Relations (1)
cross_type 2.00 — strongly supporting 3 facts
The World Trade Organization is the governing body that establishes and enforces the rules for international trade, as evidenced by its role in promoting global trade [1], guiding postwar trade agreements [2], and serving as a framework for expanding export markets [3].
Facts (3)
Sources
U.S. Trade and Tariffs: A Long-Term Perspective - UW-Stevens Point | blog.uwsp.edu 1 fact
claimThe World Trade Organization (WTO) establishes rules for member nations to promote global trade and minimize tariffs between members to further global economic development.
Transatlantic Trade, the Trump Disruption and the World ... - ECPS populismstudies.org 1 fact
claimThe European Union should prioritize applying World Trade Organization (WTO) rules to expand export markets, as international trade growth is projected to occur primarily outside the United States, specifically in Southeast Asia, according to Altman and Bastian (2025).
Beyond the headlines: How trade agreements are reshaping business mckinsey.com 1 fact
measurementPostwar trade agreements, guided by multilateral bodies such as the World Trade Organization, resulted in approximately two-thirds of international trade being tariff-free by 2023.