Some of the select major titles published by Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER) in this area are as follows: LallK. B.ErnstW.ChopraH. S. (eds) India and the EEC1984 as well as EEC and the Global System, 1984. W. M. callewaert and Rajiv Kumar (eds), EEC- India: Towards a Common Perspective 1985 ICRIER, EC-India Perspectives in a Changing International Order, 1989. Shanti Jagannathan ed., EC and India in the 1990s: Towards Corporate Strategy, 1993. R. L. Chawla (ed) Development Cooperation for Strengthening International Economic Relations: India, Germany, EC and Japan 1992
2.
In 1990, India held a market share in the EU (12) of 0.98% which rose to 1.28% in 1994. In the first ten months of 1996, the market share of India in. EU (15) has gone up from 1.28% to 1,50%. Cumulative European Community assistance to India reached US$ 2292.6 million during 1976-95. Similarly, EU (15) approved investment in India amounted to Rs. 30221.3 crores during (1991 - April 1998 (see for details, FIEO News, 16 November 1996 and SIA Newsletter May 1998)
3.
The schemes are Duty Entitlement Passbook (DEPB), EPCG, EPZs and income tax exemption on export proceeds. DEPB has been discontinued since 31 March 1997. Complaints lodged by antibiotic producers in EU led by Spanish, Austrian and Italian companies in September 1997 attracted provisional anti-subsidy duties ranging between 6.6% and 14.6% for antibiotic exports from India (quoted in Times of Oman 24 August, 1998)
4.
Data for German Foreign trade are based on Intereconomics: Review of International Trade and Development, Volume 33 No. 2 March-April 1998 (Hamburg, Germany), pp. 93–100
5.
This information on trade has been culled from SchonherrS., “The changing Environment for Economic Cooperation, Trade and Direct Investment between India and Germany” in R. L. Chawla (ed.) Development Cooperation for strengthening International Economic Relations, India, Germany, EC and Japan (New Delhi. 1992) pp. 16–17
6.
In 1996, aid per capita was highest, at $ 389 in Israel; $ 1119 in Jordan; $ 117 in Mauritania: Bolivia $ 112 and Sri Lanka 427. See World Bank, World Development Indicators Table 6.11 pp. 342-44
7.
In future, Europe is conceived not a Europe of nations but a Europe of regions which could provide the basis for the European house. This can be explained by the theory of divergence: economic growth is best achieved by the specific development of locational factors, by clusters and not (or to a lesser extent) by the movement of production factors to places of greater shortages, as the covergency theory would have it