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Fast Facts

WTO, DSU, DSB - has no supremacy over domestic law

 

 

 

World Trade Organization (WTO) Memberships - Participation and Leadership in the WTO Is Critical to the Economic Success of the United States

Under U.S. leadership, World Trade Organization (WTO) member countries have developed sound procedures to settle disputes promptly and keep trade free and fair.

World Trade Organization (WTO) countries have agreed on procedures to resolve disputes that arise among trading partners over WTO agreements. Under the WTO’s Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes (DSU), a WTO member country must enter into the dispute process when another WTO member alleges the first member has broken a WTO rule. The United States was a chief architect of the DSU and is one of the most active users of the WTO legal system. This system regu-larly protects America from unfair trade practices and levels the playing field for U.S. workers and businesses across a broad range of sectors. Despite its many benefits to hard-working Americans, there are lingering mispercep-tions about how the WTO dispute settlement system really works.

The WTO dispute settlement system serves the shared interest of WTO member countries in promoting and enforcing the rule of law in world trade.

  • The rule of law promotes certainty, predictability and stability in the world trading system.
  • Dispute settlement procedures hold WTO countries accountable for the commitments they make in trade negotiations without requiring unilateral resorting to counterproductive protectionism.

The DSU creates a robust and efficient system for resolving trade disputes.

  • Dispute settlement procedures provide a forum for disagreeing WTO members to consult and try to resolve their trade disputes amicably.
  • If this is not possible, a member that is party to the dispute may request formation of a WTO dispute settlement panel, which consists of inde-pendent and impartial experts who hear legal arguments and evidence from the disagreeing parties before issuing findings.
  • Each of the disputing members may decide whether to appeal a panel’s findings to the appellate body, a standing group that issues its own report and findings pertaining to only the specific WTO law issues raised on appeal.
  • Panel and appellate body reports are delivered to the Dispute Settlement Body (DSB) for adoption. Once adopted, these findings become DSB recommendations and rulings.

Each WTO member is left to decide how it will implement the findings of a panel or the appellate body.

  • The findings of a panel or the appellate body cannot force any WTO member to change its domestic laws.
  • The losing party determines exactly how it will implement DSB recommen-dations and rulings, if at all.
    • A WTO member has 30 days to notify the DSB as to how a panel or appellate body report will be implemented. Members are generally given a reasonable period of time to comply (which normally should not exceed 15 months from the adoption of the report).
    • A member can choose to bring its domestic law into compliance, negotiate compensation to the complaining member country, or do nothing and permit the DSB to authorize retaliation by the affected country in the form of withdrawn WTO concessions of comparable value.

WTO dispute settlement procedures help ensure that all countries receive the benefits of the trade rules to which they voluntarily agreed.

 

 

 

 

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