Is the WTO dispute settlement procedure fair to developing countries?

The World Trade Organization’s Dispute Settlement Procedure has been described as the “crown jewel” of the multilateral trading system, having been highly effective in settling a large number of disputes-without it, the results might have been much worse. Any WTO member can file a complaint against...

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Autores principales: Bouët, Antoine, Metivier, Jeanne, Parent, Marie
Formato: Brief
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/147313
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author Bouët, Antoine
Metivier, Jeanne
Parent, Marie
author_browse Bouët, Antoine
Metivier, Jeanne
Parent, Marie
author_facet Bouët, Antoine
Metivier, Jeanne
Parent, Marie
author_sort Bouët, Antoine
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The World Trade Organization’s Dispute Settlement Procedure has been described as the “crown jewel” of the multilateral trading system, having been highly effective in settling a large number of disputes-without it, the results might have been much worse. Any WTO member can file a complaint against a trade practice of another member that it believes to be in violation of WTO agreements. The Dispute Settlement body then makes a ruling on the dispute. Finally, if the respondent is found guilty by the Dispute Settlement body, the respondent may either bring its practices into compliance or face authorized retaliatory trade measures by the complainant. But is the Dispute Settlement Procedure fair to developing countries, or is there some bias in favor of powerful countries? If potential retaliatory measures by a WTO member are unthreatening to a potential offender, then does the potential offender ignore rules? Do other factors, such as political power, bias which members benefit from the Dispute Settlement Procedure? One approach to investigate potential bias looks at the final outcomes of disputes, asking: do developed countries tend to ignore the Dispute Settlement body’s recommendations when facing complaints from developing countries? Investigations with this approach have found some empirical evidence of bias against developing countries, but samples of disputes are small. Another approach to investigate bias looks at Dispute Settlement body rulings, asking: does the WTO’s panel of experts tend to rule against developing countries? An investigation found that threat of retaliatory measures and asymmetric power did not bias rulings, but that countries with better legal capacity - usually more developed countries - were more likely to win disputes. We take a different approach, looking at which members file complaints to ask: given that members may not even file complaints if they expect to lose, do developing countries avoid filing complaints because they lack power?
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spelling CGSpace1473132025-11-06T07:28:44Z Is the WTO dispute settlement procedure fair to developing countries? Bouët, Antoine Metivier, Jeanne Parent, Marie international agreements trade policies wto trade trade agreements The World Trade Organization’s Dispute Settlement Procedure has been described as the “crown jewel” of the multilateral trading system, having been highly effective in settling a large number of disputes-without it, the results might have been much worse. Any WTO member can file a complaint against a trade practice of another member that it believes to be in violation of WTO agreements. The Dispute Settlement body then makes a ruling on the dispute. Finally, if the respondent is found guilty by the Dispute Settlement body, the respondent may either bring its practices into compliance or face authorized retaliatory trade measures by the complainant. But is the Dispute Settlement Procedure fair to developing countries, or is there some bias in favor of powerful countries? If potential retaliatory measures by a WTO member are unthreatening to a potential offender, then does the potential offender ignore rules? Do other factors, such as political power, bias which members benefit from the Dispute Settlement Procedure? One approach to investigate potential bias looks at the final outcomes of disputes, asking: do developed countries tend to ignore the Dispute Settlement body’s recommendations when facing complaints from developing countries? Investigations with this approach have found some empirical evidence of bias against developing countries, but samples of disputes are small. Another approach to investigate bias looks at Dispute Settlement body rulings, asking: does the WTO’s panel of experts tend to rule against developing countries? An investigation found that threat of retaliatory measures and asymmetric power did not bias rulings, but that countries with better legal capacity - usually more developed countries - were more likely to win disputes. We take a different approach, looking at which members file complaints to ask: given that members may not even file complaints if they expect to lose, do developing countries avoid filing complaints because they lack power? 2019-06-20 2024-06-21T09:13:12Z 2024-06-21T09:13:12Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/147313 en https://hdl.handle.net/10568/147927 Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Bouët, Antoine; Metivier, Jeanne; and Parent, Marie. 2019. Is the WTO dispute settlement procedure fair to developing countries? MTID Project Note. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://hdl.handle.net/10568/147313
spellingShingle international agreements
trade policies
wto
trade
trade agreements
Bouët, Antoine
Metivier, Jeanne
Parent, Marie
Is the WTO dispute settlement procedure fair to developing countries?
title Is the WTO dispute settlement procedure fair to developing countries?
title_full Is the WTO dispute settlement procedure fair to developing countries?
title_fullStr Is the WTO dispute settlement procedure fair to developing countries?
title_full_unstemmed Is the WTO dispute settlement procedure fair to developing countries?
title_short Is the WTO dispute settlement procedure fair to developing countries?
title_sort is the wto dispute settlement procedure fair to developing countries
topic international agreements
trade policies
wto
trade
trade agreements
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/147313
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