Investment and Trade Regimes Conjoined: Economic Facts and Regulatory Frameworks

Published By: International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Dev | Published Date: July, 01 , 2015

Recent research suggests that trade and investment are closely linked as two-way economic complements. Trade liberalization facilitates investment, but even complete trade openness will not overcome an investment environment that is otherwise unfavourable. Countries must do more to attract multinational corporations and global value chains. They need to limit the burdens placed on firms through taxation and regulation, while maintaining the revenue and policy space needed for good governance. The investment chapter in the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) announced a new era. Subsequent US FTAs elaborated upon the NAFTA template. However, the World Trade Organization (WTO) lingers far behind FTAs, bilateral investment treaties and double taxation treaties in addressing the nexus between investment and trade. Another weakness is that the WTO only allows member states to bring disputes, even though the overwhelming majority of cases entail state practices that arguably harm private firms. In other words, state-to-state dispute resolution is the WTO norm, unlike ISDS resolution under bilateral treaties and FTAs. As progress at the multilateral level slowed, more limited arrangements have played a larger role in setting the rules for international trade. Even if future WTO rounds become much more productive, it is likely that the next steps on some of these issues will take place outside the WTO. But rules established elsewhere can serve as baselines for future multilateral agreements.

Author(s): Tyler Moran, Gary Hufbauer | Posted on: Jan 29, 2016 | Views()


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