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Presentation for IT Symposium – 19 October 2004

This presentation provides an overview of the process of becoming an ITA participant, the role of the WTO Secretariat in providing aid and assistance, and the final provisions. It also discusses the ITA declaration, its attachments, and the current participants. The presentation highlights the initial discussions with interested delegations, the decision-making process, drafting and verification of schedules, and the legal procedures involved. It concludes with the work of the ITA Committee and the final provisions for becoming a participant.

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Presentation for IT Symposium – 19 October 2004

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  1. Experience and Observations from the Secretariat in Providing Assistance to Interested WTO Members and Observers Presentation for IT Symposium – 19 October 2004 By Denby Probst, Counsellor, Market Access Division

  2. Objectives of the Presentation • Overview of Process of becoming an ITA participant • Secretariat aid and technical assistance • Final provisions

  3. Brief Overview of the ITA • Declaration signed on 13 December 1996 by 14 states or separate customs territories and the European Communities • There is no definition of information technology in the Declaration. Information technology products are only defined by their inclusion in Attachment A or Attachment B of the Declaration • Bind and eliminate customs duties and other duties and charges on all products listed in Attachments A and B in the Annex to the Declaration ITA

  4. The Attachments • Attachment A, Section 1-- Lists products by HS classification • Attachment A, Section 2-- Semiconductor manufacturing and testing equipment; listed by HS code and some “for attachment B” items • Attachment B-- Products listed by description; no HS classification

  5. The ITA Today • 63 Participants (including the Member states of the European Communities) Albania Iceland New Zealand Australia India Norway Bahrain Indonesia Oman Bulgaria Israel Panama Canada Japan Philippines China Jordan Romania Costa Rica Korea Separate Customs Territory Croatia Kyrgyz Rep. of Taiwan, Penghu, Egypt Macao, China Kinman and Matsu El Salvador Malaysia Singapore EC Mauritius Switzerland Georgia Moldova Thailand Hong Kong, Morocco Turkey China United States .

  6. Initial Discussions with Interested Delegations • Documentation • WT/MIN(96)/16 • Examples of schedules • Process • Submisson of schedule to Committee meeting • Assistance • Varies by participant, provide what is needed

  7. Making the Decision to Join • Political will • Decision by appropriate authorities in capital • Consultations with domestic producers, consumers, importers, exporters, advocacy groups, etc...

  8. First Draft Schedule • Prepared by: • the Member concerned • the Secretariat • Joint effort • Comprised of: • Loose-leaf schedule of commitments • Attachment B • Staging Matrix

  9. Verification of Schedules • Procedures outlined in G/IT/M/2 • "Any WTO Member, State or separate customs territory in the process of acceding to the WTO, hereinafter referred to as government, that would like to become a participant to the Ministerial Declaration on Trade in Information Technology Products should send a formal request to the Director-General of the WTO and submit a draft schedule of its commitments for verification. If the draft schedule is in line with the conditions set out in the Ministerial Declaration, it would only need to be verified in the usual way, first informally by the Secretariat[1] and then in the Committee, and unless there are objections, the government in question could become a participant. If, however, the government in question would want to deviate from the conditions set forth in the Declaration, this would have to be negotiated between the government concerned and the participants before its draft schedule is submitted for verification." • Speed & accuracy • Streamlined a labor intesive process • Ensures accuracy, especially minute details • Practical Experience

  10. Next Steps Draft schedule discrepancies found verification clean verification continues between Secretariat and country concerned Proceed to Committee process

  11. Final Verification Sheet

  12. Before the Meeting • Letter indicating intent to join accompanied by final verified schedule sent to the Secretariat • Proposed schedule,verification sheet, and accompanying details faxed to ITA participants • Consultations with ITA participants

  13. Becoming a Participant • The Committee meeting • ITA Committee to take such a decision • Agenda item—“New Participants“ • Interested delegation to state their interest and explain their schedule • Committee approval typically at this meeting

  14. The Legal Process • Rectification and modification of Schedules (Decison of 26 March 1980 on Procedures for Modification and Rectification of Schedules of Tariff Concessions (BISD 27S/25) • Letter requesting schedule to be circulated • Circulation of G/MA/TAR/RS/... document • 3-month wait • Certification

  15. Those in the Process of WTO Accession • Slightly different procedure than WTO Members • Commitments integrated into the Protocol of Accession • Timing typically linked to accession

  16. Final Provisions • Domestic • Implementation • Parliamentary approval or similar legal procedures • Industry adjustment • WTO • Certification • Letter of acceptance

  17. The Work of the Committee • Committee of Participants on the Expansion of Trade in Information Technology Products was established in 1997 to carry out the provision of the Ministerial Declaration • The Committee is open to all participants, and other WTO Member and acceding countries are invited as observers • Oversees matters of implementation, and any other issue related to the declaration

  18. In Summary • Experiences vary by participant • Length of time • Level of commitments • Participant-driven process • Secretariat available at any stage of the process for assistance

  19. Thank you • Questions ? Comments ? Contact details: denby.probst@wto.org The End

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