상세검색
최근 검색어 전체 삭제
다국어입력
즐겨찾기0
학술저널

How Large or Small is the Policy Space? WTO Regime and Industrial Policy

  • 14
113562.jpg

The paper identifies the need for improvements in policy space for developing and least developed countries under the current world trading system by examining the use of WTO dispute settlement system with descriptive statistics and case studies. The paper shows an asymmetry in the utilization of the dispute settlement system and the consequence of using the system between developed and developing countries. For instance, the paper demonstrates that the United States and some other developed countries use WTO rules effectively, resulting in the defeat of developing countries in disputes. These developing countries are forced to abandon their industrial policy measures. By contrast, the United States and the other developed countries continue to use WTO-inconsistent industrial policies in need without being much effectively challenged. Based on our findings, we suggest what should be done within the practices of the current rules, what can be done to change the current global rules, and what developing countries can still try under the current rules.

Abstract

Ⅰ. Introduction

Ⅱ. Who Makes Claims Against Whom: First Asymmetry

Ⅲ. Another Asymmetry in Enforcing Compliance with Dispute Rulings

Ⅳ. Industrial Policy Practices under the WTO and a Need for New Rules

Ⅴ. Policy Space under the WTO Regime: WTO SCM Standard

Ⅵ. What Should be Done

References

(0)

(0)

로딩중