Team TREND analytics

Team TREND analytics

TREND analytics is a joint project of the German Development Institute / Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE) and Jean-Fréderic Morin,chairholder of the Canada Research Chair in International Political Economy at Laval University, Canada. Basing on this collaboration, the team TREND analytics writes on how to use the web tool as well as on international trade developments. The authors are: Jean-Fréderic Morin (Laval University), Clara Brandi and Axel Berger (researcher at the DIE), and Dominique Bruhn (associate researcher at DIE).

So far, we have known little about the trade effects of environmental provisions in preferential trade agreements (PTAs). Can the trend to incorporate environmental provisions in PTAs help to make trade flows greener? In a new article, we show that environmental provisions can help reduce dirty exports and increase green exports from developing countries. This […]

Most recent preferential trade agreements (PTAs) include environmental provisions, as documented on TRENDanalytics. Often trade negotiators do not reinvent the wheel and copy environmental provisions that have been included in earlier PTAs. For example, while the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, signed in 2018, entails a record number of environmental provisions, only two […]

  The role of civil society was a hotly debated topic in the context of trade policies and trade agreements such as TTIP and CETA (Eliasson and Huet 2018). More recent preferential trade agreements (PTAs) include provisions that explicitly demand the participation of non-state actors such as non-governmental organisation (NGOs), citizens as well as the […]

  The North American Free Trade Agreement (“NAFTA”) entered into force in 1994 between the US, Canada and Mexico is generally acknowledged to be the first major preferential trade agreement (PTA) comprehensively addressing environmental issues. During the G20 summit,  NAFTA has been superseded by the recently negotiated United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (“USMCA“).