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Regional trade agreements
and the multilateral trading system
Prepared
by the Commission on Trade and Investment Policy November
2002
The primacy of the multilateral
trading system
ICC considers multilateral agreements in the World Trade Organization (WTO)
to be the preferred instruments for liberalizing international trade. Such agreements
ensure a non-discriminatory approach with potential mutual benefits for all
parties. They reduce trade distortions and simplify administration. The eight
rounds of multilateral trade negotiations under the General Agreement on Tariffs
and Trade (GATT) have made major contributions to economic growth and higher
living standards around the world since World War II. The most recent Uruguay
Round resulted in substantial improvements, including establishment of the WTO,
inclusion of agriculture and services in the multilateral trade regime, and
multilateralization of most of the GATT's plurilateral codes. ICC strongly supports
the new broad-based round of multilateral trade negotiations launched in November
2001 at the 4th Ministerial Conference of the WTO in Doha, Qatar. World business
is particularly encouraged by the new mandate agreed at Doha to pursue "
negotiations
aimed at clarifying and improving disciplines and procedures under the existing
WTO provisions applying to regional trade agreements
"
Regional trade agreements as building blocks
It is to be expected that trading partners and neighbours will try to advance
liberalization through regional and bilateral trade agreements. There is an
array of such initiatives in progress or contemplated at the present time. A
total of 162 regional trade agreements notified under the GATT and the WTO are
in force today. Between 100 and 200 new regional trade formations are anticipated
by 2005. Regional or bilateral agreements may bring faster results than the
multilateral process, may enable parties to conclude levels of liberalization
beyond the multilateral consensus, and may be able to address specific issues
that do not register on the multilateral menu. The resulting achievements in
trade liberalization can be substantial complements to the WTO system, and they
can be important building blocks for future multilateral liberalization.
Potential negative effects
of regional trade agreements
The most powerful economic arguments against regional and bilateral trade agreements
are that they can cause trade diversion and trade distortions and ultimately
undermine the multilateral system because of their discriminatory nature. In
some cases, preferential rules of origin have proven to stifle technological
developments, networks and joint manufacturing, and to unduly restrict third-country
sourcing, leading to trade diversion. Moreover, they can create obstacles to
trade facilitation by increasing administrative complexity at customs. One specific
example is the proliferation of different preferential rules of origin -- a
prominent source of trade costs and complexity in today's global marketplace
in which companies depend on the rapid delivery of products and components from
multiple overseas sources. Such effects are costly to business and detrimental
to the regional trading areas. Harmonization and simplification of preferential
rules of origin and the cumulation of origin could alleviate some of these obstacles
to trade facilitation.
The need for improved WTO disciplines
The founders of the GATT understood the positive and negative potential of sub-multilateral
trade agreements, and included provisions to address the formation of agreements
aimed at closer integration through customs unions and free trade areas. Besides
Article XXIV of the GATT, the Uruguay Round Understanding on Article XXIV and
Article V of the General Agreement on Trade in Services set out discipline
s
aimed at ensuring compatibility of such agreements with GATT/WTO rules. In this
context it should be noted that of the 162 regional agreements officially notified
to the WTO and in force today, only one -- the customs union between the Czech
and Slovak Republics formed in 1992 -- is formally acknowledged to be in conformity
with GATT Article XXIV. All other regional agreements reviewed and assessed
by the WTO are subject to differing opinions by practitioners and examiners.
Because of the high level of political commitment to regional and bilateral
agreements, there have been few, if any, successful challenges to breaches of
GATT/WTO rules. The provisions under Article XXIV concern above all customs
tariffs, whereas the evolution of the trading system has brought to the fore
the trade restrictive effects of non-tariff barriers. The decision taken at
Doha to review WTO provisions for regional trade agreements therefore responds
to a timely need for bringing these up to date.
While continued reduction
of barriers to trade under the WTO will erode preferential trade arrangements
over time, regional trade agreements must maintain and strengthen momentum towards
global economic integration. ICC firmly supports the WTO principle that such
agreements be in concordance with WTO rules and that objective assessment to
that effect takes place. This principle is particularly important in the current
climate of active regional and bilateral trade negotiations.
ICC recommendations
- The WTO Committee on
Regional Trade Agreements should conduct its assessments with a view to ensuring
compatibility of regional agreements with WTO rules, including in areas like
agriculture, technical barriers to trade, and sanitary and phytosanitary measures.
Negotiations launched at Doha aimed at clarifying and improving existing disciplines
and procedures should address these aspects, in particular.
- In cases where regional
agreements increase protection against non-parties, compensation must be in
accordance with Article XXIV.6.
- In cases where regional
agreements do not meet GATT criteria for customs unions and free trade agreements,
the parties should at least respect the Most Favoured Nation (MFN) principle
and lower trade barriers on an MFN basis [e.g., tariff cutting agreements
in the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation area (APEC)].1,2,3.
- While bilateral agreements
offer opportunities to handle issues that cannot be addressed through multilateral
agreements, WTO members should be circumspect about creating the potential
for precedents on non-commercial, domestic governance issues that will hamper
multilateral trade liberalization.
- WTO members should seek
to develop multilateral disciplines to simplify and harmonize preferential
rules of origin including the cumulation of origin.
- Recognizing that regional
trade agreements will continue in view of the considerable potential benefits
that they can bring, the overarching goal of WTO negotiations in this area
should be to minimize the scope for such agreements to divert trade with or
discriminate among non-parties.
ICC submits these recommendations
to all WTO members as input into their timely negotiations on this important
issue for the multilateral trading system.
About ICC
ICC is the world business organization, the only representative body that speaks
with authority on behalf of enterprises from all sectors in every part of the
world. ICC promotes an open international trade and investment system and the
market economy. Business leaders and experts drawn from the ICC membership establish
the business stance on broad issues of trade and investment policy as well as
on vital technical and sectoral subjects. ICC was founded in 1919 and today
it groups thousands of member companies and associations from over 130 countries.
Document n°
103 / 226 final EN
27 November 2002
1.ICC India is of the view
that there should be a "time bound" mechanism for integrating regional
trade agreements in the multilateral trading system; and that MFN tariff rates
should not exceed preferential rates applying to trade within regional trade
agreements by more than 3-4% in order to minimize trade distortion with third
countries.
2.ICC Thailand is of the
view that regional trade agreements do not have negative effects on the members
of such agreements, as they increase trade among members. However, ICC Thailand
recognizes that potential negative effects on non-members should be mitigated
and that non-member countries may require negotiations to restore benefits.
ICC Thailand considers that there should be a monitoring system to ensure respect
for preferential rules of origin. Members of regional trade agreements should
have the right to agree on the privileges and special treatment among themselves,
and that regional trade agreements should be acceptable even if written without
regard to GATT/WTO rules as their key function is to promote trade liberalization.
3.The Canadian Council for
International Business (CCIB) views regional agreements in a positive fashion,
noting their value to Canada and other countries. NAFTA has demonstrated that
regional and plurilateral agreements have their own intrinsic value and can
accomplish much that is far off or unattainable in the WTO context (e.g., investment).
Similarly, bilateral agreements between Canada and specific trade partners have
provided both parties with positive outcomes. Moreover, the evolving Free Trade
Area of the Americas may be able to accomplish quicker progress than the WTO
in the near future. In short, regional agreements are more than simply "building
blocks" for the multilateral system, as noted in the statement. If constructed
properly and in a manner consistent with WTO rules, regional agreements complement
multilateral agreements and lay the groundwork for even greater progress on
a multilateral basis.
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