<p>The collapse of the Doha Round hangs heavily over an already troubled world economy. Some have concluded that this failure is simply the result of a lack of political will and a pre-occupation with issues such as terrorism. But as Kent Jones reveals in <em>The Doha Blues</em> the World Trade Organization needs serious structural changes not just political backbone. He shows for instance that the WTO--now with 153 members--has become increasingly unwieldy in terms of concluding trade agreements and he suggests that countries organize around specific platform positions a strategy that would make the &quot;holy grail&quot; of consensus once again possible. Jones also argues for financial support for poorer countries so that they can participate effectively in negotiations and he contends that the principle of the &quot;single undertaking&quot; (that &quot;there is no agreement until everything is agreed&quot;) has become a serious and perhaps crippling constraint and must be modified. Jones is a leading authority on trade policy and his book illuminates the real stumbling blocks to trade liberalization and highlights the way around them.</p>
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