Given the benefits of engaging with the international economy through goods and services exports, this form of trade facilitation focuses on transparency, as firms are supported in navigating complex processes associated with international market access. Evidence may should help target this support where there exist market failures.
Get in touch with ari.comment@go-science.gov.uk
This question was published as part of the set of ARIs in this document:
The proposed research aims to improve our understanding of the relationships between firms' engagement in markets external to Northern Ireland (NI) and their performance. The overall aim of the project would be to develo...
Funded by: ESRC
Lead research organisation: University of Ulster
The project aims to improve understanding of the relationships between firms' engagement in markets external to Northern Ireland (NI) and their performance, specifically focusing on the role of exporting and importing within the NI economy.
The UK's exit from the European Union presents policymakers with an unprecedented set of challenges, risks and opportunities. Perhaps nowhere are these more significant than in the decisions that the UK will have to make...
Funded by: ESRC
Lead research organisation: Institute for Fiscal Studies
The project aims to understand how new trade arrangements for the UK might affect different industries, regions, and workers, which could indirectly provide insights into the productivity premium on exporters versus non-exporters.
This project aims at understanding which factors stimulate or hamper economic relations between the UK and India. Both countries are important markets for each other's exporters and investors, and it is imperative to unl...
Funded by: ESRC
Lead research organisation: University of Sussex
The project aims to understand the factors that stimulate or hamper economic relations between the UK and India, which could provide insights into the productivity premium on exporters versus non-exporters in the UK.