Rebooting Multilateral Trade Cooperation: Perspectives from China and Europe
Edited by Bernard Hoekman,
Xinquan Tu and
Dong Wang
in CEPR Press Books from Centre for Economic Policy Research
Abstract:
Joint leadership by China and the EU to establish a balanced work programme spanning old and new issues of interest to all WTO members is necessary to safeguard the rules-based trade order. This book, a product of a Horizon 2020 research project (RESPECT), brings together essays written by teams of European and Chinese trade policy experts, who explore possible paths to revitalise the WTO.
Date: 2021 Written 2021-07
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https://cepr.org/node/392531 (application/pdf)
Chapters in this book:
- A Core Proposal for Reforming the WTO’s Subsidy Rules

- Jiandong Liu
- About Knowledge and Rulemaking: Reforming WTO Rules on Subsidies

- Siqi Li and Luca Rubini
- China, the European Union, and the WTO Dispute Settlement Crisis

- Liao Shiping and Petros C. Mavroidis
- Climate Change, Trade Policy, and the WTO

- Jianping Zhang and Xie Zhiyu
- Introduction: Rebooting Multilateral Trade Cooperation

- Bernard Hoekman, Xinquan Tu and Dong Wang
- Is it Possible to Promote an Agricultural Agenda in the WTO?

- Lu Xiankun and Alan Matthews
- National security and other non-trade objectives under WTO law

- Cui Fan, Catherine Hoeffler and Stephanie C. Hofmann
- Reviving the negotiation function of the WTO: Why the onus falls on the three major powers

- Xinquan Tu and Robert Wolfe
- Special and differential treatment and developing country status: Can the two be separated?

- Patrick Low
- State-Owned Enterprises and International Competition: Towards Plurilateral Agreement

- Bernard Hoekman and Andre Sapir
- The EU–China Comprehensive Agreement on Investment: A Model for Investment Coverage in the World Trade Organization?

- Kurtz, Jürgen and Gong Baihua
- Transparency and Local Subsidies in China and the United States

- Simon Evenett and Kong Qingjiang
- Updating the General Agreement on Trade in Services

- Bernard Hoekman and Jingxia Shi
- What kinds of rules are needed to support digital trade?

- Martina F. Ferracane and Mosi Li
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