Date: 2023
Type: Dataset
Digital Trade Integration Dataset (2022)
EUI, RSC, Research Data, 2023, [Global Governance Programme], [Global Economics]
FERRACANE, Martina Francesca, ROGALER WILSON, Tomás, GONZÁLEZ, Simón (editor/s), FERRACANE, Martina Francesca, ROGALER WILSON, Tomás, GONZÁLEZ, Simón, Digital Trade Integration Dataset (2022), EUI, RSC, Research Data, 2023, [Global Governance Programme], [Global Economics] - https://hdl.handle.net/1814/76462
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
The Digital Trade Integration (DTI) dataset is an open-access dataset of regulatory policies about digital trade. The database includes restrictive and enabling policies in 130 economies worldwide. By providing comprehensive and comparable information on regulatory policies across 65 indicators, the database boosts the transparency of digital trade governance, permitting analysis of differences in policies across countries, their effectiveness in supporting international trade and investment in digital-intensive products, and enabling the identification of good practices in the area of digital trade.
Additional information:
1 data file, 2 documentation files
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/76462
External link: https://dti.eui.eu/database/
Series/Number: EUI; RSC; Research Data; 2023; [Global Governance Programme]; [Global Economics]
Publisher: European University Institute
Keyword(s): Digital trade Regulatory heterogeneity Trade policy Regional integration Trade barriers Africa
Version: The dataset is the result of desk research conducted in collaboration with the following institutions: the UN Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (UN-ECLAC), the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UN-ESCAP), the UN Economic Commission for Africa (UN-ECA), the US Department of Commerce, the London School of Economics, Hertie School, Bocconi University, and the Digital Cooperation Organization (DCO). Each of the entries in the datasets includes specific references to the source of information, including the links to the regulatory texts. The main sources of the analysis are official gazettes of laws and regulations. Secondary sources such as official guidelines, official government resources, publications, legal reviews, news articles, corporate blogs, and regulatory databases have been used as a guidance to identify measures, which are subsequently validated through a review of the primary sources.
Files associated with this item
- Name:
- Digital_Trade_Integration_Data ...
- Size:
- 2.823Mb
- Format:
- Microsoft Excel 2007
- Description:
- Open Dataset
- Name:
- DTI-Documentation-RSC_WP_2022_ ...
- Size:
- 574.0Kb
- Format:
- Description:
- Documentation