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SAI INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL
SESSION 2020-21
CLASS-X
ECONOMICS- Ch-4- GLOBALISATION AND THE INDIAN ECONOMY
LESSON NOTES
SUB-TOPIC- 6
World Trade Organisation
World Trade Organisation
World Trade Organisation (WTO) is an organisation whose aim is to liberalise
international trade.
At present, 164 countries of the world are currently members of the WTO.
It has established rules for developed countries regarding international trade so
that these countries can allow free trade for all.
Started at the initiative of the developed countries, WTO establishes rules
regarding international trade, and sees that these rules are obeyed.
Debate against WTO
Though WTO is supposed to allow free trade for all, in practice, it is seen that the
developed countries have unfairly retained trade barriers.
On the other hand, WTO rules have forced the developing countries to remove
trade barriers.
An example of this is the current debate on trade in agricultural products.
Debate on trade practices
Agriculture sector provides the bulk of employment and a significant portion of the
GDP in India.
Compare this to a developed country such as the US with the share of agriculture
in GDP at 1% and its share in total employment a tiny 0.5%!
yet this very small percentage of people who are engaged in agriculture in the US
receive massive sums of money from the US government for production and for
exports to other countries.
Due to this massive money that they receive, US farmers can sell the farm
products at abnormally low prices.
The surplus farm products are sold in other country markets at low prices,
adversely affecting farmers in the developing countries.
Developing country’s demand from WTO
Developing countries are, therefore, asking the developed country governments,
“We have reduced trade barriers as per WTO rules.
But you have ignored the rules of WTO and have continued to pay your farmers
vast sums of money.