcome political economy resistance to national, unilateral action, or, generates direct gains from cooperation in specific policy areas. The EC experience suggests that a services-based integration strategy will be complex and must be carefully designed and sequenced. Given the importance of services-related trade and logistics transactions costs, a first step might focus on bringing such costs down through a concerted joint effort.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Hoekman, Bernard
Messerlin, Patrick
author_facet Hoekman, Bernard
Messerlin, Patrick
author_sort Hoekman, Bernard
title Initial Conditions and Incentives for Arab Economic Integration : Can the European Community's Success be Emulated?
title_short Initial Conditions and Incentives for Arab Economic Integration : Can the European Community's Success be Emulated?
title_full Initial Conditions and Incentives for Arab Economic Integration : Can the European Community's Success be Emulated?
title_fullStr Initial Conditions and Incentives for Arab Economic Integration : Can the European Community's Success be Emulated?
title_full_unstemmed Initial Conditions and Incentives for Arab Economic Integration : Can the European Community's Success be Emulated?
title_sort initial conditions and incentives for arab economic integration : can the european community's success be emulated?
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2014
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/10/2050411/initial-conditions-incentives-arab-economic-integration-can-european-communitys-success-emulated
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19233
_version_ 1764439580922085376
spelling okr-10986-192332021-04-23T14:03:42Z Initial Conditions and Incentives for Arab Economic Integration : Can the European Community's Success be Emulated? Hoekman, Bernard Messerlin, Patrick AGRICULTURAL PRODUCE AGRICULTURE BENCHMARKS BILATERAL AGREEMENTS BILATERAL TRADE BORDER MERGERS CAPITAL MARKET CARTEL CARTELS COAL COLLUSION COMMERCIAL POLICY COMMON MARKET COMMON TARIFF COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES CONSUMERS CONVERGENCE CREDIBLE TARIFF REMOVAL CURRENCY CUSTOMS CUSTOMS UNION CUSTOMS UNIONS DEVELOPMENT DIMINISHING RETURNS DISCRIMINATORY TRADE AGREEMENTS DOMESTIC INTERESTS DOMESTIC MARKETS DOMESTIC REFORMS DOMESTIC REGULATION ECONOMIC COMMUNITY ECONOMIC COOPERATION ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY ECONOMIC FACTORS ECONOMIC IMPACT ECONOMIC INTEGRATION ECONOMIC POLICIES ECONOMIC POWER ECONOMIC PROCESS ECONOMIC SIZE ECONOMIES OF SCALE ELIMINATION OF TARIFFS EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT POLICY EXCESS SUPPLY EXPORT MARKETS EXPORT SHARES EXPORT STRUCTURE EXPORT SUBSIDIES EXPORTS EXTERNAL PROTECTION EXTERNAL TARIFF EXTERNAL TRADE EXTERNAL TRADE POLICY FACTORS OF PRODUCTION FINANCIAL SUPPORT FOREIGN POLICY FREE TRADE FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS FREE TRADE AREA FUELS GDP GDP PER CAPITA GOVERNMENTAL COOPERATION GRAVITY MODEL HARMONIZATION HIGH TARIFFS IMPORT BARRIERS IMPORT PRICES IMPORTS INCOME INCOME DIFFERENCES INDUSTRIAL POLICIES INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS INDUSTRY TRADE INTEREST GROUPS INTERNAL MARKET INTERNAL TRADE INTERNAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION INTERNATIONAL TRADE INTRA-REGIONAL TRADE LABOR FORCE LABOR MARKETS LEGISLATION LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE LOW TARIFFS MARKET SEGMENTATION MARKET SEGMENTING MARKET SHARE MARKET SIZE MEMBER COUNTRY MEMBER STATE MEMBER STATES MERCHANDISE TRADE MONETARY POLICY MULTILATERAL NEGOTIATING MUTUAL RECOGNITION MUTUAL TRADE NATIONAL LAWS NATIONAL LEGISLATION NATIONAL POLICIES NATIONAL REGULATIONS NATURAL RESOURCES OIL OIL EXPORTERS OIL PRICE OIL SECTOR PARTNER COUNTRY POLICY HARMONIZATION POLICY INTEGRATION POLICY MAKERS POLITICAL ECONOMY PREFERENTIAL BASIS PREFERENTIAL TRADE PREFERENTIAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION PRICE SUPPORTS PRIVATE SECTOR PROCESS OF INTEGRATION PRODUCERS PRODUCT CATEGORIES PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION PRODUCT MARKETS PRODUCTION COSTS PRODUCTION PROCESS PRODUCTIVITY PROFESSIONAL QUALIFICATIONS PROFIT MAXIMIZATION PROTECTIONIST POLICIES PROTECTIVE TARIFFS PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC INTEREST PUBLIC SAFETY RATES OF PROTECTION REGIONAL COOPERATION REGIONAL INTEGRATION REGIONAL TRADE REGULATORY AREAS REGULATORY ISSUES REGULATORY OBJECTIVES REGULATORY REGIMES RESTRICTIVE BUSINESS PRACTICES SAFETY STANDARDS SHARE OF WORLD EXPORTS SOCIAL SECURITY SOCIAL SECURITY COSTS SPECIALIZATION TARIFF LINES TARIFF SCHEDULE TARIFF SCHEDULES TRADE TRADE AGREEMENTS TRADE ARRANGEMENTS TRADE BARRIERS TRADE CLASSIFICATION TRADE COSTS TRADE DEPENDENCE TRADE FACILITATION TRADE FLOW TRADE FLOWS TRADE INTENSITY TRADE INTENSITY INDICES TRADE LIBERALIZATION EFFORTS TRADE PATTERNS TRADE POLICIES TRADE POLICY TRADE POLICY INSTRUMENTS TRADE REFORM TRADE RESTRICTIONS TRADE VOLUMES TRADING PARTNERS TRANSACTION COSTS TRANSACTIONS COSTS TRANSITION PERIODS UNILATERAL ACTION VALUE OF TRADE VOLUME OF TRADE WAGES WORLD ECONOMY WORLD MARKET WORLD MARKETS WORLD PRICES WORLD TRADE The authors compare the European Community's "trade fundamentals" prevailing in the 1960s with those applying in Arab countries today. The fundamentals differ significantly-Arab countries trade much less with each other than EC members did, and the importance of such trade in GDP varies greatly. This suggests that a viable Arab integration strategy must follow a path that differs from the preferential trade liberalization-led approach implemented by the European Community. An alternative is to complement long-standing attempts to liberalize merchandise trade with an effort that revolves around service sector reforms and liberalization. This may prove to be an effective mechanism to support reforms as, in principle, there is a major constituency in each Arab country that has an interest in improving the performance of services-the natural resource-based and manufacturing sectors. A key condition for such an approach to be feasible is that Arab cooperation helps overcome political economy resistance to national, unilateral action, or, generates direct gains from cooperation in specific policy areas. The EC experience suggests that a services-based integration strategy will be complex and must be carefully designed and sequenced. Given the importance of services-related trade and logistics transactions costs, a first step might focus on bringing such costs down through a concerted joint effort. 2014-08-01T20:09:52Z 2014-08-01T20:09:52Z 2002-10 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/10/2050411/initial-conditions-incentives-arab-economic-integration-can-european-communitys-success-emulated http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19233 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2921 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research Middle East and North Africa North Africa Middle East European Union