International Trade and Domestic Regulation
49 Pages Posted: 1 Dec 2009 Last revised: 19 Jun 2024
There are 2 versions of this paper
International Trade and Domestic Regulation
Date Written: November 2009
Abstract
Existing formal models of the relationship between trade policy and regulatory policy suggest the potential for a regulatory race to the bottom. WTO rules and disputes, however, center on complaints about excessively stringent regulations. This paper bridges the gap between the existing formal literature and the actual pattern of rules and disputes. Employing the terms-of-trade framework for the modeling of trade agreements, we show how "large" nations may have an incentive to impose discriminatory product standards against imported goods once border instruments are constrained, and how inefficiently stringent standards may emerge under certain circumstances even if regulatory discrimination is prohibited. We then assess the WTO legal framework in light of our results, arguing that it does a reasonably thorough job of policing regulatory discrimination, but that it does relatively little to address excessive nondiscriminatory regulations.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
National Treatment in the GATT
By Henrik Horn
-
Trade Agreements as Endogenously Incomplete Contracts
By Henrik Horn, Giovanni Maggi, ...
-
Trade Agreements as Endogenously Incomplete Contracts
By Henrik Horn, Giovanni Maggi, ...
-
International Agreements on Product Standards: An Incomplete-Contracting Theory
-
International Agreements on Product Standard: An Incomplete Contracting Theory
-
Self-Enforcing Trade Agreements and Private Information
By Kyle Bagwell
-
International Trade and Domestic Regulation
By Robert W. Staiger and Alan Sykes