Date: 2015
Type: Book
Optimal regulation and the law of international trade : the interface between the right to regulate and WTO law
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2015, Cambridge international trade and economic law ; 18
RIGOD, Boris, Optimal regulation and the law of international trade : the interface between the right to regulate and WTO law, Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2015, Cambridge international trade and economic law ; 18
- https://hdl.handle.net/1814/62584
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
Are the limitations imposed on World Trade Organization (WTO) members' right to regulate efficient? This is a question that is only scarcely, if ever, analysed in existing literature. Boris Rigod aims to provide an answer to this fundamental concern. Using the tools of economic analysis and in particular the concept of economic efficiency as a benchmark, the author states that domestic regulatory measures should only be subject to scrutiny by WTO bodies when they cause negative international externalities through terms of trade manipulations. He then suggests that WTO law, applied by the WTO judiciary can prevent WTO members from attaining optimal levels of regulation. By applying a law and economics methodology, Rigod provides an innovative solution to the problem of how to reconcile members' regulatory autonomy and WTO rules as well as offering a novel analytical framework for assessing domestic regulations in the light of WTO law.
Table of Contents:
-- Acknowledgements
-- Table of cases
-- Introduction
Part I - Optimal regulation and international trade law – theory
1 - Introduction to Part I
2 - Optimal regulation
3 - Deviations from optimal regulation
4 - Deviations from optimal regulation and the role of international trade agreements
5 - Conclusion on Part I
Part II - Optimal regulation and international trade law – application
6 - Introduction to Part II
7 - Domestic regulation and the GATT
8 - Domestic regulation and the TBT Agreement
9 - Domestic regulation and the SPS
10 - Conclusion on Part II
-- Bibliography
-- Index
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/62584
Full-text via DOI: 10.1017/CBO9781316336984
ISBN: 9781316336984; 9781107116122; 9781107537033
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Initial version: http://hdl.handle.net/1814/32095
Version: Published version of EUI PhD thesis, 2014