The World Trade Organization (WTO) is an international governmental organization comprising of sovereign states. Its primary aim is to liberalize and regulate international trade. It provides a framework for negotiation and formalization of trade agreements and solves disputes between the member states.
The WTO agreements are ratified in the Parliaments of the member nations lay down the legal ground rules for international commerce. It was established on 1st January, 1995 under the Marrakesh Agreement with the primary aim to liberalize and regulate international trade. WTO replaced General Agreement on Trade and Tariffis (GATT) which had been formed in 1947. At present it has 153 members. India became a member of the WTO in 1995.
Unlike the WTO, the GATT was a treaty organization affiliated with the United Nations whose main purpose was to facilitate trading activities between different nations of the world. The organization mainly focused on freezing and reducing tariff levels on various commodities.
At the time of its creation in 1947, GATT was meant to be a part of an International Trade Organization (ITO). Since the ITO was ultimately did not come into existence, the GATT was left as an independent body. It remained in force till 1994 when it was superseded by WTO. The original GATT text is still in effect under the WTO framework, subject to the modifications of GATT 1994
The multilateral trading system originally set up under the GATT is well over 50 years old. The system further evolved through a series of multilateral trade negotiations held under GATT Eights rounds of negotiation occurred under GATT out of which the first rounds mainly dealt with tariff reductions and the later negotiations focused on areas like anti dumping and non-tariff measures. The last round known as the Uruguay Round (from 1986-94) led to the formation of WTO.
By the time the negotiations were nearing their completion, 123 countries were taking part in the process. It was the largest trade negotiation in history covering diverse areas such as trade in services and intellectual property and trade reforms in agriculture and textiles. All the original article of GATT were brought up for review.
The Uruguay round culminated with the drafting of the first draft of a final legal agreement on world trade. This draft also known as the “Dunkel Draft” was compiled by the then GATT director-general, Arthur Dunkel in December 1991. The Dunkel Draft with minor changes became the foundation of the WTO.
The agreement establishing the WTO regime signed during the April 1994 ministerial meeting at Marrakesh (hence known as Marrakesh Agreement), Morocco encompasses a number of other agreements as well. The important agreements which form part of the WTO regime are:
The Ministerial Conference is the topmost decision making body of WTO, which generally meets after every two years and brings together all the member nations. The Ministerial Conference can take decisions on any matter under any of the multilateral trade agreements.
WTO Ministerial Conference of 1996 (December 9-13)- This was the inaugural ministerial conference held in Singapore. Disagreements emerged between different nations on a number of issues initiated by this conference and the issues came to be collectively referred to as “Singapore Issues”. The issues pertain to
➤ Second Ministerial Conference
➤ Third Ministerial Conference
➤ Fourth Ministerial Conference
➤ Fifth ministerial conference
➤ Sixth Ministerial Conference
➤ Seventh Ministerial Conference
The Doha Development Agenda, launched at the fourth ministerial conference in Doha, Qatar in November 2001, aimed to make globalization more inclusive and help the world’s poor, particularly by reducing barriers to trade and subsidies in farming. The initial agenda comprised both further trade liberalization and new rule-making and. It also provided for substantial assistance by developing counties. The negotiations were highly contentious and an agreement has not yet been reached. In 2007, negotiations within the Doha broke down at the Potsdam Conference.
ON July 21, 2008 negotiations started again at WTO’s headquarters in Geneva but stalled after nine days of negotiations over the refusal to compromise over the special safeguard mechanism, a measure designed to protect poor farmers by allowing countries to impose a special tariff on certain agricultural goods in the event of an import surge or price fall. This came one of the main bones of contention between India and US which resulted in the breakdown of the negotiations.
There was also the issue of agricultural subsidies. Developing countries like India wanted a reduction in trade distorting agricultural subsidies given the farmers in US and U.K. Further, while Brazil has emphasized reductions in trade-distorting domestic subsidies, especially by the United States, while India has insisted on a large number of special products that would not be exposed to wider market opening Moreover, developing countries led by India claim they have had problems with the implementation of the agreements reached in the earlier Uruguay Round because of limited capacity or lack of technical assistance.
They also claim that they have not realized certain benefits that they expected from the Round, such as increased access for their textiles and apparel in developed-country markets. They seek a clarification of language relating to their interests in existing agreements. Although a number of these implementation issues were resolved, outstanding implementation issues are found in the area of market access, investment measures, safeguards, rules of origin, and subsidies and countervailing measures, among others.
A tariff barrier is the barrier to trade in the form of a tax levied on imported or exported goods. Tariffs are usually associated with protectionism, the economic policy of restraining trade between nations. For political reasons, tariffs are usually imposed on imported goods, although they may also be imposed on exported goods. For instance, a protective tariff is intended to artificially inflate prices of imports and protect domestic industries from foreign competition especially from competitors whose host nations allow them to operate under conditions that are illegal in the protected nation, or who subsidize their exports. Tariff barriers have been significantly reduced in the face of WYO rules which require countries to cut down on their tariffs of imported goods.
Non-tariff barriers to trade (NTB’s) are trade barriers that restrict imports but are not in the usual form of a tariff. Some common examples of NTB’s are anti-dumping measures and countervailing duties, which, although they are called “non-tariff” barriers, have the effect of tariffs once they are enacted.
Their use has risen sharply after the WTO rules led to a very significant reduction in the use of tariff barriers. Some non-tariff trade barriers are explicitly permitted only in very limited circumstances, when they are deemed necessary to protect health, safety, or sanitation, or to protect depletable natural resources.
Quantitative restrictions are limitations on the quantity or value of a product that may be permitted to enter a country. They are probably the most familiar of the nontariff barriers and include quotas, embargoes, restrictive licensing, and other means of limiting imports. The Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture requires the conversion of quantitative restrictions to bound tariffs and tariff rate quotas. Thus, these can be considered as trading rules enacted by Member States which are capable of hindering, directly or indirectly, actually or potentially, trade between countries.
Bound tariff refers to the maximum rate of tariff allowed by (WTO) to any member state for imports from another member state. The bound tariff rate is the the most-favored-nation tariff rate resulting from negotiations under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) and incorporated as an integral component of a country’s schedule of concessions or commitments to other WTO members.
If a GATT contracting party raises a tariff to a higher level than its bound rate, the country or countries adversely affected have the right under GATT to retaliate against an equivalent value of the offending country’s exports or to receive compensation, usually in the form of reduced tariffs on other products they export to the offending country.
➤ What is an ad valorem tariff?
➤ What is the concept of balance of payments problems?
➤ What is the mechanism of WTO Dispute Settlement and Appellate Tribunal?
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