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- Brazil’s Accession to the OECD - Paul Hastings
By joining the OECD, Brazil will likely be incentivized to maintain regulatory stability and control public expenditure levels Brazil could be the first BRIC country to join the OECD
- Considerations about Brazil’s Accession to the OECD
The non-binding ones do not prevent the country from joining the Organization but aim to harmonize the countries’ policies in the accession process with the OECD standards, facilitating the integration of countries
- What can Brazil expect from joining the OECD? - TheStreet
Brazil can expect significant benefits from joining the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) The organization has shown to effectively promote better policies and
- Brazil Excludes OECD from G20 Summit, Raises Questions
Brazil’s candidacy for OECD membership, though still officially active, has seen little progress since President Lula’s return to office Some government sectors express concerns about potential constraints on public policy options that OECD membership might impose
- ROADMAP FOR THE OECD ACCESSION PROCESS OF BRAZIL - gov
The overarching objective of the accession process is to achieve convergence of Brazil with OECD standards, best policies and best practices, resulting in better outcomes for OECD Members as well as for Brazil and its citizens
- BRIDGING BRAZILIAN GOVERNANCE GAPS - OECD Watch
Each paper highlights the poor state of affairs and leading causes of governance gaps for that issue in Brazil, then proposes the domestic reforms Brazil should undertake to close the gaps The papers also identify the OECD committees, initiatives, and instruments relevant to these issues
- The OECD enlargement in Latin America and the Brazilian candidacy
As a result of the Enhanced Engagement launched by the OECD in 2007, to increase contacts with Brazil, China, India, Indonesia and South Africa, the Brazilian government has signed its cooperation agreement with the OECD in 2015, under the presidency of Dilma Rousseff
- Brazil runs counter to the requirements requested by the OECD to join . . .
Decreasing deforestation, protecting environmental defenders, fighting corruption, and strengthening democracy are conditions that the country currently does not meet By WWF-Brasil
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