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From Rule-takers to Rule-makers: Emerging Powers in the Regulation of International Trade

When and how does increasing market power translate into regulatory power to shape the rules of international trade?

Over the past two decades, new economic powers have arisen within the world trading system. Brazil, China, India and Mexico are becoming influential players within an international regime whose core principles, rules and procedures have been shaped by others, notably the US and the European Union, prior to the formers’ ascent.

 

Whereas the shifts in economic power are by now well documented, we know relatively little about what large emerging economies seek from the global system and how they pursue their interests in particular in the global trade regime.

 

This project features a comparative research design examining the foreign economic policy behaviour of Brazil, China, India and Mexico in three contested fields of trade regulation: competition law, intellectual property rights and services-related labour mobility. These regulatory fields touch so-called “behind-the-border” issues and have far reaching implications for the role of the state in economic development.

 

Two of these fields flow directly from the regulatory agenda of the EU and the US – competition law and IPR – partly evoking vivid resistance and alternative approaches from countries such as Brazil and India in particular, whereas the promotion of labour mobility is a priority of the emerging countries meeting the resistance of Western powers.

 

In short, this project seeks to understand when and under which conditions emerging powers evolve from rule-takers to rule-makers in trade regulation, through which venues and with which implications for the substance and architecture of the international trade regime.

Ongoing

Project Members

Name Role Department/Institute Institution
Manfred Elsig Associated Member WTI Universität Bern
Sandra Lavenex Coordinator Political Science Universität Luzern
Omar Serrano Co-Coordinator Political Science Universität Luzern
Scott Kennedy Associated Member Research Center for Chinese Politics & Business (RCCPB) Indiana University Bloomington
Thiago Lima Associated Member International Relations Department Universidade Federal da Paraíba
Mira Burri Associated Member World Trade Institute Universität Bern
Nuno Pires de Carvalho Associated Member Intellectual Property and Competition Policy Division WIPO World Intellectual Property Organisation
Fausto Gurrea Associated Member Other
Simon Evenett Associated Member Universität St. Gallen-Hochschule für Wirtschafts-, Rechts- und Sozialwissenschaften
Thomas Cottier Associated Member WTI Universität Bern
Richean Li Associated Member Other
Yong Huang Associated Member Other