The primary objective of most trade agreements is to restrain members\u27 use of trade policies for protectionist purposes. But it would be pointless to restrict the application of border instruments without regulating the possible use of domestic policies for protectionist purpose. To this end, most agreements include an obligation for National Treatment (NT) of foreign products. The NT provision in the GATT appears in Art. III, which applies to most government actions that have impact trade. It requires that imported products be treated as favorably by domestic policy as similar, indigenous products. This study offers suggestions based on legal and economic analysis about how this vaguely-formulated provision ought to be interpreted. The ...
resolution, law Traditionally, the ECJ has treated the international legal framework of the external...
The thesis is that to give insufficient recognition to international trade agreements in developing...
In this paper it is argued that there is an important protectionist bias inherent in free trade agre...
In the system of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), the principle of national treatm...
The World Trade Organization (WTO) Agreement covers the vast majority of international commerce in g...
The World Trade Organization (WTO) Agreement covers international commerce in goods and services inc...
This second volume in the European IP Institutes Network Series provides an exhaustive overview on t...
When establishing whether a disputed regulation is protectionist under the WTO National Treatment Pr...
This article explores the national treatment obligation of GATT, explains some of its difficult appl...
This paper will discuss the National Treatment (NT) obligation contained in Article III of the Gener...
A wide array of policy instruments can protect domestic firms against foreign competition. Regulator...
The objective of the study is to make a comparison between the standard of national treatment in int...
Defence date: 19/06/2009Examining Board: Prof. Gráinne de Búrca (supervisor), former EUI, now Fordha...
The following paper is an edited version of testimony presented before the Finance Committee of the ...
The issue of globalization and world trade liberalization has been vigorously debated over the past ...
resolution, law Traditionally, the ECJ has treated the international legal framework of the external...
The thesis is that to give insufficient recognition to international trade agreements in developing...
In this paper it is argued that there is an important protectionist bias inherent in free trade agre...
In the system of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), the principle of national treatm...
The World Trade Organization (WTO) Agreement covers the vast majority of international commerce in g...
The World Trade Organization (WTO) Agreement covers international commerce in goods and services inc...
This second volume in the European IP Institutes Network Series provides an exhaustive overview on t...
When establishing whether a disputed regulation is protectionist under the WTO National Treatment Pr...
This article explores the national treatment obligation of GATT, explains some of its difficult appl...
This paper will discuss the National Treatment (NT) obligation contained in Article III of the Gener...
A wide array of policy instruments can protect domestic firms against foreign competition. Regulator...
The objective of the study is to make a comparison between the standard of national treatment in int...
Defence date: 19/06/2009Examining Board: Prof. Gráinne de Búrca (supervisor), former EUI, now Fordha...
The following paper is an edited version of testimony presented before the Finance Committee of the ...
The issue of globalization and world trade liberalization has been vigorously debated over the past ...
resolution, law Traditionally, the ECJ has treated the international legal framework of the external...
The thesis is that to give insufficient recognition to international trade agreements in developing...
In this paper it is argued that there is an important protectionist bias inherent in free trade agre...