Accessions à l'OMC
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Chine - Contingents tarifaires visant certains produits agricoles
Le 18 avril 2019 l’OMC a distribué le rapport du Groupe spécial dans l’affaire introduite par les Etats-Unis “Chine - Contingents tarifaires visant certains produits agricoles “ (DS517).
China - Tariff Rate Quotas for Certain Agricultural Products
On 18 April 2019 the WTO circulated the panel report in the case brought by the United States in “China - Tariff Rate Quotas for Certain Agricultural Products” (DS517).
China - Contingentes arancelarios aplicables a determinados productos agropecuarios
El 18 de abril de 2019 la OMC distribuyó el informe del Grupo Especial encargado de examinar el asunto planteado por los Estados Unidos en la diferencia “China - Contingentes arancelarios aplicables a determinados productos agropecuarios” (DS517).
Russie - Mesures concernant le trafic en transit
Le 5 avril 2019 l’OMC a distribué le rapport du Groupe spécial chargé d’examiner l’affaire introduite par l’Ukraine “Russie - Mesures concernant le trafic en transit” (DS512).
Russia - Measures Concerning Traffic in Transit
On 5 April 2019 the WTO circulated the panel report in the case brought by Ukraine in “Russia - Measures Concerning Traffic in Transit” (DS512).
Rusia - Medidas que afectan al tráfico en tránsito
El 5 de abril de 2019 la OMC hizo público el informe del Grupo Especial que se ocupó del asunto planteado por Ucrania “ Rusia — medidas que afectan al tráfico en tránsito” (DS512).
Tariff Negotiations and Renegotiations under the GATT and the WTO
Over the past seven decades since the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) was established in 1947 there has been a phenomenal increase in international trade in goods largely due to sustained efforts by the world’s main trading nations to reduce and eliminate tariff barriers in a multilaterally orchestrated manner. This publication reviews how the procedures and practices relating to tariff negotiations and renegotiations have evolved over this time. In particular this new edition recounts how negotiations to expand the duty-free coverage of the Information Technology Agreement were concluded and provides an account of tariff renegotiations regarding successive enlargements of the European Union. It also covers tariff negotiations for the accession of a number of new members to the WTO such as China and Russia. This book will be of particular interest to negotiators members of government trade ministries economists and academics specialized in trade policy.
Georgia's Post-Accession Structural Reform Challenges
The process leading to WTO accession is complex requires solid domestic coordination mechanisms in the acceding country a rethinking of its economic and trade policies and significant domestic structural reforms. It often implies the creation of new institutions designed to coordinate and implement the policies at the national level as was the case in Georgia.
An Empirical Assessment of the Economic Effects of WTO Accession and its Commitments
Besides facilitating access to the world market WTO accession negotiations entail a process of domestic reforms that are expected to improve the supply side of acceding economies. However measuring the actual impact of accession remains an empirical debate.
The WTO- Plus Obligations: Dual Class or a Strengthened System?
Obligations in accession protocols that go beyond the multilateral trade agreements are commonly referred to as ‘WTO-plus’ obligations. This chapter reviews the so-called WTO-plus obligations and argues that even though they are perceived to expand the existing obligations under multilateral trade agreements they in fact do not create two classes of membership within the World Trade Organization (WTO). First all accession processes are conducted on a case-by-case basis and thus result in different obligations for each acceding government. Second the WTO legal system is evolving continuously; therefore to adopt new rules and advance the legal system obligations cannot remain the same as in previous accessions. Third non-discrimination remains one of the fundamental principles of the multilateral trading system. Accessions to WTO follow this principle and hence WTO-plus obligations have been and will continue to be set on a non-discriminatory basis. At the same time WTO-plus obligations help upgrade the rules-based multilateral trading system. They fill gaps in the WTO rules on anti-dumping countervailing and safeguard regimes and they advance WTO rules by promoting plurilateral agreements.
How Post- TRIPS Negotiations Reframe the ‘Trade- Related Aspects’ of Intellectual Property after TRIPS: The Lessons of WTO Accessions
The WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) established the first multilateral understanding of what constitutes a standard for ‘adequate’ and ‘effective’ protection of intellectual property rights and established a new mechanism for monitoring and reviewing how these standards are met. The policy and legal framework defined by the TRIPS Agreement has in the two decades since it entered into force progressively gained acceptance as a legitimate balanced and transparent set of standards. Since then however two parallel sets of negotiations have revisited the standards defined by TRIPS: the multilateral WTO accession negotiations and bilateral and regional trade negotiations outside the WTO. In each case TRIPS standards have been further elaborated and timelines for their implementation altered in a manner that produces a layering of rules upon the foundation of TRIPS. However the institutional legal and policy implications of these two lines of development contrast sharply. This chapter reviews the main lines of development of rules relating to intellectual property in the accession processes and contrasts these with the parallel developments outside the WTO. It concludes with an analysis of the policy and practical lessons that can be derived from contrasting these two processes.
Trade Multilateralism – Enhancing Flexibility, Preserving the Momentum
The book you are about to close picked up on the evolving discussion on accessions and trade multilateralism. The first book on the subject WTO Accessions and Trade Multilateralism: Case Studies and Lessons from the WTO at Twenty looked back. It took stock of two decades of accessions to the WTO their welfare and development outcomes the resulting improvements to market access and their contribution to domestic reforms and to the rules-based multilateral trading system. It shone a powerful light on the GATT/WTO accession procedure – a process hitherto viewed as lacking transparency and complicated by its esoteric vocabulary and apparent detachment from the day-to-day conduct of trade.
WTO Rules, Accession Protocols and Mega-Regionals: Complementarity and Governance in the Rules-Based Global Economy
Over the past twenty years the rules-based global economy has been subject to a dynamic process of transformation. The trading environment has been characterized by shifts in the balance of economic power emerging structures and rapid changes in global and regional alliances. Since its establishment in 1995 the WTO has sought to adapt to these global trends. The 2017 Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) the 2015 Nairobi Decisions on Agriculture the 2015 expansion of the Information Technology Agreement (ITA) and twenty years of cumulative WTO accessions acquis are all part of this process of constant adaptation by the WTO to a rapidly changing environment. However after the Seattle Ministerial meeting in 1999 free trade agreements (FTAs) and regional trade agreements (RTAs) mushroomed. The 'spaghetti-bowl’ consequences and the continuing proliferation of preferential trade agreements (PTAs) and counter-PTAs have created challenges and opportunities for the rules-based multilateral trading system. Several questions have been raised revolving around the compatibility and the discriminatory and trade diversion effects of such agreements. Are these agreements building blocks or stumbling blocks for the multilateral trading system? Moreover the emergence of mega-regional RTAs (MRTAs) in particular the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) have called into question in some quarters the power and relevance of the WTO at large. This chapter examines the core question of whether mega-regionalism (and FTAs by implication) poses an existential risk to the multilateral trading system and argues that the answer is ‘no’. The negotiating results from FTAs including in their mega-regional forms and trade multilateralism can coexist in a constructive healthy and competitive relationship and both are essential for the governance of the multipolar twenty-first-century global economy. To substantiate this conclusion the chapter reviews the WTO accessions acquis and compares it to the provisions of the TPP without pre-judging its future. The comparative analysis is conducted across several areas: market access; trade rules (bilateral/plurilateral/multilateral); trade negotiations as an instrument for domestic reforms; and discriminatory effects. The results of the analysis point to areas of significant complementarity and mutual supportiveness between WTO accession acquis and the TPP and different degrees of trade liberalization in certain sectors. The accessions acquis demonstrates a process of mutually supportive coexistence between bilateral and plurilateral negotiations and the multilateral legal and policy framework of the WTO. The scope and quality of accession negotiations results are comparable to results from PTAs including MRTAs and go further to show greater robustness and durability.
Post-Accession Support Platform
WTO obligations including notification requirements and specific accession commitments are complex. Most of them become effective from the date of WTO membership. From a centralized accession process new members now suddenly have to adapt to a decentralized WTO procedures and participate in parallel in its multiple bodies. The twenty years of post-accession experience of Article XII members suggests that many especially least-developed countries (LDCs) have faced major implementation challenges until a system of post-accession support was introduced recently. This chapter reviews the Post-Accession Support Platform (PASP) a framework developed by the WTO Secretariat to facilitate the transition from acceding economy to full-fledged WTO member. The PASP offers individual post-accession implementation strategies technical assistance and capacity-building best international practices a dedicated website and internal Secretariat procedures that can be used to support new WTO members. The chapter reviews the use of the PASP by two recently acceded LDCs – Afghanistan and Liberia – and finds early signs of improved effectiveness in the WTO post-accession transition process.
Trade Multilateralism in the Twenty-First Century
Trade multilateralism in the twenty-first century faces a serious test as weakness in the global economy and fast-paced technological changes create a challenging environment for world trade. This book examines how an updated and robust rules-based multilateral framework anchored in the WTO remains indispensable to maximizing the benefits of global economic integration and to reviving world trade. By examining recent accessions to the WTO it reveals how the growing membership of the WTO has helped to support domestic reforms and to strengthen the rules-based framework of the WTO. It argues that the new realities of the twenty-first century require an upgrade to the architecture of the multilateral trading system. By erecting its ‘upper floors’ on the foundation of existing trade rules the WTO can continue to adapt to a fast-changing environment and to maximize the benefits brought about by its ever-expanding membership.
The WTO and the Changing State of the Global Economy
The world economy is showing signs of recovery after several years of lacklustre performance although major policy uncertainties may easily upset this fragile trend. To jumpstart economies and trade after the financial crisis of 2008–9 governments across the world employed a traditional mix of fiscal monetary and structural policies. These efforts helped to prevent a deeper crisis but fell short of pulling the world out of a period of stagnation in 2012–16. Trade in particular slowed relative to its historical performance and to overall economic growth. Meanwhile political and social pressures have led to inward-looking policies in large countries. Other challenges – from civil and military conflicts to scattered terrorism – have also contributed to this inward turn. Against this background this chapter discusses the need for a new and more flexible global economic architecture. It would require reforms at all levels starting with revamping the structural foundations for growth and trade applying solid ground-level macroeconomic policies in individual countries and rebuilding the upper floors of multilateral cooperation i.e. upgrading it and making it more adaptable and responsive to the requirements of the twenty-first century. In the trade area key pillars to support this structure include innovative mechanisms of trade liberalization in both new and traditional areas increased inclusiveness of trade recognition and financing of adjustment costs effective communication on trade a redefined role and functions for the WTO upgraded multilateral rules and strong leadership. With radical changes needed WTO accessions have already contributed and could contribute even more to each of these pillars.
Transforming Accessions Data into Knowledge
Accessions to the World Trade Organization (WTO) generate large amounts of data accumulated during accession negotiations and subsequent domestic reforms. Owing to differences in the structure of acceding economies accession commitments vary across recently acceded or Article XII members in the number of tariff lines bound the level of bindings and the various accession-specific commitments and obligations. The depth of commitments and extent of post-accession implementation influence the effectiveness of benefits derived by new members from WTO accession. In spite of the generally positive economic performance exhibited by all Article XII members disparities exist in their country-specific economic performance in terms of trade foreign direct investment (FDI) and gross domestic product (GDP) growth. This chapter analyses the impact and depth of accession commitments to assess the economic effects of WTO accession. It explores how the data from accessions acquis can assist policy-makers in implementing structural reforms and integrating their countries into regional and global value chains. An Accession Commitment Index is proposed as a basis for a statistical exploration of the impact of WTO accession on a series of variables related to economic growth. Using an extension of the difference-in-difference methodological approach the chapter finds that WTO accession generally has a positive and significant impact on the acceding economy’s trade and economic performance. The results also show that the impact of WTO membership on the trade/GDP ratio in developing countries is significantly higher than in previous studies.