International economic law
Question  1:
  Can  you think of some concrete examples where international economic law overlaps  with other fields of public international law? What role do the Bretton Woods  institutions play in the international economic system? 
  
Guidance:
  The question essentially contains two aspects. The  first asks the students to identify areas where international economic law  overlaps with other areas of public international law. As noted in Question 2  to Chapter 10, there is an overlap between international economic law and  international environmental law due to the link between environmental concerns  and economic development/activity. There is also clear overlap between parts of  international economic law and regional economic cooperation, most notably that  of the EU and NAFTA. The book notes, for example, how the international  monetary system has been supplemented with the monetary system in the EU and  the introduction of a single European currency, the Euro. There is also an overlap  between international investment law and human rights law, most notably the  protection of property. The second part of the question asks the students to  consider the purposes and importance of the 1944 Bretton Woods institutions.  The book notes that the institutions were created in order to lay the  foundation for a liberal international economic order with free-flowing  economic transactions and equal market access. The conference at Bretton Woods  paved the way for the creation of three important international organizations  for the regulation of trade and monetary policy: the International  Monetary Fund (IMF), the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development  (the ‘World Bank’), and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). The  GATT and its successor, the World Trade Organization, seek to liberalize world  trade through the reduction of tariffs and other barriers to trade. The IMF, on  the other hand, has been created to ensure exchange stability and provides  loans to states with economic difficulties. The World Bank supplements the IMF  through the provision of loans to developing countries. 
Question  2: 
  The  international economic system is frequently the object of criticism. Can you  give some examples? 
Guidance:
  The question concerns the criticism of the existing  international legal system due to its origins in liberal capitalist theory. The  book notes that the Bretton Woods system of international economic law is based  on theories of market capitalism and in particular the theory of comparative  advantage. The book also notes that the capitalistic origin has made the system  the object of critique and that the source of the criticism has transformed  over the course of time. While the primary criticism in the Cold War era came  from the communist east and from developing states that called for a ‘New  International Economic Order’, more contemporary criticism primarily comes from  the Global Justice Movement. 
Question  3:
  What  is the difference between the MFN principle and the principle of national  treatment? Why is it necessary for the GATT to exempt the application of the  MFN principle in the EU? 
Guidance:
  Like Question 1, there are essentially two parts to  this question. The first asks the students to identify the difference between  the Most Favored Nation (MFN) principle and the principle of national  treatment. The book refers to the two principles in the discussion of the WTO  and the principles that govern the different WTO agreements. The MFN principle  and the national treatment principle are both derived from a more overarching  non-discrimination principle in international trade law that aims to ensure  that foreign goods and services compete on a level playing field. The book also  notes that a MFN clause in an  agreement allows a party to a trade agreement treaty and its nationals to  benefit from an advantage that is granted to another (third) state and its  nationals pursuant to another agreement concluded between one of the parties to  the first treaty and the third state. Under an obligation of national  treatment, on the other hand, the importing state obliges itself to treat  imported goods or service no less favorably than it treats its own national  products. The second element to the question asks the students to consider the  MFN principle in the EU. The book notes that the MFN principle does not apply  to customs unions and free-trade areas, such as the EU. The reason is that the  application of the MFN principle would in practice defeat the whole purpose of  the customs union and the prioritized treatment of the members therein.  
Question  4:
  Why  is the IMF vital to the maintenance of a stable international  economic order? 
Guidance:
  The question asks the students to consider the  importance of the IMF for global economic stability. The book notes that the  IMF was established with a view to avoiding a repetition of the interwar  policies of competitive and manipulative devaluation of currencies. To do that,  the IMF primarily seeks to promote international monetary cooperation, exchange  stability and to put financial resources at the disposal of members with  balance of payment difficulties. All these things are vital for ensuring stable  economic conditions and for aiding states in acute financial trouble.
Question  5: 
  In  what way does the monetary system in the EU differ from the system created  under the IMF? 
Guidance:
  The question asks the students to consider why the EU  monetary system differs from the system under the IMF. The most relevant issue  here concerns the approaches to exchange rate stability. The book notes that  the IMF originally created a regime of fixed exchange rates (on the basis of  gold or the US dollar) but that the system only lasted until 1971. It also  notes, though, that states are still under obligations in relation to their exchange  arrangements. The main difference compared to the EU, of course, is that the  latter has introduced a single currency, the Euro. As a result, states with the  common currency cannot change their interest rates, devalue their currency, or  control the supply of money. All that is now in the hands of the European  Central Bank. As the book also notes, the European Monetary Union is based on  exclusive individual liability meaning that the individual member states are  responsible for their own financial commitments. 
Question  6:
  Under  what conditions does international law allow a host state to expropriate  foreign property?
  
Guidance:
  The question tests the student’s ability to apply the  principles of expropriation contained within international investment law. The  book notes that customary international law permits the expropriation of  foreign property if the expropriation serves public (and not private) purposes,  is non-discriminatory, and is subject to compensation. It also notes the  discussion about the proper standard of compensation and specifies that states  now seem to agree that expropriation triggers full compensation. This is also  the general standard applied in most bilateral investment treaties. The book  also notes that international jurisprudence generally supports a standard of  full compensation.
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