A review of some appellate decisions: Law, policy, and economics in dispute settlement
- By: Mitsuo Matsushita
- Source: The WTO in the Twenty-First Century , pp 14-14
- Publication Date: January 2007
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.30875/2ac1b0ad-en
- Language: English
Panels and the Appellate Body of the World Trade Organization (WTO) have sometimes been criticized as being too textual or literal in interpreting WTO agreements and, at the same time, as deviating too much from the texts of those agreements. These criticisms have been directed particularly at the Appellate Body because it has the power to make the final judgment on the issue in a case. Although such criticisms are not entirely unfounded, the Appellate Body has tried to be faithful to the wording of the WTO agreements and, at the same time, to accomplish the basic policy goal of those agreements. It is indeed difficult to reconcile textual or literal interpretations as mandated by the Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes (DSU) and retain some flexibility in interpretation so that the dispute settlement system of the WTO can deal with the ever-evolving area of international trading relations and new issues arising thereunder.
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