The principle of non-discrimination is fundamental to the regulation of international trade in goods and services. In the context of trade in goods, the concept of 'like products' has become a key element of the legal analysis of whether a trade obstacle violates GATT non-discrimination obligations. The equivalent concept of 'like services and service suppliers' in GATS rules on non-discrimination has received little attention in WTO jurisprudence. In light of the remaining uncertainties, Nicolas Diebold analyses the legal problems of the GATS 'like services and services suppliers' concept using a contextual and comparative methodology. The 'likeness' element is not analysed in isolation, but in context with 'less favourable treatment' and regulatory purpose as additional elements of non-discrimination. The book also explores how far theories from non-discrimination rules in GATT, NAFTA, BITs and EC as well as market definition theories from competition law may be applied to 'likeness' in GATS.
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Diebold: Non-Discrimination in International Trade in Services: 'Likeness' in WTO/GATS
Nicolas F. Diebold (Froriep Renggli) has published Non-Discrimination in International Trade in Services: 'Likeness' in WTO/GATS (Cambridge Univ. Press 2010). Here's the abstract:
Labels:
GATS,
International Trade Law,
Scholarship - Books,
WTO