Promising trail or perilous trap? Engaging China in the WTO and beyond

How to deal with China? This is the biggest question confronting U.S. trade policy - or even the United States' entire foreign policy - today. Over the past few years, the debate on this important issue has benefited from the contributions of many trade law scholars, including those by Mark Wu,...

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Main Author: GAO, Henry S.
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2022
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WTO
Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/3938
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/5896/viewcontent/Promising_trail_or_perilous_trap_pvoa.pdf
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spelling sg-smu-ink.sol_research-58962022-07-14T08:33:21Z Promising trail or perilous trap? Engaging China in the WTO and beyond GAO, Henry S. How to deal with China? This is the biggest question confronting U.S. trade policy - or even the United States' entire foreign policy - today. Over the past few years, the debate on this important issue has benefited from the contributions of many trade law scholars, including those by Mark Wu, Jennifer Hillman, Petros Mavroidis, André Sapir, Rob Howse, Weihuan Zhou, and the present author. In Governing the Interface of U.S.-China Trade Relations, Gregory Shaffer offers refreshing insights. Building on the framework developed by the U.S.-China Trade Policy Working Group, of which he is a member, Shaffer further adjusts the group's four-buckets model and provides an updated framework. Calling his approach Rebalancing Within a Multilateral Framework, Shaffer argues that his framework avoids the pitfalls of both Power-Based Bargaining and Rule-Based Neoliberalism and is the most promising middle path. As a trade lawyer, I am naturally more inclined toward Shaffer's approach and its firmer grounding in trade law, in contrast to the heavily econ-centric approach in the Joint Statement by the Working Group, which does not reference law. Coming from the other side of the Pacific, however, I would approach the issue a bit differently by asking the questions that rarely gets asked: What are China's reactions to these proposals? Will China be willing to trail along, or, perhaps more likely, will it view them suspiciously as traps, as China's former World Trade Organization (WTO) Ambassador Zhang Xiangchen once put it? 2022-02-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/3938 info:doi/10.1017/aju.2022.1 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/5896/viewcontent/Promising_trail_or_perilous_trap_pvoa.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University WTO trade policy China United States Asian Studies International Trade Law
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic WTO
trade policy
China
United States
Asian Studies
International Trade Law
spellingShingle WTO
trade policy
China
United States
Asian Studies
International Trade Law
GAO, Henry S.
Promising trail or perilous trap? Engaging China in the WTO and beyond
description How to deal with China? This is the biggest question confronting U.S. trade policy - or even the United States' entire foreign policy - today. Over the past few years, the debate on this important issue has benefited from the contributions of many trade law scholars, including those by Mark Wu, Jennifer Hillman, Petros Mavroidis, André Sapir, Rob Howse, Weihuan Zhou, and the present author. In Governing the Interface of U.S.-China Trade Relations, Gregory Shaffer offers refreshing insights. Building on the framework developed by the U.S.-China Trade Policy Working Group, of which he is a member, Shaffer further adjusts the group's four-buckets model and provides an updated framework. Calling his approach Rebalancing Within a Multilateral Framework, Shaffer argues that his framework avoids the pitfalls of both Power-Based Bargaining and Rule-Based Neoliberalism and is the most promising middle path. As a trade lawyer, I am naturally more inclined toward Shaffer's approach and its firmer grounding in trade law, in contrast to the heavily econ-centric approach in the Joint Statement by the Working Group, which does not reference law. Coming from the other side of the Pacific, however, I would approach the issue a bit differently by asking the questions that rarely gets asked: What are China's reactions to these proposals? Will China be willing to trail along, or, perhaps more likely, will it view them suspiciously as traps, as China's former World Trade Organization (WTO) Ambassador Zhang Xiangchen once put it?
format text
author GAO, Henry S.
author_facet GAO, Henry S.
author_sort GAO, Henry S.
title Promising trail or perilous trap? Engaging China in the WTO and beyond
title_short Promising trail or perilous trap? Engaging China in the WTO and beyond
title_full Promising trail or perilous trap? Engaging China in the WTO and beyond
title_fullStr Promising trail or perilous trap? Engaging China in the WTO and beyond
title_full_unstemmed Promising trail or perilous trap? Engaging China in the WTO and beyond
title_sort promising trail or perilous trap? engaging china in the wto and beyond
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2022
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/3938
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/5896/viewcontent/Promising_trail_or_perilous_trap_pvoa.pdf
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