Oecd

Oecd

Concept of Oecd

An introductory definition of Oecd is provided here: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, organization of 29 industrialized countries

OECD

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, abbreviated as OECD and based in Paris (FR), is an international organisation of 35 countries committed to democracy and the market economy. The forerunner to the OECD was the Organisation for European Economic Co-operation and Development (OEEC), formed in 1947 to administer American and Canadian aid under the auspices of the Marshall Plan following World War II. The OECD was established on 14 December 1960

OECD Member States (and the dates on which they ratified the OECD Convention) are:

Australia (7 June 1971) Hungary (7 May 1996) Norway (4 July 1961)

Austria (29 September 1961) Iceland (5 June 1961) Poland (22 November 1996)

Belgium (13 September 1961) Ireland (17 August 1961) Portugal (4 August 1961)

Canada (10 April 1961) Israel (7 September 2010) Slovak Republic (14 December 2000)

Chile (7 May 2010) Italy (29 March 1962) Slovenia (21 July 2010)

Czech Republic (21 December 1995) Japan (28 April 1964) Spain (3 August 1961)

Denmark (30 May 1961) Korea (12 December 1996) Sweden (28 September 1961)

Estonia (9 December 2010) Latvia (1 July 2016) Switzerland (28 September 1961)

Finland (28 January 1969) Luxembourg (7 December 1961) Turkey (2 August 1961)

France (7 August 1961) Mexico (18 May 1994) United Kingdom (2 May 1961)

Germany (27 September 1961) Netherlands (13 November 1961) United States (12 April 1961)

Greece (27 September 1961) New Zealand (29 May 1973)

The OECD’s mission is to bring together the governments of countries committed to democracy and the market economy from around the world to:

support sustainable economic growth;

boost employment;

raise living standards;

maintain financial stability;

assist other countries’ economic development;

contribute to growth in world trade.

OECD

Embracing mainstream international law, this section on oecd explores the context, history and effect of the area of the law covered here.

OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) and Europe

There is an entry on oecd (organisation for economic co-operation and development) in the European legal encyclopedia.

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See Also

  • Foregin Policy
  • Foreign Affairs

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See Also

  • International Organization
  • Foreign Relations
  • Intergovernmental Organization
  • Regional Organization
  • Regional Integration

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See Also

Further Reading

  • Entry “OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development)” in the work “A Concise Encyclopedia of the European Union from Aachen to Zollverein”, by Rodney Leach (Profile Books; London)

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Further Reading

  • The entry “oecd” in the Parry and Grant Encyclopaedic Dictionary of International Law (currently, the Encyclopaedic Dictionary of International Law, 2009), Oxford University Press

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Further Information

OECD website

Hierarchical Display of OECD

International Organisations > World organisations > World organisation
Geography > Economic geography > OECD countries

OECD

Concept of OECD

See the dictionary definition of OECD.

Characteristics of OECD

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Translation of OECD

Thesaurus of OECD

International Organisations > World organisations > World organisation > OECD
Geography > Economic geography > OECD countries > OECD

See also

  • Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
  • Organisation for European Economic Cooperation
  • OEEC

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