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WTO Regime and Labour Relations

The World Trade Organization (WTO) is the only global international organization dealing with the rules of trade between nations. At its heart are the WTO agreements, negotiated and signed by the bulk of the world’s trading nations and ratified in their parliaments. The goal is to help producers of goods and services, exporters, and importers conduct their business.

Thus the impact on industrial relations under WTO assumes significance for the following reasons

It is here that two most important international organizations come into focus to protect the growing threat to the way of globalization towards labor and their problems.

Labour rights have been finding reflection in regional and bilateral Preferential Trading Agreements beginning with the U.S. negotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (“NAFTA”) with Mexico and Canada in the early 1990s.

There are two broad categories of provisions relating to labour standards in PTAs:

The Trade and Labour linkage is a sensitive and controversial issue for many countries, particularly developing countries. There are both proponents and opponents to the debate. Existing literature indicates that:

At the WTO, the Singapore Ministerial Declaration in 1996 dealt with the trade and labour relations. Two key elements of the Declaration were:

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