In 1986 the 12 members of the European Community began designing and implementing an ambitious plan for regional integration. This Single Market Plan called for European market barriers to fall, a unified market of over 320 million consumers to emerge, goods and capital to flow across national borders, businesses to benefit from new market opportunities, and other dramatic economic gains to be achieved. But restrictive trade practices and protective enclaves elude the integration process, and other troubling issues remain. They are discussed in this volume by European and American authors.
| ISBN | 0844737550 | | DEWEY edition | DC20 | | ISBN13 | 9780844737553 (What's this?) | | Pages | 480 | | Publisher | AEI Press | | Weight (grammes) | 907 | | Imprint | AEI Press | | Published in | Washington DC | | Format | Hardback | | Height (mm) | 230 | | Publication date | 01 Jan 1992 | | Width (mm) | 165 | | Library of Congress | HC241.2.I4 | | Academic level | Undergraduate, Postgraduate | | DEWEY | 338.094 | |
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Technological competition, structural change and international integration of the European single market, Fabrizio Onida; will the automobile industry go the way of the steel industry?, Frank Weiss; Europe's drug market and pharmaceutical industry in the 1990s, Peter Oberender; the European telecommunications equipment market, Claude G.B. Fontheim; telecommunications and information services, Jonathon D. Aronson; US-European air services in the 1990s, Daniel M. Kasper; insurance trade between the United States and the European Community, Robert L. Carter; implications for the United States of financial services in the European Community, Paul M. Horvitz and R. Richardson Pettit; agricultural trade conflicts in the 1990s, Tim Josling; European integration and the common agricultural policy, Stefan Tangermann.