International Data Flows and Privacy
The free flow of data across borders underpins today's globalized economy. But the flow of personal data outside the jurisdiction of national regulators also raises concerns about the protection of privacy. Addressing these legitimate concerns without undermining international integration is a challenge. This paper describes and assesses three types of responses to this challenge: unilateral development of national or regional regulation, such as the European Union's Data Protection Directive and forthcoming General Data Protection Regulation; international negotiation of trade disciplines, most recently in the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP); and international cooperation involving regulators, most significantly in the EU-U.S. Privacy Shield Agreement. The paper argues that unilateral restrictions on data flows are costly and can hurt exports, especially of data-processing and other data-based services; international trade rules that limit only the importers' freedom to regulate cannot address the challenge posed by privacy; and regulatory cooperation that aims at harmonization and mutual recognition is not likely to succeed, given the desirable divergence in national privacy regulation. The way forward is to design trade rules (as the CPTPP seeks to do) that reflect the bargain central to successful international cooperation (as in the EU-US Privacy Shield): regulators in data destination countries would assume legal obligations to protect the privacy of foreign citizens in return for obligations on data source countries not to restrict the flow of data. Existing multilateral rules can help ensure that any such arrangements do not discriminate against and are open to participation by other countries.
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Format: | Working Paper biblioteca |
Language: | English |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2018-05
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Subjects: | PRIVACY, DATA PROTECTION, GLOBALIZATION, TRADE, WTO, WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION, REGULATORY COOPERATION, HARMONIZATION, TRADE AGREEMENT, |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/751621525705087132/International-data-flows-and-privacy-the-conflict-and-its-resolution https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29837 |
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dig-okr-10986298372024-12-18T04:36:31Z International Data Flows and Privacy The Conflict and its Resolution Mattoo, Aaditya Meltzer, Joshua P. Mattoo, Aaditya PRIVACY DATA PROTECTION GLOBALIZATION TRADE WTO WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION REGULATORY COOPERATION HARMONIZATION TRADE AGREEMENT The free flow of data across borders underpins today's globalized economy. But the flow of personal data outside the jurisdiction of national regulators also raises concerns about the protection of privacy. Addressing these legitimate concerns without undermining international integration is a challenge. This paper describes and assesses three types of responses to this challenge: unilateral development of national or regional regulation, such as the European Union's Data Protection Directive and forthcoming General Data Protection Regulation; international negotiation of trade disciplines, most recently in the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP); and international cooperation involving regulators, most significantly in the EU-U.S. Privacy Shield Agreement. The paper argues that unilateral restrictions on data flows are costly and can hurt exports, especially of data-processing and other data-based services; international trade rules that limit only the importers' freedom to regulate cannot address the challenge posed by privacy; and regulatory cooperation that aims at harmonization and mutual recognition is not likely to succeed, given the desirable divergence in national privacy regulation. The way forward is to design trade rules (as the CPTPP seeks to do) that reflect the bargain central to successful international cooperation (as in the EU-US Privacy Shield): regulators in data destination countries would assume legal obligations to protect the privacy of foreign citizens in return for obligations on data source countries not to restrict the flow of data. Existing multilateral rules can help ensure that any such arrangements do not discriminate against and are open to participation by other countries. 2018-05-15T21:34:24Z 2018-05-15T21:34:24Z 2018-05 Working Paper Document de travail Documento de trabajo http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/751621525705087132/International-data-flows-and-privacy-the-conflict-and-its-resolution https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29837 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8431 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC |
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biblioteca |
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America del Norte |
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Biblioteca del Banco Mundial |
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English |
topic |
PRIVACY DATA PROTECTION GLOBALIZATION TRADE WTO WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION REGULATORY COOPERATION HARMONIZATION TRADE AGREEMENT PRIVACY DATA PROTECTION GLOBALIZATION TRADE WTO WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION REGULATORY COOPERATION HARMONIZATION TRADE AGREEMENT |
spellingShingle |
PRIVACY DATA PROTECTION GLOBALIZATION TRADE WTO WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION REGULATORY COOPERATION HARMONIZATION TRADE AGREEMENT PRIVACY DATA PROTECTION GLOBALIZATION TRADE WTO WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION REGULATORY COOPERATION HARMONIZATION TRADE AGREEMENT Mattoo, Aaditya Meltzer, Joshua P. Mattoo, Aaditya International Data Flows and Privacy |
description |
The free flow of data across borders
underpins today's globalized economy. But the flow of
personal data outside the jurisdiction of national
regulators also raises concerns about the protection of
privacy. Addressing these legitimate concerns without
undermining international integration is a challenge. This
paper describes and assesses three types of responses to
this challenge: unilateral development of national or
regional regulation, such as the European Union's Data
Protection Directive and forthcoming General Data Protection
Regulation; international negotiation of trade disciplines,
most recently in the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement
for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP); and international
cooperation involving regulators, most significantly in the
EU-U.S. Privacy Shield Agreement. The paper argues that
unilateral restrictions on data flows are costly and can
hurt exports, especially of data-processing and other
data-based services; international trade rules that limit
only the importers' freedom to regulate cannot address
the challenge posed by privacy; and regulatory cooperation
that aims at harmonization and mutual recognition is not
likely to succeed, given the desirable divergence in
national privacy regulation. The way forward is to design
trade rules (as the CPTPP seeks to do) that reflect the
bargain central to successful international cooperation (as
in the EU-US Privacy Shield): regulators in data destination
countries would assume legal obligations to protect the
privacy of foreign citizens in return for obligations on
data source countries not to restrict the flow of data.
Existing multilateral rules can help ensure that any such
arrangements do not discriminate against and are open to
participation by other countries. |
format |
Working Paper |
topic_facet |
PRIVACY DATA PROTECTION GLOBALIZATION TRADE WTO WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION REGULATORY COOPERATION HARMONIZATION TRADE AGREEMENT |
author |
Mattoo, Aaditya Meltzer, Joshua P. Mattoo, Aaditya |
author_facet |
Mattoo, Aaditya Meltzer, Joshua P. Mattoo, Aaditya |
author_sort |
Mattoo, Aaditya |
title |
International Data Flows and Privacy |
title_short |
International Data Flows and Privacy |
title_full |
International Data Flows and Privacy |
title_fullStr |
International Data Flows and Privacy |
title_full_unstemmed |
International Data Flows and Privacy |
title_sort |
international data flows and privacy |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2018-05 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/751621525705087132/International-data-flows-and-privacy-the-conflict-and-its-resolution https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29837 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT mattooaaditya internationaldataflowsandprivacy AT meltzerjoshuap internationaldataflowsandprivacy AT mattooaaditya internationaldataflowsandprivacy AT mattooaaditya theconflictanditsresolution AT meltzerjoshuap theconflictanditsresolution AT mattooaaditya theconflictanditsresolution |
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1819034878031691776 |