1 / 10

Marion Jansen (ILO) and Patrick Low (WTO) Presentation at “Trade-And?

Dealing With Internal Measures in the Multilateral Trading System: Why, How and With What Consequences?. Marion Jansen (ILO) and Patrick Low (WTO) Presentation at “Trade-And? The World Trade Organization’s Fuzzy Borders” a Graduate Institute and NCCR Conference Geneva, February 5, 2009.

mikasi
Download Presentation

Marion Jansen (ILO) and Patrick Low (WTO) Presentation at “Trade-And?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dealing With Internal Measures in the Multilateral Trading System: Why, How and With What Consequences? Marion Jansen (ILO) and Patrick Low (WTO) Presentation at “Trade-And? The World Trade Organization’s Fuzzy Borders” a Graduate Institute and NCCR Conference Geneva, February 5, 2009.

  2. Dealing with Internal Measures at the WTO • Reasons for linking internal measures and policies to trade negotiations … we suggest a variety of motives; no over-arching theory for normative analysis available. • Internal policies in WTO law … different approaches have been used • Factors that have affected agenda-setting in the past … some motives appear to have found more political support than others • Decision-making options in the WTO … suggesting a way forward for discussing internal measures within the WTO

  3. Motives for linking internal measures to trade negotiations • Contestability of markets • Anti-circumvention • Public policy with a dual objective ( … regulatory chill, race to the bottom arguments) • Engendering new competitive opportunities • Reduce trade costs • Shaping national markets in the face of other distortions

  4. Motives for linking internal measures to trade negotiations • Contestability of markets • Guaranteeing the effectiveness of domestic policies • Taking advantage of cross issue linkages in negotiations

  5. Factors that have affected agenda-setting the past • “Policy effectiveness” arguments have not been very successful; • There is evidence of an ambiguous attitude towards harmonization; • Export interests and the anti-circumvention argument appear to have been rather successful; • Enforcement considerations appear to have played a role.

  6. Decision making and agenda formation in the WTO • Varied interests, needs and priorities • Complex negotiations • Transactions costs and large numbers • Agenda size and trade-offs For WTO rule-making (not trade liberalization negotiations) • Consensus/veto ? • Critical Mass ?

  7. Decision making and agenda formation in the WTO Maintaining multilateral integrity with critical mass • Critical mass defines itself • Three decision points: • Launching a negotiation • Drawing up the norms • Adopting the results • Critical mass and MFN • Critical mass, protecting interests and managing free-riding

  8. Conclusions • Motives for affecting agenda setting are multiple and complex • Options for institutional design are numerous • Forum selection • Facilitating agreement through a re-balancing of rights and obligations

More Related