National Regulation and Trade Liberalization in Services: The Legal Impact of the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) on National Regulatory Autonomy

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Kluwer Law International B.V., 2003 M01 1 - 245 pages
Like tariffs and other border measures, national regulatory barriers impede international trade. Unlike tariffs, however, such barriers usually indicate an important domestic policy choice. This 'conflict of interest' has emerged as a crucial issue in international law, particularly with regard to services, such as telecommunications and health services.

This study is the first to analyze the potential impact of incompatibilities between national regulatory regimes and the rules and obligations imposed by the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). In the process of arriving at his challenging concluding theses, the author investigates such relevant concepts as the following:

the political and ideological dynamics of GATS negotiations services trade liberalization in regional integration systems, particularly in EC law policies common to diverse national regulatory systems the notions of 'deregulation' and 'privatization' the human rights implications of international trade law the GATS obligations of market access, national treatment, and most-favoured-nation treatment the role of the WTO's dispute settlement organs GATS transparency obligations

Professor Krajewski's study is of enormous significance to specialists in regulatory policies and instruments at all national and sectoral levels, especially in the context of ongoing GATS negotiations. As the author warns: Unless GATS negotiators and national regulators have a thorough understanding of the relationship between GATS obligations and regulatory policies and instruments, they cannot effectively use the flexible elements of GATS and could reach an agreement which they may later regret.

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Contents

Conclusion
Abbreviations and Notes on Citation
Introduction
Chapter 3
Chapter 1
Structure and Scope of Trade Liberalization under GATS
46
68
Market Access and Nondiscrimination
Future Disciplines on Domestic Regulations
Chapter 6
b Relationship Between Schedules and the General Scope of Market
1
9
vi
a Public Interest Regulation Based on Economic Goals

98
Regulation and Liberalization as Elements of the StateMarket
Nonviolation Nullification and Impairment of Specific Commitments
viii
vii
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