Doha round Agenda began with a ministerial-level meeting in Doha round, Qatar in 2001.
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Doha round Agenda began with a ministerial-level meeting in Doha round, Qatar in 2001.
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Doha round officially began in November 2001, committing all countries to negotiations opening agricultural and manufacturing markets, as well as trade-in-services negotiations and expanded intellectual property regulation .
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The intent of the Doha round, according to its proponents, was to make trade rules fairer for developing countries.
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However, by 2008, critics were charging that the Doha round would expand a system of trade rules here were bad for development and interfered excessively with countries' domestic "policy space".
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The failure to advance the Doha round resulted in a serious loss of momentum and brought into question whether 1 January 2005 deadline would be met.
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Doha round said that the Singapore issues could progress by negotiating on trade facilitation, considering further action on government procurement, and possibly dropping investment and competition.
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Director-general of Trade and Industry, Raymond Young, says the territory, which hosted the last round of Doha negotiations, has a "moral high-ground" on free trade that allows it to play the role of "honest broker".
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On 21 July 2008, negotiations started again at the WTO's HQ in Geneva on the Doha round but stalled after nine days of negotiations over the refusal to compromise over the special safeguard mechanism.
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Major topic at the Doha round ministerial regarded the WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights .
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At the Doha round meeting, the Ministerial Declaration directed a two-path approach for the large number of remaining issues: where a specific negotiating mandate is provided, the relevant implementation issues will be addressed under that mandate; and the other outstanding implementation issues will be addressed as a matter of priority by the relevant WTO bodies.
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