학술논문

The “public body” enquiry in WTO disputes: implications for partial privatization
Document Type
JOURNAL
Author
Source
Journal of International Trade Law and Policy, 2022, Vol. 21, Issue 2, pp. 140-159.
Subject
research-article
Research paper
cat-STGY
Strategy
cat-IBUS
International business
cat-IBLW
International business law
Public body enquiry
Partial privatization
China’s accession
SOE reforms
WTO law
Language
English
ISSN
1477-0024
Abstract
Purpose This paper aims to question the “conventional” privatization of State-owned enterprises (SOEs) and to propose the neutral position adopted by the Dispute Settlement Body (DSB) to reconcile the divergent views within the World Trade Organization (WTO) regime. Design/methodology/approach China’s partially privatized SOEs have raised numerous attention in WTO disputes regarding whether China's way of social and economic reform is consistent with its accession commitments and with WTO rules, in particular subsidy rules. Instead of providing a definite legal standard applicable to the “public body” enquiry, the DSB adopts the neutral position to reconcile the divergent views between developed and developing countries on whether not fully privatized SOEs constitute “public body.” Findings Albeit with interpretative vagueness, the value of DSB’s neutral position lies in its adequacy: first, the adequacy to address the complexity of SOE privatizations in developing countries; second, the adequacy to engage relevant parties to maintain the multilateral trading system; and third, not to impose specific impact on justification of countervailing duties. Originality/value This paper captures the recent developments in “public body” enquiry and calls for a compromised approach to maintain the WTO-like multilateral trade regime and to allow for more policy spaces for developing countries that best fit their unique circumstances and needs. It sees new and significant information, in the sense that the paper aims to present why China’s partial privatization benefits from the WTO “neutrality” on the subject.