Publication Type

Journal Article

Version

publishedVersion

Publication Date

6-2018

Abstract

Trends in Chinese and U.S. approaches to regional integration are likely to profoundly affect other states and even the future of global economic governance. Showing a possible paradigm shift, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) renegotiation reflect the latest major developments in China and the U.S. regarding regional integration. In particular, the U.S. pursues managed trade, shifts to bilateralism, and adopts an aggressive approach. This article analyses a core question: will Chinese and U.S. trade approaches converge, diverge or both, and why? For the analysis of the convergence or divergence, four aspects will be covered: the objectives of regionalism, the instruments for regionalism, the approaches to multilateralism, and the role in rulemaking. This paper argues that Chinese and U.S. trade approaches are likely to diverge and converge, leading to crossvergence (a simultaneous convergence and divergence of regulatory approaches). Divergence can be found in fundamental areas and particularly the approaches to regionalism and multilateralism. Convergence appears to occur only in selected areas (e.g. investment and intellectual property). Uncertainties exist since both the BRI and trade policies of the Trump Administration are under development. The interaction between Chinese and American approaches will affect the shaping of the international economic legal order.

Keywords

United States, China, regional integration, NAFTA renegotiation, Belt and Road Initiative, approach, convergence, divergence, crossvergence, trade, investment

Discipline

Asian Studies | International Law | Regional Economics

Research Areas

Public International Law, Regional and Trade Law

Publication

Tsinghua China Law Review

Volume

10

Issue

2

First Page

149

Last Page

185

ISSN

2151-8904

Publisher

Tsinghua Law School

Copyright Owner and License

Authors CC-BY

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