1st Edition

Multilateralism and Regionalism in Global Economic Governance Trade, Investment and Finance

Edited By Junji Nakagawa Copyright 2011
    216 Pages
    by Routledge

    216 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Reconciling regionalism and multilateralism is a challenge common to all branches of global economic governance. While the Bretton Woods/GATT (WTO) institutions, decades-old multilateral framework for global economic governance, are facing serious challenges to their effectiveness, regional framework are emerging as complementary or alternative means of global economic governance. The real challenge is how to reconcile multilateralism and regionalism in global economic governance. This book tackles this problem by analysing issues of multilateral/regional conciliation and coordination in global economic governance, focusing on Asia.

    Chapters of the book deal with challenges of multilateralism and regionalism in three fields of global economic governance, namely, global monetary/financial governance, global trade governance, and global investment governance. The major regional focus is on Asia, though some chapters deal with regionalism in Europe and North America. Topics include Asian Monetary Fund and Asian financial architecture, open accession provisions of regional trade agreements, and APEC’s role in multilateral investment rules.

    As a whole, the book elucidates the contemporary reach of Asian regionalism in global economic governance, and shows the neat balance between regionalism and multilateralism in global economic governance. It is of particular use to the students and practitioners of international economic law, international political economy, international finance and international economics, both with and without Asian focus.

    1. Multilateralism and Regionalism in Global Economic Governance Junji Nakagawa  2. How to Avoid Anti-Competitive Effects of State Interventions in Times of Financial Crisis Rolf H. Weber and Seraina N. Gruenewald  3. Designing and Asian Financial Architecture Douglas W. Arner and Lotte Schou-Zibell  4. Institutional Approach to the Needs and Possibilities of Financial Cooperation System in East Asia Seung Pil Choi  5. East Asian Financial Integration Ross P. Buckley  6. Open Accession Provisions in FTAs Meredith Kolsky Lewis  7. Dynamic Process of Transnational Dispute Settlement as Autopoietic System? Tomohiko Kobayashi  8. APEC's Role in Rationalizing International Investment Obligations J. Anthony VanDuzer  9. Vertical Allocation of Competences for Investment Treaties in the European Union Markus Burgstaller  10. Investment Treaties and Public Goods Daniel Kalderimis  11. China's Evolving International Investment Treaty Policy towards Liberalism Chunbao Liu

    Biography

    Junji Nakagawa is Professor of International Economic Law at the Institute of Social Science, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan. His publication includes International Harmonization of Economic Regulation (Oxford University Press, forthcoming), Anti-Dumping Laws and Practices of the New Users (Cameron May, 2007), and Managing Development: Globalization, Economic Restructuring and Social Policy (Routledge, 2006).