Book contents
- Digital Services in International Trade Law
- Cambridge International Trade and Economic Law
- Digital Services in International Trade Law
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- WTO Cases
- E-commerce RTAs
- Abbreviations
- Introduction The Uruguay Round and the Advent of the Internet
- Part I Digitisation and International Trade
- Part II Classification of Digital Services
- Part III Addressing Barriers at the WTO Level
- 6 WTO Instruments Applicable to Digital Services Trade
- 7 GATS Consistency of Barriers to Digital Services Trade
- Part IV Addressing Barriers at the RTA Level
- Bibliography
- Index
7 - GATS Consistency of Barriers to Digital Services Trade
from Part III - Addressing Barriers at the WTO Level
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 September 2021
- Digital Services in International Trade Law
- Cambridge International Trade and Economic Law
- Digital Services in International Trade Law
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- WTO Cases
- E-commerce RTAs
- Abbreviations
- Introduction The Uruguay Round and the Advent of the Internet
- Part I Digitisation and International Trade
- Part II Classification of Digital Services
- Part III Addressing Barriers at the WTO Level
- 6 WTO Instruments Applicable to Digital Services Trade
- 7 GATS Consistency of Barriers to Digital Services Trade
- Part IV Addressing Barriers at the RTA Level
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This chapter analyses the consistency of the barriers to services trade that were identified in Chapter 3 with the GATS obligations as elaborated upon in Chapter 6. First, the chapter addresses restrictions to cross-border data flows, using two case studies: Russia’s amended Law on Personal Data and the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation. Second, the barrier of web filtering and content control is assessed under the applicable GATS obligations, using the case study of China’s Great Firewall. Third, the lack of access to infrastructure as an obstacle to digital services trade is considered using the case study of the United States’ Restoring Internet Freedom Order. Finally, a briefer analysis of the GATS consistency is provided for bans on cross-border supply through electronic means, digital taxes and restrictions on intellectual property rights. For each of these barriers, the services at issue are classified, the different GATS obligations are applied and the potential justification grounds are considered.
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- Information
- Digital Services in International Trade Law , pp. 235 - 284Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021