Successfully reported this slideshow.
Your SlideShare is downloading. ×

International institutions

Ad
Ad
Ad
Ad
Ad
Ad
Ad
Ad
Ad
Ad
Ad
Loading in …3
×

Check these out next

1 of 43 Ad

More Related Content

Advertisement

Recently uploaded (20)

Advertisement

International institutions

  1. 1. INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS PRESENTED BY SIMRAN KAUR MBA 2ND YEAR IGICM
  2. 2. UNCTAD • United Nations Conference on Trade and Development • 194 states are members • Established in 1964 as a permanent intergovernmental body of UNO assembly • Responsible for dealing with developmental issues particularly international trade, the main driver of development • UNCTAD Secretriat : Geneva Secretriat headed by Mukhisa Kituyi from Kenya • Meets every 4 years • 11 conferences have been held up to 2004 • Aim to help take informed decision and promote macro-economic policies best suitable to ending global economic inequalities
  3. 3. ROLE OF UNCTAD • Globalization and development • Provide technical assistance on the management of public debt • Promote integrated approach to trade, environment and sustainable development • Focus on contribution of commodity sector to development, advocating diversification and risk management • Inform policy makers about the structure and evolution of FDI in the world • Participate in setting international accounting standards • Focus on issue related to international investment agreements
  4. 4. FUNCTIONS OF UNCTAD • To promote international trade with a view to accelerating economic development • To formulate principles of and policies on international trade and related problems of economic development • To negotiate multinational trade agreements • To make proposals for putting its principles and policies into effect
  5. 5. PRINCIPLES OF UNCTAD • Every country has the sovereign right freely to dispose of its natural resources in the interest of economic development and freely to trade with other countries • Economic relations including trade relations shall be based on the respect for the principles of sovereign equality of states, self determination of people, and non-interference in internal affairs of other countries • There shall be no discrimination on the basis of differences in socio-economic systems
  6. 6. INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND(IMF) • Established on December 27, 1945 with 29 countries • Began financial operations on March 1, 1947 • Central institution of international monetary system • Aims to prevent crises in the system by encouraging countries to adopt sound economic policies • 187 countries on September 30, 2010
  7. 7. PURPOSES OF IMF • Promote international monetary cooperation through a permanent institution • Facilitate expansion and balanced growth of international trade • Promote exchange stability • Assist in establishment of multilateral system of payments • Monitors economic and financial developments and policies • Provides the governments and central banks of its member countries with technical assistance and training in its area of expertise
  8. 8. VISION OF IMF • Strive to promote sustained non-inflationary economic growth that benefits all people • Be the centre of competence for the stability of the international financial system • Focus on its core macroeconomic and financial areas of responsibility • Be an open institution, learning from experience and dialogue
  9. 9. ORGANIZATION OF IMF • Board of Governors, all member countries are represented, highest authority : meets once a year • Executive Board – 24 Executive Directors with Managing Director as Chairman : meets three times a week in Washington DC • 5 largest shareholders : United States, Japan, Germany, France and United Kingdom – along with China, Russia, Saudi Arabia, have their own seats on the Board • Other 16 Executive Directors elected for 2-year terms by group of countries known as constituencies • Key policy issues considered twice-yearly in International Monetary and Financial Committee (IMFC) • Committee of Board of Governors of IMF and World Bank called Development Committee advises on development policy • IMF has weighted voting system
  10. 10. PROCESS OF IMF LENDING • IMF loans are provided under an “arrangement” • All arrangements are based on economic programmes and must be approved by Executive Board through a “letter of intent” • Loans are then released in phased installments as the programme is carried out • Low-income countries may borrow at a concessional interest rate through Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGF) • Non-concessional loans are provided through five facilities : Stand-By Arrangements (SBA), Extended Fund Facility (EFF), Supplemental Reserve Facility (SRF), Contingent Credit Lines (CCL), Compensatory Financing Facility (CFF) • Rate of charge is currently about 2.9%
  11. 11. IMF FACILITIES • Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGF)  Interest rate : 0.5%  Repaid over period of 5.5-10 years • Stand-By Arrangements (SBA)  Short-term balance of payment problems  Length: 12-18 months  Repayment: 2.25-4years • Extended Fund Facility (EFF)  Established in 1974  Repayment : 4.5-7 years
  12. 12. IMF FACILITIES • Supplemental Reserve Facility (SRF)  Introduced in 1997  Surcharge : 3-5%  Repayment : 1-1.5 years • Contingent Credit Lines (CCL)  Established in 1999  Repayment :1-1.5 years  Surcharge : 1.5-3.5% • Compensatory Financing Facility (CFF)  Established in 1960s  No surcharge  Same as SBA
  13. 13. IBRD • International Bank for Reconstruction and Development • International financial institution • Offers loans to middle-income developing countries • Established in 1944 • Main lending organization of the World Bank Group • Headquarters at Washington, D.C.
  14. 14. ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE OF IBRD • President • Board of Governors • Board of Executive Directors • Board Committee • Development Committee
  15. 15. FUNCTIONS OF IRBD • To assist in the reconstructions and development of territories of its member countries by facilitating the investment of capital for productive purpose • To promote private foreign investment by means of guarantees or participations in loans and other investment made by private investors • To arrange the loans made or guaranteed by it in relation to international loans through other channels so that more useful and urgent small and large projects are dealt with first • To promote the long ranged balanced growth of international trade and maintenance of equilibrium in the balance of payments of member countries
  16. 16. FUNDING STRATEGY OF IBRD • Ensure the availability of funds to the Bank • Minimise the effective cost of those funds to its borrowers • Control volatility in net income and over all loan charges • Provide an appropriate degree of maturity transformation between its borrowing and lending
  17. 17. WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION (WTO) • Only global international organization dealing with the rules of trade between nations • Formed on 1 January 1995 • Headquarter : Central William, Geneva, Switzerland • Members : 167 nations • India joined on 1 January, 1995 • Older form : GATT (General Agreement of Tarriffs and Trade) • Official language : English, French, Spanish • Current Director General : Roberto Azeuedo
  18. 18. PRINCIPLES OF WTO • Non-discrimination • Freer trade, predictable policies, encouraging competition • Extra provisions for less developed countries • Achieve further liberalization gradually through negotiation
  19. 19. FUNCTIONS OF WTO • Administering the WTO trade agreements • Monitoring national trade policies • Providing technical assistance and training for developing countries • Administering mechanism for settling trade disputes • Cooperating with other international organizations like IMF and IBRD • Providing the forum for negotiations among its members concerning their multilateral trade relations
  20. 20. BENEFITS OF WTO • Achievements in reducing the tariff and non-tariff barriers to trade • Liberalization of investments has been fostering economic growth of a number of countries • Increase in competition, efficiency of resource utilization, improvement in quality and productivity and fall in prices and acceleration of economic development • Provides forum for multilateral discussion of economic relations • Mechanism to deal with violation of trade agreements • Considerable research related to global trade and disseminates a wealth of information
  21. 21. DRAWBACKS OF WTO • Negotiations and decision making dominated by the developed countries • Many developing countries don’t have the financial and knowledge resources to effectively participate in WTO discussions and negotiations • The developing countries have been getting a raw deal from WTO • WTO has not been successful in imposing organization’s disciplines on the developed countries • Because of dependence of developing countries on developed countries, developed countries are able to resort to arms-twisting tactics
  22. 22. ORGANIZATION STRUCTURE OF WTO • Top level decision-making body is the Ministerial Conference which meets at least once every two years • General Council : ambassadors and heads of delegations in Geneva which meets several times a year • General Council also meets as Trade Policy Review Body and Dispute Settlement Body • Goods Council, Services Council and Intellectual Property (TRIPs) Council report to General Council • Numerous specialized committees, working groups and working parties deal with individual agreements • All WTO members may participate in all councils, committees, etc except Appellate Body, Dispute Settlement panels, Textiles Monitoring Body and plurilateral committees
  23. 23. PROCESS OF SETTLING A DISPUTE BY WTO • 60 days: Consultations, meditation, etc • 45 days: Panel set up and panelists appointment • 6 months: Final panel report to parties • 3 weeks: Final panel report to WTO members • 60 days: Dispute Settlement Body adopts report (if no appeal) • 60-90 days: Appeals report • 30 days: Dispute Settlement Body adopts appeals report
  24. 24. ECONOMIC INTEGRATION • Type of arrangement that removes artificial trade barriers between integrating economies • Balassa drew distinction between integration and cooperation • Abolition of discrimination within an area
  25. 25. DEGREES OF ECONOMIC INTEGRATION • Free trade area • Customs union • Common market • Economic union • Economic integration
  26. 26. EUROPEAN UNION (EU) • Most successful of regional economic integration schemes • Originally comprised 6 countries, namely, Belgium, France, Federal Republic of Germany, Italy, Luxembourg and Netherlands • Brought on January 1, 1958 by virtue of Treaty of Rome, 1957 • Expanded in 1973 with inclusion of UK, Denmark and Ireland • Greek joined in 1981 • Spain and Portugal in 1986 • Abolished tariffs on trade among themselves • Largest market in the world • Boost competitiveness of European industry against its rivals particularly USA, SAARC, Japan
  27. 27. BARRIERS TO EU • Border control • Limitations on movement of people and their right to establishment • Differing internal taxation regimes • Lack of a common legal framework for business • Controls on movement of capital • Heavy-and differing- regulation of services • Divergent product regulations and standards • Protectionist public procurement policies
  28. 28. BENEFITS OF EU • Uniform policy and regulatory environment of Union and reduction in transaction costs • Expansion of markets • Availability of new ports reducing transportation costs • Removal of quota restrictions for textiles and clothing will reduce protection presently available to Acs(accession countries) exports in EU market • Harmonization of tariff structures will increase import duty of some countries above pre-accession level and reduce those of others
  29. 29. CHALLENGES OF EU • Many Indian products will have to face stiffer competition in EU market • Low labour costs give rise to competition • As Acs are labour abundant and low income countries, it could affect BPO by EU to India • Acs may affect FDI inflow to India • Exports of textiles may be adversely affected with low cost production in Central and Eastern European Countries(CEECs) eating into India’s EU(15) markets
  30. 30. INDO-EU TRADE • EU is India’s largest trading partner • India’s exports to EU grew from Rs.282 crore in 1970-71 to Rs.1447 crore in 1980-81 and Rs.8951 crore in 1990-91. Correspondingly, imports were Rs.320 crore, Rs.2639 crore andRs.12,680 crore • Within EU, largest trade partners of India have been UK, Germany, Belgium, France • Exports include textiles, jute, leather, polished diamonds, chemicals, engineering goods, etc • Imports include edible oils, dairy products, capital goods, optical instruments, synthetic rubber, etc • India should pay sufficient attention in order to take advantage of “enlarging opportunity”
  31. 31. ENLARGED EU & INDIA • Accession of 10 new members • Exports were insignificant and imports were lower than exports • Main exports include gems and jewellery, drugs and pharmaceuticals, leather, textiles, plastics and agricultural commodities
  32. 32. NAFTA • Signed between USA and Canada in 1988, enlarged by inclusion of Mexico in 1994 • Eliminate all tariffs on products moving among three countries and end other barriers to services and investment capital within North America
  33. 33. AREAS OF NAFTA • Market access • Trade rules • Services • Investment • Intellectual property • Dispute settlement
  34. 34. ADVANTAGES OF NAFTA • Reduced Tariffs • The Three Countries Take Advantage Of Real Income Increases • Increased Of Trade Between, Canada, Mexico and the United States • Provided More Employment Opportunities for the US Workers
  35. 35. DISADVANTAGES OF NAFTA • Less Benefits To Mexican Workers Than Expected • Increased Tariffs Yet Not Regulations
  36. 36. ASEAN • Association of South East Asian Nations • Formed by Bangkok Declaration,1967 • 5 countries viz Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore and Thailand • Brunei joined in 1984 • Economic growth rate has been very high • Important producer of coffee, sugar, timber, petroleum, nickel, bauxite, tungsten and charcoal • ASEAN Free Trade Area(AFTA) created in 1992 which calls for elimination of all custom duties • ASEAN-India summit held in November 2002 • Free Trade Agreement was signed between ASEAN and India in 2009
  37. 37. SAARC • South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation • Seven countries: India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Sri Lanka, Maldives • Formally launched in December, 1985 • Secretriat of Association: Kathmandu, Nepal • Fundamental goal: accelerate economic and social development through optimum utilization of their human and material resources
  38. 38. OBJECTIVES OF SAARC • To promote welfare of people of South Asia • To accelerate economic growth, social progress and cultural development in the group • To promote and strengthen collective self-reliance among countries of South Asia • To contribute to mutual trust, understanding and appreciation of each other’s problems • To strengthen cooperation with other developing countries • To strengthen cooperation among themselves in international forums • To cooperate with international and regional organizations with similar aims and purposes • To promote active collaboration and mutual assistance in economic, social, cultural, technical and scientific fields
  39. 39. PRINCIPLES OF SAARC • Cooperation should be based on respect for principles of sovereign equality, territorial integrity, political independence, non-interference in the internal affairs of other States and mutual benefits • Such cooperation shall not be a substitute for bilateral cooperation but shall complement them • Such cooperation shall not be inconsistent with bilateral and multilateral obligations
  40. 40. ADVANTAGES OF SAARC • Greater cultural co-operation • Promoted global objective of shelter for all • SAFTA : a Free Trade Agreement confined to goods reduced custom duties to zero • Provided forum for bilateral and regional agreements to the small poor nations for collaboration among themselves for development
  41. 41. LIMITATIONS OF SAARC • Domination of India • Political differences • Inequality among members • Excludes bilateral and contentious issues discussion on forum • No progress in road and rail connectivity which is obstacle for trade • Lack of financial resources and technology • Most of the countries are poor except for India and lack full fledged democratic structure
  42. 42. ECONOMIC INTEGRATION OF BUSINESS • Provides opportunity for free trade with other countries that are at similar levels of development • Presents a way to trade with advanced countries without being harmed by their superior economic power • Generate economic growth and development
  43. 43. THANK YOU!!!

×