for the Implementation of International Standards
related to Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) Measures
ECONOMIC COOPERATION SUPPORT PROGRAMME (AECSP)
Disclaimer
This e-learning module has been developed for the teaching purposes and material contained in it is of general nature.
It is not intended to be relied upon as legal advice and the concepts and comments may not be applicable in all circumtances.
ECONOMIC COOPERATION SUPPORT PROGRAMME (AECSP)
Overview
This section is dedicated to the World Trade Organization (WTO)
- what it is,
- what it does,
- how it came to be.
The objectives is
to give you the broad overview of the WTO’s functions and trade rule-book
What is WTO?
The WTO is the international organisation dealing with the global rules of trade for all commodities.
The aim of the WTO is to facilitate trade between countries.
Trade Facilitation
through lowering or removing trade barriers.
The main aim of the WTO is to facilitate trade between nations and improve the welfare of its members by lowering potential trade barriers. To that effect, the WTO has developed a set of rules, agreements and commitments to assist nations with improving trade facilities.
WTO’s Functions
- The WTO assist Nations with trade activites. Click here for more informations
- The WTO oversees and reports on global trade activities. Click here for more informations
Members’ rights and obligations
WTO members commit to operate a non-discriminatory trading system.
The WTO agreements are agreed by consensus by Member nations.
For more information on rights and obligations under the WTO, click here
WTO schedules
WTO schedules are legal instruments that describe the treatment a Member must provide to the trade of other Members.
These schedules cover all current rules of trade.
Schedules are lengthy legal documents setting the rules of trade for goods and services that are agreed by consensus by all Member Nations.
There are currently 30 schedules.
For WTO documents and resources, click here
Introductions
The WTO is ruled by the Governments of the WTO’s Member countries. So the WTO is a Member-driven organisation.
Currently the WTO has 164 Member countries, with 22 countries negotiating membership.
Membership or accession to the WTO is granted after some negotiations with Governments from Member countries.
To find the list of member countries and observers, and dates of WTO membership, click here. You can find more information on membership here.
Alliances
WTO members can form alliances with other members (i.e. ASEAN, EU) with the same trade interests.
For example, the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) has 9 WTO members including Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam, whereas the remaining member – Laos PDR- is applying to join the WTO (November 2019). The European Union has 28 members.
Summary
As you can see from the WTO home page, there is a broad range of information freely available to all, including reports, books, training programs, and e-learning, trade topics, trade monitoring reports etc.
Image source: WTO home web page.
A bit of history of…
Let’s see how WTO got established
How did the WTO come to be?
The WTO’s predecessor was called the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (the GATT). The GATT came in existence after the Second World War in 1947.
The GATT set the original multilateral trading system of today’s WTO. The GATT was a legal agreement minimising barriers to international trade by reducing or eliminating tariff, quotas, and subsidies while preserving significant regulations.
Over the years, several amendments were made to the original agreements to include trade rules for the many services and goods traded globally, as well as intellectual property. These amendments were the result of trade negotiations – called “rounds”- between Member countries. Rounds are given the name of the countries, town and capitals where the negotiations took place at the time. For definitions of Quotas, Tariffs and Subsidies see slide 17.
Atlantic Charter: Churchill meets with Roosevelt in 1941
The global rules that underpin today’s multilateral economic system were a direct reaction to the Second World War and desire of two very important people for it to never repeat.
In 1941, as the Germans had just invaded Russia, Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt signed “the Atlantic Charter”. The Charter contained only 8 short clauses, some of which reflected the wish to end the war and the hope for world peace and security, but two clauses of which were economic clauses.
The Atlantic Charter inspired several other international agreements and events that followed the end of the Second World War including the formation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO), and the GATT. In 1942, adherents to the Atlantic Charter signed the Declaration by United Nations which was the basis for the modern United Nations (UN). Image source: Atlantic Charter.
Geneva (1947)
Most of the GATT’s rounds focused originally on goods and reducing tariffs. It started with a first round in Geneva in 1947.
A General Agreement was signed by 23 countries. It was the first attempt to write a rule book for commerce. This first rule books includes tariff cuts on one-fifth (1/5) of world trade representing around 45,000 tariff cuts and affecting $10 billion of trade.
The Dillon round (Geneva 1960-1961)
This Geneva round is referred to as the “Dillon Round” and focused on customs duties.
26 countries met in Geneva, focussed on harmonising concessions within the new European Economic Community. During this round about 4,400 tariff concessions covering $4.9 billion of trade were agreed on.
The Kennedy round (Geneva 1964-1967)
The next round of negotiations, called the “Kennedy round” saw a further reduction of tariffs, down to 50%.
This round was also held in Geneva, with participation of 62 Members countries representing 75% of total world trade. Further tariff reductions were agreed on and valued at an estimated $40 billion. This round resulted in 35% of average cuts on industrial goods.
Tokyo (1973-1979)
This round focused on a series of agreements on non-tariff barriers. The Tokyo round was the first major attempt to tackle trade barriers that do not take the form of tariffs and to improve the system.
102 Member countries were present and discussed both tariffs and non-tariffs issues. Further tariff reductions and bindings (commitments not to increase current tariffs) were agreed on during this round.
Uruguay round (Beginning of WTO)
Most importantly, the Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture (or URAA), signed in April 1994, focussed on outstanding trade issues including agriculture, textiles, services and intellectual property.
123 signatory countries committed themselves to reductions in protectionist measures, export subsidies, and domestic support for their own agricultural products.
The Uruguay round not only created new rules for dealing with trade but it also led to the development of new procedures for dispute settlement system and trade policy review mechanism. The value of trade impacted is estimated at 3.7 trillion. This final act concluding the Uruguay round and officially establishing the WTO regime was signed in 1994 at Marrakech, Morocco and it is hence known as Marrakech Agreement. It entered into force in the 1st of January 1995.
Summary
The outcome of the 1986-94 Uruguay Round of negotiations led to a major revision of the original General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and the formation of the WTO.
In the next set of slides, we are going to go through the next round of trade negotiations, called the Doha/Qatar round.
For more information each round of trade negotiations, please refer to the WTO GATT bilateral negotiating material by Round
Introduction
In the year 1995, the WTO replaced the GATT, after 47 years of negotiations.
The WTO has more powers and augmented functions in dealing with international economic affairs and facilitation of trade.
A new round of negotiations started called the Doha round. This round covers 20 areas of trade including agriculture, services, industrial products, intellectual property, anti-dumping and other WTO rules issues, dispute settlement, and some trade and environment issues. This round is still going.
First WTO Ministerial Conference (Singapore 1996)
Conference (Singapore 1996) The negotiations on trade liberalisation kept on going to include agricultural products which became a part of the WTO’s agenda through the Doha round between 2001 and 2004.
A fundamental objective of the Doha round is to improve the trading prospects of developing countries.
The first ministerial conference (MC) took place in Singapore in 1996.
Doha round (2001- 2017)
The work program of the Doha round is also known as the “Doha development Agenda”.
The aim is to further liberalise trade, but also to focus on developing countries, particularly Least Developed Countries (LDCs), and their integration into the WTO multilateral system.
Talks so far have focused on:
- Reforming agricultural subsidies;
- Ensuring that new liberalisation in the global economy respects the need for sustainable economic growth in developing countries; and
- Improving developing countries’ access to global markets for their exports.
Negotiations resulted in major updates to the WTO rule-book stating the terms of trade for all members.
Bali (2013)
The second MC took place in Bali in 2013.
This meeting saw the adoption of the Agreement on Trade Facilitation (TFA) , which aims to reduce border delays by facilitating and fast-tracking processes – the overall outcome being a significant decrease in trade costs.
For more information see WTO Bali Package and November 2014 decisions
Trade Facilitation Agreement (2017)
In 2017, the WTO amended its Intellectual Property Agreement as the Trade Facilitation Agreement (or TFA for short) entered into force.
Under the TFA, Member countries must comply with international best practice including:
- publishing information on customs procedures
- advance rulings
- appeal mechanisms
- limiting fees and charges
- establishing procedures for clearing goods
Specific examples of practical measures that will strengthen global trade and economic growth include:
- allowing exporters to submit import documentation before physical goods arrive,
- clearing goods before final duties and charges are calculated,
- obtaining precise and binding information on the tariff classification of their goods before arrival,
- mandating the quick release of perishable goods, which will reduce waiting times for clearance of agricultural exports in foreign ports, and
- requirements to publish relevant procedures and forms for importing goods online to streamline access to customs procedures and new export markets.
How did the WTO come to be?
to give you the broad overview of the WTO’s functions and trade rule-book
Introductions
Coming back to the beginning, it all started with the trade of goods with the predecessor of the WTO, the GATT.
The GATT initially focused on developing mechanisms to lower tariffs for the trade of goods ONLY between 1947 and 1994.
Tariffs are nothing more than a type of tax also called import duty or imposition on imported goods. Tariffs are normally imposed by Governments on the imports of a particular commodity.
There are two important economic principles that require explanation: tariffs and quotas. There are many others of course, but these two are important ones.
What are tariffs?
Tariffs are a tax on imported goods that eventually adds to the cost borne by consumers of imported goods. Tariffs are paid to the customs authority of the country imposing the tariff and importing the goods. Tariffs are simply a tax that a governing authority imposes on goods or services entering or leaving the country. Taxes owed on imports, the so called tariffs, are paid by domestic consumers, and not imposed directly on the foreign country’s exports.
By doing so, the importing country is trying to protect its domestic economy by raising the cost of imports and shifting the trade balance in favor of their domestic goods and services.
Of course if the tariffs are high and because the cost gets shifted to the consumer, the imported commodity then becomes more expensive than its domestic equivalent. So to ensure that trade can still occur, one has to find a way to make imported goods competitive and still attractive cost-wise: one way to achieve this is to lower tariffs on imports.
Tariffs can therefore be an impediment- or barrier- to trade because they increase the cost of imported commodities. Lowering or removing them promotes global trade.
Another way for a country or nation to protect its domestic markets from imports is to impose quotas.
What are quotas?
A quota is nothing more than a defined physical limit of quantity for a given product. Quotas limit the quantity or volume of imports to a given country.
In other words – a quota specifies the maximum amount that can be imported during a given time period for specific goods or services.
Quotas act as another trade barrier by imposing strict restrictions on volumes of imported products.
What are subsidies?
A subsidy is often used as an antonym to a tax, i.e. a government transfer of money to an entity in the private sector.
It can also be defined as an assistance granted by government to the production, manufacture or export of specific goods, and taking the form either of direct payments, such as grants or loans, or of measures having equivalent effect, such as guarantees, operational or support services or facilities, and fiscal incentives (Glossary of trade and market protection related terms, World Bank).
Subsidies lower the price of goods in the producing country and make them competitive against foreign goods therefore reducing foreign competition and impacting on trade.
Summary
So both tariffs and quotas are potential trade barriers and if both are lowered and fixed, or removed entirely, then global trading systems can improve.
This is what the GATT and later on the WTO have focused on through their negotiations with Members. It is about finding better ways to trade, by lowering trade barriers to facilitate the movement of goods and services around the world.
The overall outcome is an increased prosperity of all trading partners by increasing trade activities and promoting economic growth, noting however, there is still periodic debate on labour standards and environmental implications arising from free trade. It is more complicated than this, and you might have heard about other sanctions such as bans, exchange rate policies and others, but this is the realm of economists! So we will stop here.
Principles of a trading system
Towards an open, fair and transparent global trading system
- Trade without discrimination
- Freer trade through negotiations
- A predictable system through binding and transparency
- A more competitive system – encouraging development and economic reform
The GATT laid out dome principles that have now become the core principles of rule of trade of the WTO.
Five principle rule out the Uruguay round of Agreement
This means that a country should not discriminate between its trading partners. The rules of non-discrimination are designed to secure fair conditions of trade.
For example, if tariffs are lowered for a given commodity coming from country A and the same commodity is also imported from country B, then the tariffs imposed on that same commodity should be the same for both countries A and B. Secondly, under the principle of non-discrimination, a country should not discriminate between its own domestic products and foreign (imported) products, services or others. By this, the importing country is told to give their trading partner the “national treatment” once the product has entered the local market and appropriate duties have been paid. In other words, a country should not favor domestically produced goods or services over imported ones and through this non-discrimination principle, Members receive guarantees that their exports will be treated fairly and consistently in other Members’ markets.
Lowering or removing barriers to trade to ensure a freer global trading system is accomplished through regular on-going negotiations between Members.
This means that any decision or mechanism to improve trade is not imposed but discussed and agreed upon by all involved.
Opening markets can be economically beneficial for all – but it also requires some adjustment to take into account the challenges faced by some Members.
The WTO agreements allow countries to introduce changes to their trading systems and rules gradually, through what is called “progressive liberalisation”. Developing countries are usually given longer to fulfil their obligations and allowed some flexibility and special privileges in implementing their commitments.
Another way to describe the WTO is as a system of rules dedicated to open, fair and undistorted competition.
Promoting a fair competition system is very difficult and we will not discuss here the many ways that can result in unfair trade conditions and how to deal with them. In short Governments are given the opportunity to translate what could be seen as unfair trade barriers into additional transparent import duties to compensate for the eventual damage caused by unfair trade (such as additional tariffs through tariffication for instance).
These import duties can also be calculated to compensate for bans and exports subsidies.
Export subsidies are a good example of trade regulation tools developed by Governments who provide support and funds for export producers. Subsidies enable export producers to offer domestic products or services to other countries at lower prices. In other words, this enables domestic producers to win markets by undercutting the prices charged by producers in foreign countries. This is another trade barrier that could slow down trade liberisation and can be counter-balanced by import duties.
Once trade barriers have been lowered and conditions for trade have been defined and stable, Members need to be confident that these will remain in place and not be changed arbitrarily without any warning.
Once nations join the WTO as Members, their commitments are bound and should remain so. By joining, Members’ tariffs for goods and services are set or “bound”.
A tariff-binding is a commitment not to increase a rate of duty (a tariff) beyond an agreed level. Once a rate of duty is bound, it may not be raised without compensating the affected parties.
For instance, currently 100% of agricultural products have bound tariffs and quotas have been transformed into tariffs themselves, a process called “tariffication”. Until then, only 30% of all agricultural products had set tariffs. Over the years, tariffs cuts were also adopted by WTO Members.
This means that trading partners now know what tariffs will be applied to any of their agricultural products and this results in more predictable markets for agriculture.
Setting tariffs for all products made a big difference to the level of confidence of Members and trade.
Through a more predictable trading system with clear, transparent and fixed trading conditions, competition is encouraged, and trade and its conditions is improved.
WTO Members are required to publish their trade regulations, to maintain institutions allowing for the review of administrative decisions affecting trade, to respond to requests for information by other members, and to notify changes in trade policies to the WTO.
So to summarise, the WTO agreements are negotiated and signed by the majority of the world’s trading nations which have joined the WTO and are now members.
The WTO Agreements provide the legal ground-rules for international commerce – they are essentially legal contracts.
These WTO Schedules are dedicated to the rules of trade for goods, services and intellectual property. These Agreements bind WTO member governments to keep their trade policies within agreed limits and terms and conditions that are transparent, fair and non-discriminative.
For more information see the WTO’s Principles of a trading system.
Why is it important for you to know about the WTO?
ECONOMIC COOPERATION SUPPORT PROGRAMME (AECSP)