Developing country status in the WTO: investigating self-designation and perpetuation of the “pretend” culture

Author:

Yap Deannie Yi Ping

Abstract

Purpose This paper aims to investigate whether the practice of self-designation of developing country status in the World Trade Organization (WTO) risks irrelevance of the institution, having regard to legitimacy concerns and evolving trade policy considerations. Design/methodology/approach The methodology of this paper involves the application of critical analysis to assess the utility of regime overhaul vis-à-vis a detailed recalibration of the status quo; included in this are key examinations of whether the introduction of a definitive classification criteria will alleviate present challenges as well as critiques of alternative target-specific schemes. Findings This paper suggests that an ideal approach to the controversies surrounding self-designation steers away from pure income-based indicators to arrive at targeted special and differentiated treatment allocation. Such a framework anchors itself on principles of nuanced differentiation that support depoliticization and facilitate capacity building in developing countries. Originality/value To the best of the author’s knowledge, this paper represents an original evaluation of the possible reforms available to the WTO concerning the present status and functionality of the mechanism underpinning the practice of self-designation of developing country status.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Law,Political Science and International Relations,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance,Industrial relations

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5. Cotton, J.J., Nicholls, A. and Remy, J.Y. (2019), “Using a trade vulnerability index to determine eligibility for developing-country status at the WTO: a conceptual response to the ongoing debate”, SSRN, available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3582486

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