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12 Pac. Rim L. & Pol'y J. 751 (2003)
China's New Foreign Law Firm Regulations: A Step in the Wrong Direction

handle is hein.journals/pacrimlp12 and id is 763 raw text is: Copyright D 2003 Pacific Rim Law & Policy Journal Association

CHINA'S NEW FOREIGN LAW FIRM REGULATIONS: A
STEP IN THE WRONG DIRECTION
Jane J. Hellert
Abstract:  Following China's accession to the World Trade Organization
(WTO), the Chinese government issued new regulations governing foreign law firms in
China. A number of commentators have analyzed these regulations to evaluate whether
China is 'on track to fulfilling the commitments it undertook to gain entry to the WTO.
However, a more basic question that should be addressed is whether the new regulations
meet China's goals in joining the WTO: to foster trade and economic development and
to accelerate the growth of China's legal profession.
Although China appeared willing to engage in significant liberalization of the legal
services sector when it joined the WTO, the new regulations reflect a much more
cautious approach in recognition of the vulnerability of Chinese law firms to foreign
competition. On one hand, the regulations shield an infant domestic industry from
competition in spheres of activity where Chinese law firms already dominate, while, on
the other hand, they favor the expansion into China of some of the largest foreign firms in
the world by erecting costly barriers to entry that deter entry by smaller foreign firms. As
China's market for legal services expands, and the demand for legal expertise in complex
commercial transactions grows, Chinese firms, which lack a deep pool of attorneys
experienced in commercial transactions, are likely to be squeezed out of the transactional
segment of the market by larger, more efficient foreign firms. China's approach in
adopting the new regulations fails to recognize the benefits of competition and the
regulations should therefore be revised. By lowering barriers to entry and permitting free
interaction between Chinese and foreign lawyers, China can accelerate the development
of its legal services sector and continue to sustain high levels of economic growth.
I.      INTRODUCTION
The accession of the People's Republic of China (China) to the
World Trade Organization (WTO) on December 11, 2001, after nearly
fifteen years of negotiations, was a historic step toward free trade on a truly
global scale.t China's accession package was the most complicated and
lengthy accession agreement by any WTO member (Member) to date.2
t The author would like to thank Professor Donald Clarke and the Pacific Rim Law & Policy
Journal staff for their valuable comments.
1 See Press Release, World Trade Organization, WTO Ministerial Approves China's Accession
(Nov. 10, 2001), available at http://www.wto.org/english/news e/pres0le/pr252_e.htm (last visited Apr.
30, 2003). See, e.g., Charlene Barshefsky, Enter China: WTO Membership has Important Potential, WASH.
POST, Nov. 9, 2001, at A37, available at LEXis, News Group File; Paul Blustein & Clay Chandler, WTO
Approves China's Entry; Move Expected to Speed Beijing's Transition to Capitalism, WASH. POST, Nov.
11, 2001, at A47, available at LEXis, News Group File; Press Release, European Union, China in WTO:
Lamy Hails China's Accession Greatest Leap in History of Organisation (Nov 10, 2001), available at
http://europa.eu.int/comm/trade/bilateral/china/prl 21101 en.htm (last visited Apr. 30, 2003).
2 William Abnett, China and Compliance With World Trade Organization Commitments. The First
Six Months, in NATIONAL BUREAU OF ASIAN RESEARCH SPECIAL REPORT No. 3: CHINA'S WTO
ACCESSION: THE ROAD TO IMPLEMENTATION 6-7 (Nov. 2002).

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