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The WTO and the Doha Development Agenda

The WTO and the Doha Development Agenda. Background World Bank, April 25-26, 2005 . Origins of the Multilateral Trading System. Pre-WWII trade relations The post-war design: a multilateral focus The Havana Charter - ITO The ITO is still-born Side negotiations on tariffs - GATT

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The WTO and the Doha Development Agenda

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  1. The WTO and the Doha Development Agenda Background World Bank, April 25-26, 2005

  2. Origins of the Multilateral Trading System • Pre-WWII trade relations • The post-war design: a multilateral focus • The Havana Charter - ITO • The ITO is still-born • Side negotiations on tariffs - GATT • Establishment of the GATT in 1948 • From GATT to WTO in 1995

  3. Objectives of the WTO • Raising standards of living • Ensuring full employment • Ensuring a large and steadily growing volume of real income and effective demand • Expanding the production of and trade in goods and services, while allowing for the optimal use of the world’s resources • … seeking both to protect and preserve the environment and to enhance the means for doing so in a a manner consistent with the respective needs and concerns of Parties to the Agreement at different levels of economic development

  4. Structure of the WTO • Ministerial Conference • General Council + DSB + TPR (Appellate Body) • Councils on Goods, Services and TRIPS • Committee on Trade and Development • Subordinate Committees ______________________ • Negotiating Structure

  5. Functions of the WTO • Forum for negotiations: • further trade liberalization • adjustment and introduction of new rules • System for administering trade rules • Mechanism for settling trade disputes among Members

  6. The WTO and Negotiations • Geneva 1947 (23 participants) • Annecy 1949 • Torquay 1950 • Geneva 1956 • Dillon Round 1960-61 • Kennedy Round 1964-67 (60 participants) • Tokyo Round 1973-79 (99 participants) • Uruguay Round 1986-93 (123 participants) • Doha Round 2001- (over 140 participants)

  7. Post-1995 Ministerials • Singapore 1996 (Singapore issues, plan of action for LDCs, ITA) • Geneva 1998 (electronic commerce, implementation) • Seattle 1999 (battle of Seattle) • Doha 2001 (launch of Doha Round) • Cancún 2003 (failed mid-term review) • Hong Kong, China 2005 (wait and see)

  8. Rules and Conventions Basic Rules • Non-discrimination plus exceptions (MFN and NT) • Tariffs alone • Contingency protection • Subsidies • Standards • General exceptions • Transparency Conventions • Reciprocity and Non-reciprocity • Consensus

  9. The Economic Rationale of GATT/WTO Rules • The economics of non-discrimination • The political economy of non-discrimination • Price-based versus quantity-based instruments • Pre-commitment, greater policy certainty • The role of information (transparency) • Reciprocity and mercantilism

  10. Non-discrimination: A Rule with Many Exceptions • Exceptions to MFN and their economic rationale • Regional agreements • Trade preferences • Special and differential treatment

  11. Regionalism • Types of agreement • RTAs have proliferated • Basic WTO rules • Why has regionalism become more attractive? • Economic arguments, but downside risks • Political factors

  12. Trade, Development and the WTO • Defining national economic policies • Why accept international constraints on national policies? • Advantages of reciprocity • Transaction costs • Predictability, security of access • Rule of law • Discipline at home

  13. Developing Countries and GATT/WTO • A brief history: • Phase 1 (up to 1973) • Phase 2 (the Tokyo Round, 1973-79) • Phase 3 (up to 1995) • Phase 4 (post-1995)

  14. Components of S&D • Market access for exports • Increased flexibility to restrict imports • Additional freedom to subsidize exports • Postponing application of rules

  15. S&D: Where to go next • Current impasses • Can we distinguish between core obligations and others? • Resource-intensity and development-relevance of some rules. • Phase-in? • Opt-in, opt-out? • Soft law and consultation processes? • How to address graduation.

  16. Subsidies • Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures • Definition of subsidy: prohibited, actionable and non-actionable • Concept of specificity • Financial contribution, or any form of price support or income support and a benefit is conferred • Developing country provisions on export subsidies • TRIMS elimination (2, 5 and 7 years) • Provision for review of actionable and non-actionable categories of subsidy • Review foreseen before the end of 1999 to determine whether to continue or modify the provisions. There was no consensus and the provisions have lapsed, so all subsidies are either prohibited or actionable

  17. Subsidies (cont.) • Justifications: externalities, alignment of social/private costs/benefits – eg. labour market rigidities, infant industries, small firms • Governments might act for distributive reasons • A subsidy is superior to a tariff because of absence of consumption costs • Political economy considerations: does the government have adequate information, are “technical” not political decisions made? • Subsidies cost money and are likely to be used with more restraint than taxes. • Subsidies are more visible and make governments more accountable

  18. Contingency Trade Policy: Countervailing and Antidumping Duties • Subsidies and Countervailing Measures Agreement • Countervailing duties may be applied subject to a range of procedural requirements when the subsidy in question is causing injury • De minimis threshold of less than 1% or negligible import volumes • Undertakings of voluntary restraint foreseen • Procedures to be completed in one year or exceptionally 18 months • Duties to be discontinued after 5 years (sunset) unless problem persists • Agreement on Antidumping measures • Antidumping measures may be applied when sales are made at less than normal value (i.e. at a lower price than that for a like product in the domestic market) and cause injury; a range of procedures to be followed • De minimis thresholds of 2% dumping margin or when volume (normally less than 3% from one country) is negligible • Undertakings foreseen • Procedures to be completed in one year or exceptionally 18 months • Duties to be discontinued after 5 years (sunset) unless problem persists

  19. Contingency Trade Policy: Safeguards • Agreement on Safeguards • Elimination of Article XIX measures • Safeguard measures can be taken when a product is being imported in such increased quantities, absolute or relative to domestic production, and under such conditions as to cause or threaten serious injury to a like or directly competitive product • Preliminary determination is enough to act upon in critical circumstances • Quantitative restrictions may be applied • In principle, MFN should apply to actions, duration should not last more than 4 years, extendable to 8 years if necessary and if industry is adjusting • No compensation required for three years if action results from absolute increase in imports

  20. Contingency Protection (cont.) • Antidumping – price discrimination, not predation; cyclical factors, scale economies in early phases, creating markets • Link to own trade policy • Difficulties of establishing causality • Methodological opportunism • Superiority of safeguards over antidumping

  21. Standards • Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade • Distinction between technical regulations and standards • Provenance GATT Arts. III, X and XX • No more restrictive than necessary and no disguised trade restrictions • Non-discriminatory (MFN and NT) • Reference to “legitimate objectives” • Issues relating to PPMs • Presumption in favour of international standards for technical regulations • Voluntary standards, Code of Good Practice, also presumption in favour of international standards • Conformity assessment non-discriminatory and based on international guidelines or recommendations: accept exporting country assessment if equivalent • Mutual recognition encouraged, based on non-discrimination • Transparency: national enquiry points

  22. Standards (continued) • Agreement on Sanitary and Phytosanitary • An SPS measure is imposed: to protect animal or plant life or health from risks arising from: a) entry establishment or spread of pests, diseases etc.; b) from additives, contaminants, toxins etc. in food, beverages or feedstuffs; and c) diseases carried by animals, plants or products thereof • Many provisions similar to TBT • Reliance on international standards, guidelines or recommendations unless science suggests otherwise • SPS measures must be based on scientific principles, including in relation to risk. Risk assessment should be consistent across products. Precautionary principle plays a role.

  23. Standards: Economic Considerations • A standard can be defined: “for common and repeated use, rules, guidelines or characteristics in respect of activities or their results” • Technical regulations and standards (TRS) should improve welfare in situations where there is a market imperfection: • Asymmetric information (need/right to know) • Uncertainty (precautionary principle) • Market power (abuse of dominant position) • Externalities in production or consumption (e.g. regulations on pollution) • Other features of standards: • Public good characteristics (shared knowledge) • Efficiency contribution (reduce transaction costs, and network externalities – measurement, traffic rules) • But, standards can be used to abuse market position, directly via anti-competitive behaviour, or through lobbying and capture • Similarly in trade, standards and conformity procedures as protectionism • Harmonization versus regulatory competition

  24. Dispute Settlement • Unique system: an alternative to diplomatic settlement of disputes; built on mutual interest – repeated game – but needs to be seen as equitable and effective • Premise for complaint is nullification or impairment of previous commitment, or impairment of attainment of an objective of the WTO • Three kinds of complaints: • Violation • Non-violation (unexpected, changing conditions of competition) • Any other situation

  25. Evolution of Dispute Settlement System • GATT system revamped in the Uruguay Round. Problems with blocking panel establishment, delay tactics, blocking of adoption of reports; more than 90% cases worked well, but growing problem in 1980s • Dispute Settlement Understanding in UR: • Elimination of blocking opportunities • Procedural time limits • Standard terms of reference for panels • Appeals process • Increased surveillance of implementation of panel reports and Appellate Body findings • Automaticity in approval of retaliation in cases of non-compliance • Post-UR: Greater use of dispute settlement, especially by developing countries (involved in 30% of all cases)

  26. Dispute Settlement: Some Outstanding Issues • Dispute settlement as negotiation • Dispute settlement as law-making • Only governments have standing – what prompts cases: country size, other factors? • Settlement by bilateral means (how, what outcomes?) • Remedies: call for compliance, but advantages of specific proposals for remedies (not always forthcoming) because perception of inadequate remedy/compliance can only be challenged by bringing another case • Generally no compensation for damages (Australia case) • Enforcement capacity – who has effective power to retaliate? • Resource costs – Advisory Centre on WTO Law, but problem is real • Transparency – amicus briefs and participation by NGOs

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