A challenge is before the industrialised world: to grant fair-trade access to developing countries in agriculture in a manner that allows these countries to penetrate the rich markets of the world without the non-tariff barriers and other forms of protection which have historically impeded the progress of developing countries.It really is a challenge of having humanity prevail over domination, greed, military might and the economic muscle which flows into world trade and politics.
Over the last couple centuries, Europe, North America and in the post WWII period, Japan dominated industrial production and trade. The newly industrialising countries in southern Asia (South Korea, Singapore, Taiwan and a few others) and now the so-called BRICS–Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa–have been in control of economic growth, trade and development.
Over the period the ruthless exploitation of the natural and human resources of Africa, India, Latin America and the Caribbean has been well-documented and commented upon.
Critically too, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation Development (the industrialised world) has systematically denied "fair" access to the agricultural and manufacturing products of the developing world. This is beyond the special and preferential access given in limited free-trade agreements to the developing world–the Caribbean Basin Initiative and the Economic Partnership Agreement–given by the European Union to the region being examples of such agreements.
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