Case Studies in US Trade Negotiation: Resolving disputes, Volume 2

Capa
Peterson Institute, 2006 - 377 páginas
Between 1992 and 2000, US exports rose by 55 percent. By the year 2000, trade summed to 26 percent of US GDP, and the United States imported almost two-thirds of its oil and was the world's largest host country for foreign investors. America's interest in a more open and prosperous foreign market is now squarely economic. These case studies in multilateral trade policymaking and dispute settlement explore the changing substance of trade agreements and also delve into the negotiation process--the who, how, and why of decision making. These books present a coherent description of the facts that will allow for discussion and independent conclusions about policies, politics, and processes. Volume 2 presents five cases on trade negotiations that have had important effects on trade policy rulemaking, as well as an analytic framework for evaluating these negotiations.
 

Índice

Worldwide government assistance to the cotton sector
3
Figures
10
Barriers to Negotiated Agreement
11
0
16
Dispute Resolution in the Trading System
17
Gaming the System
25
The United States Europe and Trade
31
17
38
2A 1
105
Kodak v Fuji
143
1
149
2
156
3A 1
178
and Paper First Submission of
181
Standing Up for Steel
193
Negotiation Through Litigation
235

Hormones and International Institutions
44
The Ban Goes into Effect and the United States Retaliates
51
Changing the Rules
57
The United States Tries Again
63
Back to the FutureRetaliatory Tariffs and a Stalemate
72
The Standoff Continues
79
1B 1
89
and Phytosanitary Measures 1994
91
Challenges to the European Unions
97
1
244
Appendix 5C The Uruguay Round Agreement
271
viii
294
Appendix 1A Timeline of Key Events in the Beef
307
Appendix
341
References
345
The WTO Panel Process
351
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