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Commercial Policy in Post-War Europe: Reciprocity Versus Most-Favored-Nation Treatment

H. Van V. Fay

Geneva, Switzerland

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1927

I. The situation before the war: The Cobden treaty and the general-conventional system, 443. — The double-schedule system, 444. — Opposition to the most-favored-nation clause, 445. — II. Principles under discussion after the peace, 446. — The right of access to raw materials, 447. — Freedom of transit, 448. — Equality of trade conditions, 449. — The treaty provisions and their effects, 450. — III. France's espousal of reciprocity, 456. — Influence on policies of other countries, 457. — Genoa conference of 1922, 458. — IV. Movements for a multilateral arrangement, 462. — Brussels conference of 1920, 462. — Barcelona conference of 1921, 463. — V. Development of most-favored-nation agreements in negotiations between individual states, 466. — The International Economic Conference of 1927, 469.

DOI
10.2307/1883701
Volume
41 (3)
Pages
441
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