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Anti-Dumping Law of WTO/GATT and EC: Gradual Evolution of Anti-Dumping Law in Global Economic Integration

Li, Wenxi LU (2002)
Abstract
The aim of this study is to demonstrate and evaluate the current anti-dumping law as formed by the WTO/GATT law (GATT law) and implemented by the EC law against the background of global economic integration. Over centuries, international trade has involved a controversial business behaviour, “dumping”. Roughly speaking, a product is considered to be dumped if it is sold at a lower price abroad than at home. In nature, dumping is a differential pricing behaviour between different national markets. No sooner had the world entered into the 20th century than the first national anti-dumping law was enacted by Canada in 1904. International anti-dumping law was adopted in Article VI of the 1947 GATT, the rules of which have been elaborated and... (More)
The aim of this study is to demonstrate and evaluate the current anti-dumping law as formed by the WTO/GATT law (GATT law) and implemented by the EC law against the background of global economic integration. Over centuries, international trade has involved a controversial business behaviour, “dumping”. Roughly speaking, a product is considered to be dumped if it is sold at a lower price abroad than at home. In nature, dumping is a differential pricing behaviour between different national markets. No sooner had the world entered into the 20th century than the first national anti-dumping law was enacted by Canada in 1904. International anti-dumping law was adopted in Article VI of the 1947 GATT, the rules of which have been elaborated and evolved in the subsequent three GATT Anti-Dumping Codes. In the EC, the first anti-dumping legislation, the so-called “Basic Regulation”, was enacted in 1968 and evolved in parallel with the GATT Anti-Dumping Codes within the structure of the EC legal system. The central parts of the current rules are those for determination of dumping (dumping rules), for determination of injury (injury rules) and for anti-dumping procedure (procedural rules). The current trend of global economic integration give rise to at least two questions: how does the current anti-dumping law operate under the auspices of the WTO/GATT and in a national or regional context? What should be done for the current anti-dumping law to satisfy the demand of global economy? Rather than advocates radical changes, this study pursues the goal of a gradual evolution of the current anti-dumping law. This general goal is derived, first, from a systematic and detailed inquiry into all three parts of the GATT anti-dumping law as international law and the EC anti-dumping law as implementing law and second, from an objective assessment of the current world economic situation. The inquiry presents the historical evolution of anti-dumping law, the current shape of each part of anti-dumping rules and practices, the current legal mechanism of each part and the inherent defects and loopholes in each part, suggesting the direction for each part to be improved and evolved if so required. The assessment indicates that, to maintain a stable world economic order, it is more appropriate to have a gradual evolution of the current anti-dumping law than to make radical changes. To this effect, the specific goals are set out for application and evolution of each part of the current anti-dumping law. (Less)
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author
supervisor
opponent
  • Assistant Professor Moell, Christina, Lund
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
like products, domestic industry, threat of material injury, material injury, export price, normal value, Basic Regulation, GATT Anti-Dumping Code, GATT, dumping, anti-dumping law, anti-dumping procedure, global economic integration, European law, EU-rätt
pages
501 pages
defense location
Kungshuset, Lundagård, Lund
defense date
2002-02-02 10:15:00
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
bc8ec7b9-5b4e-4d2a-9ce9-3829c9f820a9 (old id 20475)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 13:44:03
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:15:55
@phdthesis{bc8ec7b9-5b4e-4d2a-9ce9-3829c9f820a9,
  abstract     = {{The aim of this study is to demonstrate and evaluate the current anti-dumping law as formed by the WTO/GATT law (GATT law) and implemented by the EC law against the background of global economic integration. Over centuries, international trade has involved a controversial business behaviour, “dumping”. Roughly speaking, a product is considered to be dumped if it is sold at a lower price abroad than at home. In nature, dumping is a differential pricing behaviour between different national markets. No sooner had the world entered into the 20th century than the first national anti-dumping law was enacted by Canada in 1904. International anti-dumping law was adopted in Article VI of the 1947 GATT, the rules of which have been elaborated and evolved in the subsequent three GATT Anti-Dumping Codes. In the EC, the first anti-dumping legislation, the so-called “Basic Regulation”, was enacted in 1968 and evolved in parallel with the GATT Anti-Dumping Codes within the structure of the EC legal system. The central parts of the current rules are those for determination of dumping (dumping rules), for determination of injury (injury rules) and for anti-dumping procedure (procedural rules). The current trend of global economic integration give rise to at least two questions: how does the current anti-dumping law operate under the auspices of the WTO/GATT and in a national or regional context? What should be done for the current anti-dumping law to satisfy the demand of global economy? Rather than advocates radical changes, this study pursues the goal of a gradual evolution of the current anti-dumping law. This general goal is derived, first, from a systematic and detailed inquiry into all three parts of the GATT anti-dumping law as international law and the EC anti-dumping law as implementing law and second, from an objective assessment of the current world economic situation. The inquiry presents the historical evolution of anti-dumping law, the current shape of each part of anti-dumping rules and practices, the current legal mechanism of each part and the inherent defects and loopholes in each part, suggesting the direction for each part to be improved and evolved if so required. The assessment indicates that, to maintain a stable world economic order, it is more appropriate to have a gradual evolution of the current anti-dumping law than to make radical changes. To this effect, the specific goals are set out for application and evolution of each part of the current anti-dumping law.}},
  author       = {{Li, Wenxi}},
  keywords     = {{like products; domestic industry; threat of material injury; material injury; export price; normal value; Basic Regulation; GATT Anti-Dumping Code; GATT; dumping; anti-dumping law; anti-dumping procedure; global economic integration; European law; EU-rätt}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  title        = {{Anti-Dumping Law of WTO/GATT and EC: Gradual Evolution of Anti-Dumping Law in Global Economic Integration}},
  year         = {{2002}},
}