experts
Viji Rangaswami
Associate

about


This person is no longer with the Carnegie Endowment.

Viji Rangaswami was an associate in the Trade, Equity, and Development Project at the Carnegie Endowment.  She was formerly minority trade counsel to the Committee on the Ways and Means in the U.S. House of Representatives.  Her work focuses on how multilateral and regional trade agreements, as well as unilateral preference programs, can promote development, particularly among the least developed countries.

Rangaswami served for six years with the Committee. She played a key role in legislation granting permanent normal trade relations status to China and extending unilateral trade preferences to various regions, including sub-Saharan Africa.

Rangaswami also worked with both the Clinton and Bush Administrations to implement major trade initiatives, including free trade agreements with Jordan, Chile, Singapore, Australia, and Morocco. She provided oversight and advice to members of Congress on ongoing trade negotiations, with particular emphasis on the Doha Round, the FTAA, Central America, and the Southern African Customs Union.  She also advised members on issues such as textiles and apparel trade, intellectual property rights, unfair trade practices, WTO dispute settlement, and customs administration .

Before joining the Ways and Means staff, Rangaswami was an associate at the law firm of Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, working in the area of international trade. She has served as a visiting lecturer at Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School and as an adjunct professor at Georgetown University Law School.

Selected Publications:  Feast or Famine: US Trade Policy in 2001 (Bridges, 2001); "Joltin' Joe Has Left and Gone Away - Embracing Change:  The Way Forward for US Trade Policy and the WTO", (Journal of Law and Policy in International Business, 2000)


education
B.A., Duke University; J.D., Duke University

All work from Viji Rangaswami

filters
10 Results
event
Fast Track Renewal: Is the Past Prologue and Current Prospects
October 18, 2006

Discussants focus on the likelihood that fast track trade negotiating authority will be renewed before it expires next June.

  • +7
  • Sherman Katz
  • Viji Rangaswami
  • Bill Frenzel
  • Tom Downey
  • Bob Packwood
  • Marcia Miller
  • Grant Aldonas
  • Tim Reif
  • Mike Castellano
  • Brian Pomper
article
Farm Policies Block Progress for the Poor

Global trade talks at the WTO were suspended indefinitely because key countries could not agree on how deeply to reduce tariffs on farm products and farm subsidies. Without real concessions, these talks will fail, and the world will lose an important opportunity to integrate the poorest and most marginalized countries into the global economy.

· September 27, 2006
REQUIRED IMAGE
commentary
Preserve GSP, A Memo to the U.S. Trade Representative

The real reason more countries do not benefit from the U.S. Generalized System of Preferences is that the program excludes the very products most developing countries can competitively produce, which primarily benefits developed countries and non-GSP countries at the expense of countries with large poor populations.

· September 7, 2006
Comments Submitted to the US Trade Representative
REQUIRED IMAGE
commentary
Nickel and Diming the Poor: U.S. Implementation of the LDC Initiative

The U.S. should provide open access for least developed country exports, which would yield real benefits to the global poor and allow the U.S. to reclaim its leadership position in the struggling WTO round.

· July 10, 2006
Carnegie Endowment
event
Labor Standards in Development Finance: Recent Breakthroughs
April 18, 2006

Development finance institutions that lend to private firms in developing countries have started to require borrowers to adhere to national and international labor standards in their operations. Carnegie and the ILO brought together practitioners to discuss the process of implementing labor standards and to share best practices to achieve success on the ground.

  • +21
  • Sandra Polaski
  • Armand Pereira
  • Dorothy Berry
  • Rachel Kyte
  • Suellen Lazarus
  • Peter Thimme
  • Robert Montgomery
  • Amber Frugte
  • Alke Schmidt
  • Lee Swepston
  • Ros Harvey
  • Emily Sims
  • Steve Gibbons
  • Dan Viederman
  • Jorge Perez-Lopez
  • Bruce Moats
  • Peter Bakvis
  • Adam Greene
  • Viji Rangaswami
  • William Bulmer
  • Lejo Sibbel
  • Mark Constantine
  • Judy Gearhart
  • Patrick Neyts
REQUIRED IMAGE
event
Free Trade Agreements with Latin America: A Test of Globalization
March 14, 2006

Carnegie hosted a discussion with Congressman Sander Levin on free trade agreements with Latin America.

  • +1
REQUIRED IMAGE
commentary
A Stitch in Time: Helping Vulnerable Countries Meet the Challenges of Apparel Quota Elimination

In the wake of the WTO's elimination of apparel export quotas, analysts predict that China and a handful of other efficient, low-cost producers will dominate the global market within a few years, shutting smaller, less industrialized countries out of an industry that created millions of jobs and often was the first step in the process of industrialization.

· September 27, 2005
REQUIRED IMAGE
event
Promoting Cambodia’s Competitiveness in a Post-MFA World
July 21, 2005

The Carnegie Endowment recently hosted a conference on the Cambodian apparel sector, which has been revolutionized by an innovative trade agreement that helped create jobs and improve working conditions.  Government officials, representatives from NGOs, intergovernmental organizations, and the private sector discussed how Cambodia's experience can be improved and replicated elsewhere.

  • +25
  • Viji Rangaswami
  • Sandra Polaski
  • Brad Figel
  • Jim Kolbe
  • Gordon Smith
  • H.E. Cham Prasidh
  • Ros Harvey
  • H.E. Roland Eng
  • Sean Ansett
  • Sarah Marniesse
  • Edward Gresser
  • David Birnbaum
  • Nigel Twose
  • Chhorn Sokha
  • Ken Loo
  • Jason Judd
  • Bama Athreya
  • Trini Leung
  • Agatha Schmaedick
  • Tim Reif
  • Sandy Levin
  • Edward Alden
  • Elizabeth Becker
  • John Podesta
  • Eric Autor
  • Angela Hoffman
  • Hervé Gallepe
  • Magdi Amin
REQUIRED IMAGE
event
Globalization, International Law and the Future of International Investment Treaties
July 15, 2005

Carnegie hosted a workshop on IISD's Model International Agreement on Investment for Sustainable Development, which aims to ensure that foreign investment creates development benefits in host countries. 

  • +2
  • Viji Rangaswami
  • Aaron Cosbey
  • Howard Mann
  • Daniel Price
  • William Reinsch