GATT保障措施与自愿出口限制:发展中国家的利益何在?

GATT Safeguards and Voluntary Export Restraints: What Are the Interests of Developing Countries?

World Bank Economic Review · 1987
被引 47
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

分析发展中国家在GATT保障条款与自愿出口限制之间的利益权衡,指出自愿出口限制的成本可能被高估,发展中国家应谨慎让步,避免为禁止自愿出口限制而付出过高代价。

Abstract

Exports from developing countries are frequently the targets of trade protection to offset injury to domestic producers. A safeguard clause of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), Article XIX, authorizes such protection, but voluntary export restraints (VERS), which are not authorized or controlled by the GATT, are often used in its place. A call for a “comprehensive agreement on safeguards” was one outcome of the 1986 Punta del Este ministerial meeting. The spread of VERS is often taken to be a threat to the interests of developing countries. The costs of VERS to developing country exporters may have been overestimated, however, and as a consequence, developing countries may be at risk of conceding too much, perhaps in terms of a relaxation of the conditions of application of Article XIX, in an attempt to ban or directly control VERS. The central issue is the extent to which VERS are adopted to avoid invocation of Article XIX. If so, there is no valid case for developing countries to pay anything for a ban on VERS. A better course for them would be to press for more rigor in GATT articles used as threat, which would enhance their bargaining position in setting the conditions for VERS.

GATT保障措施自愿出口限制发展中国家利益贸易保护