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Foundations of International Economic Law- Complete summary - 3554FICOVY

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Complete summary of the course principles and foundations of international economic law. Contains all weeks. From all the course material

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Subido en
21 de enero de 2026
Archivo actualizado en
22 de enero de 2026
Número de páginas
37
Escrito en
2025/2026
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Int TRADE law Int INVESTMENT law
Governs the flow of goods/services across borders. Governs the movement of capital and enterprises across borders.
governs cross-border exchange governs cross-border presence,

Goal : Liberalizes transactions Goal : Protects assets and long-term presence

DS : State - state dispute DS : Investor- state disputes

Both branches of int Economic law (IEL) = governs cross border economic activity
are two sides of the same coin: they both aim to structure and stabilize global economic relations — just at different points in the process.

Share principles :
-​ Non-discrimination → MFN & National Treatment exist in both
-​ Market access & liberalization → both aim to reduce barriers
-​ Dispute settlement → both use binding dispute resolution (DSU vs. ISDS)
-​ Balancing sovereignty and economic integration → both seek to reconcile state power with investor/trader rights

Trade law without investment law = you can trade goods, but your factories, infrastructure, and services abroad may be unprotected.
Investment law without trade law = you can protect your factory abroad, but barriers on goods and services may block your business.
→Together, they form the legal architecture of globalization — enabling goods, capital, services, and technology to move across borders in a predictable, rule-based way.




W2 - int trade law
WTO replaced and expanded GATT into a comprehensive organization with stronger enforcement and broader coverage.

GATT was foundation of WTO - a trade treaty focused on goods
-​ Not enforce any more


Bretton Woods conference (1944)
-​ Goal: Rebuild post-WWII economic order.
-​ Institutions created: IMF, World Bank, GATT.
-​ Significance: Basis of modern international economic law.

,GATT = General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (1947–1994)
-​ Multilateral treaty reducing tariffs and trade barriers.
-​ = treaty
-​ Core principles :
-​ Non-discrimination: Equal treatment of trading partners.
-​ MFN: No worse treatment than any other state. = most favored nation - any trade advantage granted to one must be granted to all
-​ National treatment: Imported goods treated same as domestic goods after entry.​

-​ Problems: Blocking in dispute settlement, rise of new protectionism, unilateralism (e.g., US Section 301).
-​ Legacy: Foundation for creation of WTO.


WTO (1995–present)
= Permanent int. organization replacing GATT.
-​ Goal: Liberalize trade in goods, services, and IP; create binding, predictable trade system.
-​ Founding agreement : Marrakech Agreement
-​ Annexes complement the founding agreement :
-​ =attachements to the main treaty - each annex contains a group of agreements on a specific area of int trade
-​ 1A: GATT 1994 & agreements : on agriculture, SPS, TBT, TRIMS, subsidies, safeguards, etc.
-​ 1B: GATS – trade in services.
-​ 1C: TRIPS – intellectual property.
-​ 2: DSU – dispute settlement understanding
-​ 3: Trade Policy Review Mechanism.
-​ 4: Plurilateral agreements (civil aircraft, procurement).
-​ Key features:
-​ Single undertaking: All agreements part of one package.
-​ Precise rules: Anti-dumping, subsidies, no voluntary export restraints.
-​ Improved dispute settlement: DSU, Appellate Body, negative consensus.

-​ Objectives (Preamble):
-​ Raise living standards, full employment, expand trade sustainably.
-​ Ensure developing countries share trade growth.

-​ Functions :
-​ Administer and implement covered agreements
-​ Forum for new trade negotiations.
-​ Administer dispute settlement.
-​ Administer trade policy reviews.

, -​ Cooperate with IMF & World Bank.

-​ Means: Trade liberalization, harmonization, integration.
-​ No direct effect: WTO law does not automatically apply domestically.

-​ WTO Structure
-​ Ministerial Conference: Top decision-making body, meets biennially.
-​ General Council: Day-to-day decisions; acts as DSB and Trade Policy Review Body.
-​ Specialized Councils: Goods, services, IP.
-​ Committees/Working groups: Technical work.
-​ Decision-Making in WTO
-​ Amendments: Members can choose not to join (sovereignty preserved).
-​ Decisions/Interpretations/Waivers: Positive consensus or voting.
-​ Dispute Settlement: Negative consensus – reports adopted unless all oppose.
=a panel or Appellate Body report is automatically adopted unless all members reject it.
= Makes rulings much harder to block → strengthens enforcement compared to GATT

-​ DSB = Dispute settlement body
-​ Function: Administers dispute settlement procedures.
-​ Powers: Establish panels, adopt reports, monitor implementation, authorize retaliation.
-​ Consensus rule: Decisions adopted if no member objects.
-​ Appellate Body: 7 members, 4-year terms (currently paralyzed due to US blocking).


DSB in WTO DSU in WTO

= the institutional body that applies and enforces the DSU = the legal framework = annex 2
(made up of all WTO members) -​ Sets rules and procedures for how disputes are
handels
Responsibilities:
-​ Establish panels
-​ Adopt panel and Appellate Body reports
-​ Monitor implementation of rulings
-​ Authorize retaliation (suspension of concessions)


Regional Trade Agreements (RTAs)
= negotiated outside the WTO legal framework.- not part of WTO law
= A treaty between two or more countries in a specific region (or sometimes globally) to reduce or eliminate trade barriers — usually tariffs and quotas — only among

, themselves.
=agreement formed between WTO members under the conditions allowed by WTO rules.
=RTAs co-exist with the multilateral system
= separate treaties negotiated outside the WTO - but must comply w WTO conditions
-​ They allow members to go beyond WTO rules with preferred partners while remaining inside the WTO framework.
-​ Multiplication challenges multilateral WTO regime
-​ rapid growth (over 350+ today) shows a shift from purely multilateral trade governance (WTO) to a mixed system of multilateral + regional rules. -
-​ multiplication can fragment global trade law and weaken WTO centrality.
-​ Eg :
-​ MERCOSUR
-​ NAFTA

-​ Challenges & Erosion of WTO
-​ Appellate Body crisis: Blocking of appointments → end of compulsory dispute settlement.
-​ MPIA – Multi-Party Interim Appeal Arbitration
=Alternative appeal mechanism created by some WTO members after AB paralysis.
-​ Purpose : Maintain rule-based dispute settlement among participants.
-​ Significance : Shows adaptation of WTO system despite crisis.
-​ EU, canada , not US!
-​ Replicates role of the appellate body

-​ Rise of RTAs: Parallel rules and dispute settlement.
-​ US unilateralism: “Trump deals,” disregard for MFN and tariff bindings.
-​ = result of returning to more bilateralism but most members still follow WTO rules.

-​ New Developments : Plurilateral Initiatives
=shift in how trade law is made today: Instead of full consensus among all 160+ members (often hard to achieve), smaller groups of members
negotiate plurilateral agreements (only binding on those who sign).
= system continues to evolve beyond the original Uruguay Round agreements.
→focus is: new or emerging issues that were not central in 1995,
→Demonstrates flexibility —
-​ Fisheries Subsidies (2022)
-​ Electronic Commerce (2024)
-​ Investment Facilitation for Development (2023)


RTAs Plurilateral initiatives
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