Date: 2017
Type: Working Paper
Sunshine over Shanghai : can the WTO illuminate the murky world of Chinese SOEs?
Working Paper, EUI RSCAS, 2017/12, Global Governance Programme-255, Global Economics
WOLFE, R., Sunshine over Shanghai : can the WTO illuminate the murky world of Chinese SOEs?, EUI RSCAS, 2017/12, Global Governance Programme-255, Global Economics - https://hdl.handle.net/1814/45586
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
State-owned enterprises (SOEs) are a major force in the Chinese economy and a growing presence in international trade and investment. The challenge to the WTO legal regime is commercial, given their size and their share of Chinese output, and political, given worries that trade and investment by SOEs may be driven by public policy goals. And both challenges may be exacerbated by the murky world of Chinese SOEs. In this article I first review whether Chinese SOEs are a problem for the WTO, and whether more sunshine on their operations might be a useful discipline. I then ask what we know about SOEs inside the WTO, including in the Trade Policy Review Mechanism. Since the answer is, not much, I consider whether mega-regional trade negotiations offer a better approach. My answer being negative, I finally consider whether an attempt to negotiate a WTO Reference Paper on SOEs might help. I conclude that transparency is likely to be a better discipline on the spillovers associated with SOEs than a search for binding rules, while also helping everyone better understand the efficiency effects.
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/45586
ISSN: 1028-3625
Series/Number: EUI RSCAS; 2017/12; Global Governance Programme-255; Global Economics
Keyword(s): Subsidies State-owned enterprises Transparency Informal law
Other topic(s): Trade, investment and international cooperation