United States Shipping Policies and the World Market
By (Author) William Lovett
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
18th April 1996
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
International trade and commerce
International law: transport, communications and commerce
Labour / income economics
387.50973
Hardback
344
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
595g
Nearly two-thirds of world shipping is done under flags of convenience. The significant over-tonnaging, subsidies and/or restrictions, and shipping friendly policies present in many countries create strong competitive pressures. Unfortunately, the US and British merchant marines are in serious decline. But the Japanese, Chinese, Greeks and Scandinavians are thriving at sea, and many European Union, Asian and former Eastern bloc nations are likely to remain determined competitors. US maritime policies need overhaul and a more realistic outlook. This book reviews the long history of US shipping policy and explains the present challenges (including the increasing use of open register arrangements). US labour problems, tort and liability risks, environmental and safety regulations and coastal and harbour security issues receive heavy emphasis. Options for reviving US shipbuilding are analysed, along with balance of payments implications, and sealift and national security requirements. The book offers a detailed programme for American maritime renewal. It is intended for maritime, national security, international trade and foreign policy audiences. Extensive data and tables allow for a comprehensive assessment of the US merchant marine and the global shipping industry, with substantial historical background.
WILLIAM A. LOVETT is Joseph Merrick Jones Professor of Law and Economics, and Director, International Law, Trade, and Finance Program, Tulane Law School, New Orleans, Louisiana./e Formerly an economist with the Federal Trade Commission and a trial attorney at the U.S. Department of Justice. He is author of Inflation and Politics: Fiscal, Monetary, and Wage-Price Discipline (1982), World Trade Rivalry (1987) and Banking and Financial Institutions Law (1984, 1988, 1992, 1996 {forthcoming}). Dr. Lovett has also taught or lectured in Canada, U.K., Ireland, France, Germany, Italy, Greece, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Japan, China, Taiwan, S. Korea, Thailand, Singapore, and the Philippines.