1 / 27

From the GATT to the WTO

Government 1740 International Law Summer 2008. From the GATT to the WTO. I: History of the International Trading System II: GATT 1947 -the GATT norms -GATT negotiating rounds -focus on the Uruguay Round III: Creation of the WTO IV: Current Problems in the Trade Regime. Outline.

kacy
Download Presentation

From the GATT to the WTO

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Government 1740 International Law Summer 2008 From the GATT to the WTO

  2. I: History of the International Trading System II: GATT 1947 -the GATT norms -GATT negotiating rounds -focus on the Uruguay Round III: Creation of the WTO IV: Current Problems in the Trade Regime Outline

  3. “Prohibit trade, prohibit honest gain; Turn all the good that God hath made To fear and hate, and pain; Till beggers all; assassins all, All Cannibals we be, And death shall have no funeral From shipless sea to sea” -from “Caged Rats” by Ebenezer Eliot, the Corn Law Rhymer I: History of the Trading System

  4. Free Trade, 1846-1914 • Founded upon: • technological innovation • interest groups in the dominant economy, Britain, including manfacturers and the City of London • subsequent web of bilateral trade treaties beginning with the 1860 Franco-British Trade Treaty • the gold standard system of fixed exchange rates • intellectual developments of economic liberalism: the theory of comparative advantage.

  5. The Interwar Years, 1919-1939 • Growing economic isolation of the US and Europe: • Republican rule and Smoot-Hawley (1930) • world economic depression and the demise of the gold standard • new economic nationalism supplants liberal orthodoxies • The failure of international economic cooperation becomes inextricably linked with subsequent conflict • US emerges from WWII committed to free trade

  6. The International Trade Organization • The complementary institution to the IMF and the World Bank • Havana Charter not ratified by the US Senate • interest groups on both sides critical • post-war moment for elaborate institutional engineering over: majority voting for executive council; retaliatory measures; broad remit • Britain concerned about imperial trade system; Europe about trade balance • suspicion among developing countries

  7. II: GATT 1947 • Negotiated concurrently as a stop-gap declaration of principles with initial set of tariff concessions while ITO finalized • Little institutional heft: • no secretariat until 1955 • not an IO and signatories not members (“GATT contracting parties”) • panel reports for non-compliance easily blocked or ignored • Emerges as treaty for trade agreements, and the flexible linchpin of post-war liberalization.

  8. The GATT Norms • Liberalization

  9. Liberalization • With the aim of “raising standards of living, ensuring full employment, and... a growing volume of real income” states agree to “enter into reciprocal and mutually advantageous arrangements directed to the substantial reduction of tariffs and other barriers to trade...” • Article XI: General Elimination of Quantitative Restrictions • exceptions: agricultural and fisheries products • GATT would grow to cover a wide variety of non-tariff barriers (NTBs) to trade

  10. The GATT Norms • Liberalization • Two norms of non-discrimination • Most-favored nation

  11. Most-favored nation • Article I: “any advantage granted by any contracting party shall be accorded ... unconditionally to all other contracting parties.” • Exceptions: • FTAs, customs unions, and colonial blocs • Generalized System of Preferences • national security and government use • sectoral development

  12. The GATT Norms • Liberalization • Two norms of non-discrimination • Most-favored nation • National treatment • Reciprocity • Safegaurds • “...serious injury to domestic producers...” or “external financial position...” • written notice and consultation required • must be non-discriminatory

  13. GATT Negotiating Rounds • Trends over time:

  14. GATT Negotiating Rounds

  15. GATT Negotiating Rounds • Trends over time: • number of issues • percentage of world trade • number of participating states • a trend towards 'package negotiations' • A complete formalagenda • Institutionalized issue linkage • Final consensus on a complete package • amount of time and negotiation burden

  16. The Uruguay Round, 1986-1994 • A response to changes in the composition of international trade... • increased FDI and intra-firm trade in the developed world • increased trade in services • high-tech trade with an IP component • ...and changes in trade politics • developing states emerging out of ISI • the new regionalism • unresolved issues: agriculture, textiles. • resolved issues: manufacturing tariffs

  17. The Grand Bargain

  18. New Regulatory Coverage (1) • GATS: General Agreement on Trade in Services • broad definition of types services • extends MFN to trade in services • exceptions to national treatment and full market access acceptable but must be negotiated • regulations must be transparent, impartial and supply some from of regulatory review

  19. New Regulatory Coverage (2) • TRIPs: Trade-Related Aspects of IP Rights • an attempt to cover lingering IP issues from previous international conventions • MFN and national treatment for trade in IP • but perhaps more importantly, a baseline set of ground-rules for IP to which all WTO members must adhere • including fair and equitable IP protections sufficient to deter violation of the law

  20. Renewed Regulatory Coverage: Textiles • Before Uruguay, textiles and apparel covered under the Multi-Fiber Agreement • $50 billion plus annually in lost exports to developing world, but some states benefit under MFA • Agreement on Textiles and Clothing (1995-2005) dismantles MFA and transitions textiles and apparel to the ordinary GATT rules

  21. III: Creation of the WTO • 1: A new international institution: • fully fledged IO with member-states, explicitly charged with administering broad set of rights and obligations under the GATT • permanent forum for negotiations which nonetheless remain intergovernmental • Trade Policy Review Mechanism to supervise compliance and facilitate reciprocal compliance • 2: A clear set of baseline obligations to which all members must adhere: • TRIPs, TRIMs, GATT 1994, GATS, Anti-Dumping Agreement, Agreement on Import Licensing, Rules of Origin Agreement, Technical Barriers to Trade…

  22. Creation of the WTO: The DSM • 3: The Dispute Settlement Mechanism • legally binding system of dispute settlement with a decentralized system of member-state sanctioning as enforcement • A 15-month process: • government brings violation to WTO DS Body • if dispute cannot be negotiated, it faces panel review • three experts prepare final report: consensus veto only • appeals procedure available to both sides • if upheld: change behavior, compensate, or face authorized retaliation

  23. Three Interpretations of the DSM • Defense, if not deterrence: potential punishments for violations of trade rules are binding and potentially severe, increasing stability of the trade regime. • Stability through flexibility: 15 months to come back into compliance; pay a fine and spread the pain among the tax base; let the aggrieved retaliate. • Dispute settlement in the shadow of power

  24. IV: Current Problems in the Regime

  25. The Doha “Development Agenda” • Launched in November 2001 after the failed launch at Seattle Ministerial Conference (1999)‏ • the Doha round was intended to concentrate on the unresolved North-South issues from Uruguay: • reduction in agricultural tariffs and subsidies • implementation of TRIPs and a pharma exception • reform of over-used anti-dumping rules • environmental issues • capacity building • dismantling of GSP

  26. Further Setbacks • Cancun Ministerial Conference (2003)‏ • lack of compromise by US/EU on agriculture in run-up to the conference • controversy over expansion into “Singapore issues”: rules on investment, competition, transparency in government procurement and trade facilitation • participants lament the WTO's unwieldy (and unfair?) negotiating structure • Geneva (2008): a final attempt?

  27. Summary • States have a long history of regulating access to their markets • First comprehensive multilateral efforts to liberalize international trade after WWII • ITO fails, but GATT 1947 emerges as a flexible set of norms to govern liberalization: non-discrimination, national treatment, reciprocity, safeguards. • The Uruguay round significantly expands the scope and depth of the international trading system, and centralizes administration in the WTO, which has a binding and enforced dispute settlement mechanism • North-South distributional debates remain over agriculture, IP and other issues. • The US and other countries have increasingly turned to bilateral or regional agreements.

More Related