The European Union and the World Trade Organisation - Two governance systems in trade policy: A selection of their differences, similarities and mutua
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Erscheinungsdatum
16.04.2004
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156 KB
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1. Auflage
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Englisch
EAN
9783638268752
can be described as governance systems:
"Governance is about the structured ways and means in which the divergent preferences of
interdependent actors are translated into policy choices to allocate values, so that the
plurality of interests is transformed into co-ordinated action and the compliance of actors is
achieved."1
This essay cannot reflect all aspects of the two governance systems, but is limited to a
selection of their differences, similarities and mutual influences. After the opening remark
alludes to a similarity, the differences will be touched upon next.
The individual characteristics of the EU and the WTO become particularly obvious in the
institutional set-ups of the two organisations: In the case of the EU one deals with a
supranational organisation, what means that the current 15 member states partly transfer
sovereign rights to the organisation, thus rendering the EU a partly independent and
powerful policy actor.
In comparison, the WTO is an intergovernmental organisation, in which its 146 members
negotiate without transferring any sovereignity to the organisation, thus depriving the WTO
of any independence in policy decisions 2.
The WTO is a broad international organisation, its members accounting for over 90 % of all
trade in the world, whereas the EU, being a member of the WTO, is a geographically
limited and closely integrated organisation. Even though the EU represents just 6 % of the
world's population, it accounts for more than a fifth of global imports and exports3.
Concerning the relationship between the two organisations, their origins had an important
influence: The WTO was founded in 1995 as a successor of the General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade (GATT) from 1947. [...]
1 Beate Kohler-Koch/ Rainer Eising (eds.): The Transformation of Governance in the European Union.
London, New York: Routledge, 1999, p. 5.
2 Mary Farrell (ed.): EU and WTO regulatory frameworks. Complementarity or competition? London: Kogan
Page, 1999, p. 44.
3 European Union: Making globalisation work for everyone.The European Union and world trade.
Luxembourg: Office for Official Publications of the European Communities, 2003, p. 4.
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