About
Centad
Centre for Trade and Development (Centad) is a registered,
independent, not-for-profit organisation that carries
out policy research and advocacy on issues around
trade and development. Its publications are well received
by policy makers.
Background
Services constitute approximately half of the GDP
of developing countries and trade in services is the
fastest growing sector in world trade. Trade in services
occupies 30 percent of India’s exports. These are
in the form of four modes of services delivery. Mode
1 refers to cross-border supply, for instance call
centers (India’s BPO sector at US$7.7 billion is seven
times that of China). Mode 2 relates to consumption
abroad. Medical care, education, and tourism are few
of the services delivered by this mode. Mode 3 refers
to commercial presence, where delivery requires FDI
for instance banking and financial services. Mode
4 refers to movement of natural persons, where services
are delivered by individuals traveling to other countries
e.g. IT professionals.
Centad is instituting a call for papers for researchers
on key areas of trade in services, to address current
research gaps. Papers are expected to have an India
focus, development linkages and provide a policy angle.
Papers should also include India’s negotiations in
the WTO as well as provide inputs for future negotiations.
Trade researchers, economists, lawyers, social scientists
are invited to submit abstracts. The call for papers
is subdivided into 1) Sectoral Analysis and 2) Thematic
Analysis.
Sectoral Analysis
Sectoral themes refer to studies on sectors for instance
those listed under 12 headings in the classification
system adopted by the WTO. These include distribution
services, professional services, financial services
etc. Within the sector selected, the paper may encompass
- Market access
- India’s competitiveness in all four modes of service
delivery
- Domestic regulation at federal and state level
Researchers are encouraged to use alternative classification
methods for instance consumer services, public utility
services, infrastructure etc.
Thematic Analysis
Thematic areas refer to crosscutting issues that are
overarching and generally relate to some or most sectors
of trade in services. These may include
- Liberalisation of services in India
- Barriers to trade in services
- Conceptual studies on productivity, competitiveness
etc
- Studies on individual modes of supply
- Domestic regulation in destination markets
Extended Abstracts/Paper Submission
The abstracts should clearly delineate
- Topic
- Rationale
- Hypothesis/Objectives/Addressed questions
- Research methodology
- Proposed sections
The abstracts should be submitted electronically (MS
word, maximum 1200 words) with a separate sheet providing
details of the researcher. Name of the researcher
should not appear on the abstract sheet. A team of
experts will review the abstracts for originality
and relevance. Researchers whose abstracts are selected
will be required to submit full papers which will
be collated, peer reviewed and edited in the form
of a book, by experts. Centad will pay Rs. 20,000
to the researcher/s whose papers are selected.
Important Dates
Last date to email abstract
– 7 March 2006
Selection of abstracts – 31 March 2006
Last date to submit final paper – 10 July 2006
Contact Us:
Contact Us:
Centre for Trade and Development,
#406, Bhikaiji Cama Bhawan,
Bhikaiji Cama Place,
New Delhi – 110066
INDIA
Email: centad@centad.org
Phone: +91 - 11 - 4145
9226.
February 22, 2006. |