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The WTO Regime on Government Procurement

Challenge and Reform

Description :

Sue Arrowsmith
University of Nottingham
Robert D. Anderson
World Trade Organization

Originally an important but relatively obscure plurilateral instrument, the WTO Agreement on Government Procurement (GPA) is now becoming a pillar of the WTO system as a result of important developments since the Uruguay Round. This collection examines the issues and challenges that this raises for the GPA, as well as future prospects for addressing government procurement at a multilateral level. Coverage includes issues relating to pending accessions to the GPA, particularly those of developing countries with a large state sector such as China; the revised (provisionally agreed) GPA text of 2006, including provisions on electronic procurement and Special and Differential Treatment for Developing Countries; and procurement provisions in regional trade agreements and their significance for the multilateral system. Attention is also given to emerging issues, especially those concerning environmental, social and SME policy; competition law; and the implications of the recent economic crisis.

• Includes detailed analysis of, and commentary on, the key changes incorporated in the provisionally agreed revised GPA text
• Integrates the latest academic thinking with practical insights and challenges as they are perceived 'on the ground
• Provides readers with new insights and practical suggestions relating to the integration of formerly state-directed economies into the world trading system
• Covers not only current negotiating issues and challenges but also the next generation of issues in this area, including issues concerning environmental and social policy

Published may 2011 | 892 pages | 228 x 152 mm | Weight: 1.500 kg

Table of Contents
Part I. The WTO Regime on Government Procurement: 1. The WTO regime on government procurement: past, present and future
Part II. Expanding the Scope of the Agreement on Government Procurement: Accession and Coverage: 2. Forging a more global procurement market: issues concerning accessions to the agreement on government procurement
3. Accession to the agreement on government procurement: the case of China
4. India's possible accession to the agreement on government procurement: what are the pros and cons?
5. The benefits to developing countries of accession to the government procurement agreement: the case of Chinese Taipei
6. The coverage negotiations for the agreement on government procurement: context, mandate, process and prospects
7. A case study of coverage issues: Canada's sub-central coverage under the agreement on government procurement
8. The procurement of state trading companies under the WTO agreements: a proposal for a way forward
9. Addressing purchasing arrangements between public sector entities – what can the WTO learn from the EU's experience?
Part III. Revision of the Procedural Rules and Other Transparency Provisions of the Agreement on Government Procurement: 10. The revised agreement on government procurement: changes to the procedural rules and other transparency provisions
Part IV. Developing Countries in the WTO Procurement Regime: 11. Special and differential treatment for developing countries under the agreement on government procurement: the current text and new provisions
12. Building sustainable capacity in public procurement
13. Untying aid through the agreement on government procurement: a means to encourage developing country accession to the agreement and to improve aid effectiveness?
Part V. Economic and Social Development (Horizontal Policies) in Government Procurement: 14. The national treatment and exceptions provisions of the agreement on government procurement and the pursuit of horizontal policies
15. The limited case for permitting SME procurement preferences in the agreement on government procurement
16. Social policies in procurement and the agreement on government procurement: a perspective from South Africa
Part VI. Enforcement and Remedies: 17. Constructing a system of challenge procedures to comply with the government procurement agreement
18. Designing effective challenge procedures: the EU's experience with remedies
19. The design and operation of a bid challenge mechanism: the experience of Hong Kong
Part VII. Multilateralism and Regionalism: 20. Government procurement provisions in regional trade agreements: a stepping stone to GPA accession?
21. A case study of regionalism: the EU-Cariforum economic partnership agreement
Part VIII. Challenges and New Directions: 22. Ensuring integrity and competition in public procurement markets: a dual challenge for good governance
23. Developing multilateral rules on government procurement: the value of soft law
24. Work of UNCITRAL on government procurement: purpose, objectives, and complementarity with the work of the WTO
25. Global procurement law in times of crisis: new buy American policies and options in the WTO legal system
26. Procurement rules in times of crisis: lessons from U.S. government procurement in three episodes of 'crisis' in the 21st century.

List of Contributors
Robert D. Anderson, Sue Arrowsmith, Kodjo Osei-Lah, Ping Wang, S. Chakravarthy, Kamala Dawar, Chang-fa Lo, David Collins, Roberto Cavallo Perin, Dario Casalini, Anna Caroline Müller, Annamaria La Chimia, Arwel Davies, John Linarelli, Phoebe Bolton, Geo Quinot, Xinglin Zhang, Hans-Joachim Priess, Pascal Friton, Henry Gao, Josefita Pardo De Leon, Philippe Pelletier, Simon Evenett, William E. Kovacic, Lili Jiang, Caroline Nicholas, John Linarelli, Joshua Schwartz.


Edition :


Net price : 200.00 CHF

WTO Publications are not subject to VAT

Also available through the co-publisher (Cambridge University Press)