Geo-economic tensions and global collective action problems call for international cooperation to revise and develop rules to guide both the use of domestic subsidies and responses by governments to cross-border competition spillover effects. Current WTO rules that divide all subsidies into either prohibited or actionable categories are no longer fit for purpose. Piecemeal efforts in preferential trade agreements and bi- or trilateral configurations offer a basis on which to build, but are too narrow in scope and focus. Addressing the spillover effects of subsidies could start with launching a work program at the 12th Ministerial Conference of the WTO to mobilize an epistemic community concerned with subsidy policies, tasked with building a...
This contribution was delivered online on 6 May 2021 on the occasion of the hybrid 2021 edition of E...
Why did countries achieve a consensus to restrict export subsidies and export-promoting domestic sub...
Why did countries achieve a consensus to restrict export subsidies and export-promoting domestic sub...
First published online: 05 September 2020Geo-economic tensions, notably associated with the rise of ...
Geo-economic tensions, notably associated with the rise of China, and global collective action probl...
Geo-economic tensions and global collective action problems call for international cooperation to re...
Negative international spillovers created by nontariff policies are a rising source of trade tension...
First published online: 1 April 2016As tariffs have fallen, subsidies and related policies with simi...
Decades of negotiation to extend the GATT/WTO system to address subsidies have never produced the so...
In this paper we focus on a rising source of international trade ten-sions: national sub...
Published online 23.03.2020Industrial subsidies are a major source of trade tensions among WTO membe...
International disputes over subsidies have be-come a prominent feature of the world trading system. ...
We provide a first formal analysis of the international rules that govern the use of subsidies to do...
Countries can choose between a wide range of policy instruments to address climate change. While eco...
We provide a first formal analysis of the international rules that govern the use of subsidies to do...
This contribution was delivered online on 6 May 2021 on the occasion of the hybrid 2021 edition of E...
Why did countries achieve a consensus to restrict export subsidies and export-promoting domestic sub...
Why did countries achieve a consensus to restrict export subsidies and export-promoting domestic sub...
First published online: 05 September 2020Geo-economic tensions, notably associated with the rise of ...
Geo-economic tensions, notably associated with the rise of China, and global collective action probl...
Geo-economic tensions and global collective action problems call for international cooperation to re...
Negative international spillovers created by nontariff policies are a rising source of trade tension...
First published online: 1 April 2016As tariffs have fallen, subsidies and related policies with simi...
Decades of negotiation to extend the GATT/WTO system to address subsidies have never produced the so...
In this paper we focus on a rising source of international trade ten-sions: national sub...
Published online 23.03.2020Industrial subsidies are a major source of trade tensions among WTO membe...
International disputes over subsidies have be-come a prominent feature of the world trading system. ...
We provide a first formal analysis of the international rules that govern the use of subsidies to do...
Countries can choose between a wide range of policy instruments to address climate change. While eco...
We provide a first formal analysis of the international rules that govern the use of subsidies to do...
This contribution was delivered online on 6 May 2021 on the occasion of the hybrid 2021 edition of E...
Why did countries achieve a consensus to restrict export subsidies and export-promoting domestic sub...
Why did countries achieve a consensus to restrict export subsidies and export-promoting domestic sub...