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Safeguards and the perils of preferential trade agreements: Dominican Republic–Safeguard Measures

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 April 2014

CHAD P. BOWN*
Affiliation:
The World Bank and CEPR
MARK WU*
Affiliation:
Harvard Law School
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Abstract

The legal-economic implications of how WTO members apply an import-restricting safeguard measure become more complex in light of the increasing web of trade concessions undertaken through their preferential trade agreements (PTAs) in addition to their WTO commitments. This paper examines a number of complex issues that arose in the WTO litigation between five new PTA partners through the Dominican Republic–Safeguard Measures disputes. First, we highlight the difficulties in assessing the extent to which safeguards imposed following a PTA are the result of PTA concessions relative to developments that pre-date or are otherwise unrelated to the PTA. Second, we examine how the WTO Panel resolved a number of previously unanswered questions in the WTO's safeguards jurisprudence that arose in these cases. We suggest that the Panel rightly foreclosed a number of potentially dubious practices that WTO members might otherwise have pursued when using safeguards to circumvent trade concessions. Third, we identify how safeguard-related provisions within a PTA may give rise to constraints that subsequently affect how a country may apply safeguards available under the WTO Agreements, and we describe some implications for PTA design and negotiation. Finally, we analyze the broader implications that arise from the interplay of PTAs, safeguards, and dispute settlement in light of the availability of both relatively substitutable policy instruments and dispute resolution forums.

Information

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © Chad P. Bown and Mark Wu 2014 
Figure 0

Figure 1. Dominican Republic macroeconomic indicators, 2000–2011

Source: Compiled by the authors with data from World Bank's World Development Indicators. Dominican Republic's inflation reached 51.5% (not shown for scaling purposes) in 2004. Current account data not available before 2005, unemployment rate data not available for 2011.
Figure 1

Table 1. Timeline/dates of interest

Figure 2

Figure 2. Dominican Republic: total goods imports by foreign source, 2002–2011

Source: Constructed by the authors with nominal import data from UN Comtrade made available from WITS.
Figure 3

Figure 3. Dominican Republic's imports of polypropylene bags and tubular fabric, 2002–2011

Source: Constructed by the authors with nominal import data at the 6-digit HS level from UN Comtrade made available from WITS.
Figure 4

Table 2. Dominican Republic: trade policies toward polypropylene bags and tubular fabric

Figure 5

Figure 4. The importance of the Dominican Republic's export market for polypropylene bags and tubular fabric for selected countries' exporters, 2002–2011

Source: Constructed by the authors with nominal export data at the 6-digit HS level from UN Comtrade made available from WITS. Share of each country's total exports of polypropylene bags and tubular fabric that were exported to the Dominican Republic.