World Trade and Local Public Interest

£139.50

World Trade and Local Public Interest

Trade Liberalization and National Regulatory Sovereignty

International law Public international law: economic and trade Arbitration, mediation and alternative dispute resolution

Dinosaur mascot

Collection: Studies in European Economic Law and Regulation

Language: English

Published by: Springer

Published on: 15 July 2020

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 3 Mb

ISBN: 9783030419202


Trade liberalization and regional economic integration

Trade liberalization has shaped international economic relations since the conclusion of the GATT 1947. The last few decades have seen a significant shift in the focus of this process: multilateralism seems to have reached its limits, giving way to regionalism, and the focus of trade liberalization has shifted to non-tariff barriers. While these developments have attracted considerable attention, exploring them from comparative perspectives has been largely neglected. Trading systems – the WTO, regional economic integrations and federal systems – are all based on the same dichotomy of free trade and local public interest: they generally prohibit the constituent parties (states) from restricting trade, but exempt them from this limitation if the restriction is warranted by a legitimate local end.

The purpose of this volume is to contribute to filling the above-mentioned research gap by exploring central issues in regional economic integrations from a comparative perspective. It provides a general economic analysis of the costs and benefits of trade liberalization and the role and function of normative values in commercial policy. This is followed by a comparative analysis of the approaches used in various regional economic integrations (in North America, Europe and Latin America) and federal markets (the United States, Australia and India) regarding the balance between free trade and local public interest. Key issues in investment law, one of the most contentious elements of next-generation free trade agreements, are also addressed.

Show moreShow less