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The Use of Economics in International Trade and Investment Disputes

The Use of Economics in International Trade and Investment Disputes

The Use of Economics in International Trade and Investment Disputes

Editors:
Theresa Carpenter, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva
Marion Jansen, International Trade Centre, Geneva
Joost Pauwelyn, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva
Marion Jansen, Joost Pauwelyn, Theresa Carpenter, Robert Teh, Alan Yanovich, Thomas Graham, Christian Lau, Simon Schropp, David Unterhalter, James Flett, Bruce Malashevich, Anne van Aaken, Marios Iacovides, Petros Mavroidis, Damien Neven, Jorge Miranda, Pablo M. Bentes, Amar Breckenridge, Wolfgang Alschner, Bastian Gottschling, Willis Geffert, Carla Chavich, Pablo Lopez, Manuel A. Abdala, Alan Rozenberg, Fuad Zarbiyev
Published:
December 2018
Availability:
Available
Format:
Paperback
ISBN:
9781316508053

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    Twenty-first-century trade agreements increasingly are a source of international law on investment and competition. With chapters contributed by leading practitioners and academics, this volume draws upon investor-state arbitration and competition/antitrust disputes to focus on the application of economics to international trade law and specifically WTO law. Written in an accessible language suitable for a broad readership while providing concrete insights designed for the specialist, this book will be of use to those active or interested in the related fields of trade disputes, competition law, and investor-state arbitration.

    • Compiles insights gained by practitioners and academics on the use of economics in international economic law
    • Explores insights from the fields of trade law, investment arbitration, competition law and even commercial arbitration on the use of economics within disputes
    • Provides a comprehensive overview of existing knowledge and practice regarding the use of economics in international economic law

    Reviews & endorsements

    'Government officials and commercial litigants increasingly rely on technical, economic analysis in their international trade and investment disputes. At the same time, the public has also become more motivated to understand how the legal decisions arising from the World Trade Organization and investor-state dispute settlement - which they perceive as potentially constraining their policymakers’ access to regulation - are being made. Jansen, Pauwelyn, and Carpenter bring together scholars from a range of disciplines to provide this much-needed volume. Their collection investigates the benefits and costs of integrating economic insights into international jurisprudence, as well as identifying perils for the road ahead.' Chad P. Bown, Peterson Institute for International Economics

    'In the field of competition policy the use of economic analysis has been the norm for many recent decades. This practice is now gradually becoming the norm in trade and investment disputes as well. The outstanding contributions from practitioners and academics in this fascinating volume demonstrate that together with a deep understanding of the law economic analysis is absolutely key in trade and investment disputes just as it is in competition policy. It is heartening to see that law and economics are again used together in modern regulatory cases as they were in classical times.' André Sapir, Université libre de Bruxelles, Belgium and former Economic Advisor to the President of the European Commission

    'This very useful volume contains analyses by leading scholars and practitioners of the increasing use of economic analysis in WTO dispute resolution, investor-state arbitration, and competition law. This includes the expected areas - such as causation, market definition, likeness, etc., as well as newer developments such as necessity and commercial impact, where the use of economists is an emerging trend. It will be very helpful for those trying to understand the areas - and their interrelationships - and also those trying to win their cases.' Gary Horlick, Adjunct Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center, Washington, DC

    'This timely and critical publication compiles innovative insights from first-range experts on the use of economics in international trade and investment dispute settlement. It offers lessons learnt from state-state dispute settlement in the WTO and investor-state dispute settlement under international investment agreements. It provides practical guidance on how economists and lawyers can work together to create synergies between the two disciplines. A 'must-read' for practitioners in the field, the book will undoubtedly also inspire a much broader range of policymakers and other stakeholders that are grappling with the interface of law and economics in the pursuit of today’s sustainable development imperative.' James Zhan, Director, Investment and Enterprise Division, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development

    'From my perspective of investor-state dispute settlement, this is a most welcome contribution that explores the interactions between law and economics present at many stages of an investment arbitration, not only at the quantum stage but equally at the level of liability - what are the economics of the project or contract? How to assess causation? Or contributory negligence? The search for coherence between trade and investment law, which is one of the themes of the book, can also provide guidance to investment specialists. In other words, for many reasons, a very valuable new tool.' Gabrielle Kaufmann-Kohler, Geneva University Law School and Attorney at law with Lévy Kaufmann-Kohler

    See more reviews

    Product details

    December 2018
    Paperback
    9781316508053
    418 pages
    227 × 150 × 20 mm
    0.58kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Introduction: the use of economics in international trade and investment disputes Marion Jansen, Joost Pauwelyn and Theresa Carpenter
    • Part I. The Use of Economics in International Trade and Investment Disputes: A Practitioner's View:
    • 2. Integrating economic analysis into WTO dispute settlement practice: a view from the trenches Robert Teh and Alan Yanovich
    • 3. Present at the creation: economists and accountants in international trade law practice Thomas Graham
    • 4. The role of economics in WTO dispute settlement and choosing the right litigation strategy - a practitioner's view Christian Lau and Simon Schropp
    • 5. On interpretation and economic analysis of law David Unterhalter
    • 6. The client's perspective James Flett
    • 7. The use of economics in competition law: what works and what doesn't across national jurisdictions? Bruce Malashevich
    • Part II. The Use of Economics in International Trade Disputes: Economic Versus Legal Thinking:
    • 8. What to do if economic insights are disputed: on the challenge to deal with competing and evolving theories or empirics in international trade disputes Anne van Aaken
    • 9. Lost in translation: communication and interpretation challenges related to economic evidence in trade disputes Marion Jansen and Marios Iacovides
    • 10. Land rich and cash poor? The reluctance of the WTO dispute settlement system to entertain economics expertise: an institutional analysis Petros Mavroidis and Damien Neven
    • 11. The economics of actionable subsidy disputes Jorge Miranda
    • 12. In search of a 'genuine and substantial' cause: the analysis of causation in serious prejudice claims Pablo M. Bentes
    • 13. The games we play - simulation models in merger analysis and their potential use in trade litigation Amar Breckenridge
    • Part III. The Use of Economics in International Investment Disputes: Liability and Damages:
    • 14. Aligning loss, liability and damages: towards an integrated assessment of damages in investment arbitration Wolfgang Alschner
    • 15. An economic assessment of contracts and requests for contract reform and damages in international arbitration Bastian Gottschling and Willis Geffert
    • 16. Economics in investor-state arbitration beyond quantum Carla Chavich and Pablo Lopez
    • 17. Assessing investor damages involving publicly traded companies – with examples from the Yukos' cases Manuel A. Abdala and Alan Rozenberg
    • 18. From the law of valuation to valuation of law? On the interplay of international law and economics in fair-market valuation Fuad Zarbiyev
    • Conclusion Theresa Carpenter, Marion Jansen and Joost Pauwelyn
    • Appendix. Guidelines for best practices for the use of economics in WTO dispute settlement Theresa Carpenter, Marion Jansen and Joost Pauwelyn.
      Contributors
    • Marion Jansen, Joost Pauwelyn, Theresa Carpenter, Robert Teh, Alan Yanovich, Thomas Graham, Christian Lau, Simon Schropp, David Unterhalter, James Flett, Bruce Malashevich, Anne van Aaken, Marios Iacovides, Petros Mavroidis, Damien Neven, Jorge Miranda, Pablo M. Bentes, Amar Breckenridge, Wolfgang Alschner, Bastian Gottschling, Willis Geffert, Carla Chavich, Pablo Lopez, Manuel A. Abdala, Alan Rozenberg, Fuad Zarbiyev

    • Editors
    • Theresa Carpenter , Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva
    • Marion Jansen , International Trade Centre, Geneva
    • Joost Pauwelyn , Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva