India, Dec. 11 -- Global standards now affect almost 90% of world trade, up from 15% in the late 1990s.
The World Bank warns they are widening inequalities between advanced and developing economies.
EU's CBAM climate policy places heavy reporting burdens on low-income exporters.
Developing nations have minimal representation in standard-setting bodies such as ISO.
Without greater participation, poorer countries risk costly technological lock-ins and reduced policy autonomy.
A fast-growing web of international standards, governing everything from food labels and cargo containers to electric-vehicle chargers and 5G networks, is quietly reshaping the global economy while widening inequalities between rich and poor nations, according to ...
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