Over the past two decades, governments have delegated extensive
regulatory authority to international private-sector organizations.
This internationalization and privatization of rule making has been
motivated not only by the economic benefits of common rules for
global markets, but also by the realization that government
regulators often lack the expertise and resources to deal with
increasingly complex and urgent regulatory tasks. "The New Global
Rulers" examines who writes the rules in international private
organizations, as well as who wins, who loses--and why.
Tim Buthe and Walter Mattli examine three powerful global
private regulators: the International Accounting Standards Board,
which develops financial reporting rules used by corporations in
more than a hundred countries; and the International Organization
for Standardization and the International Electrotechnical
Commission, which account for 85 percent of all international
product standards. Buthe and Mattli offer both a new framework for
understanding global private regulation and detailed empirical
analyses of such regulation based on multi-country, multi-industry
business surveys. They find that global rule making by technical
experts is highly political, and that even though rule making has
shifted to the international level, domestic institutions remain
crucial. Influence in this form of global private governance is not
a function of the economic power of states, but of the ability of
domestic standard-setters to provide timely information and speak
with a single voice. Buthe and Mattli show how domestic
institutions' abilities differ, particularly between the two main
standardization players, the United States and Europe."
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