TRADE POLICY REVIEW MECHANISM
draft Report of the
Trade Policy Review Body for 2016
Chairperson: Ms Irene YOUNG, Permanent Representative
of Hong Kong, China
1.
This Report by
the Trade Policy Review Body (TPRB) provides a brief assessment of its
activities in 2016. The annexed tables provide information on Members that are
to be reviewed up to the end of 2016, the geographical coverage of the reviews
conducted to date, the programme of reviews for 2017, and candidates for review
in 2018.
Sixth Appraisal of the TPRM
2. In June, the TPRB agreed to
undertake the sixth appraisal this year. Members plan to complete the appraisal
by the end of 2016 and to present the results to the 11th
Ministerial Conference in 2017.
3. Having regard to the results of the
fifth appraisal, which were presented to the 9th Ministerial
Conference in 2013[1], the
main issues being discussed as part of the current appraisal include:
preparation for TPR meetings; organization and structure of TPR meetings;
follow-up to TPR meetings; and other areas of the Trade Policy Review Mechanism
(TPRM).
Activities of the TPRB
4. By the end of 2016,
the TPRB will have conducted 452 reviews since its inception in 1989 (up from
429 in 2015), at 345 review meetings (Annex I). The reviews have covered 153
out of 164 Members.[2]
The trade policies and practices of two Members were reviewed for the first
time in 2016.[3] The
TPRB will have conducted reviews of 23 Members in 2016 (Annex II).
5. The review process, from start to
finish has run relatively smoothly. The Secretariat's reports continue to be
prepared in close consultation with the authorities of the Member under review.
Responses to requests for data, documentation and information have generally
been provided within the suggested deadlines. In preparing its reports, the
Secretariat has continued its efforts to reduce the burden on Members under
review by using, to the extent possible, other sources of documentation,
including Members' official web-sites or other credible sources. Essential
elements to the process have been the responses by the authorities to draft
reports and visits to capitals by teams from the Secretariat.
6. There have been a few adjustments
to the programme of reviews during the course of the year.[4]
Efforts continue to be made to space meetings of the TPRB as evenly as possible
throughout the year and to avoid clashes with other meetings at the WTO so as
to reduce pressure on Members. However, the increasing number of WTO Members,
while a success for the multilateral trading system, is also increasing the number
of reviews necessary to comply with paragraph C (ii) of Annex 3 of the
Marrakesh Agreement. This adds to the burden on Members, chairpersons and the
Secretariat.
7. The TPR programme for 2017
comprises 16 review meetings covering 24 Members, counting the EU as one (Annex
III). It includes a joint review of Members of the West African Economic and
Monetary Union (WAEMU) (Benin, Burkina Faso,
Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Niger, Senegal, and Togo), and the postponed review of
Sierra Leone. Annex IV provides the list of Members that can be considered
as candidates for review in 2018.
Coverage of LDCs and follow-up to TPRB
meetings
8. Trade policy reviews of LDCs have
been beneficial to them in terms of improving their understanding of WTO
Agreements, as well as encouraging their compliance with, and integration into,
the multilateral trading system. Of the 36 least-developed Members of the WTO,
31 will have been reviewed by the end of 2016.[5]
9. At the request of the Member concerned, the Secretariat organizes
follow-up workshops to discuss the outcome of its Trade Policy Review with
domestic stakeholders.
In 2016, four follow-up workshops for Botswana (Member
of the Southern African Customs Union (SACU)), El Salvador, Guyana, and
Madagascar are to be conducted.
Building on the success of the Myanmar and Pakistan follow-ups, the WTO
Secretariat has strengthened its approach. Rather than just disseminating the
results/outcomes of the Review, the Secretariat now works closely with the
Member under review, upon its request, to plan for a workshop that reflects its
priorities and technical assistance needs. For example, in the case of Myanmar, the workshop provided the opportunity to
identify priority areas for reforms requiring technical cooperation and capacity‑building
assistance, and to synchronize these priorities with the Enhanced Integrated
Framework (EIF) work and donor programmes. Several donors made pledges during
the workshop to provide specific assistance in some of these identified areas.
With regards to Pakistan, the authorities' primary objectives were to enhance awareness
of the WTO and the multilateral trading system among domestic stakeholders, and
to promote the Agreement on Trade Facilitation (TFA). These examples would
suggest that the follow-up workshops are following more closely Members' needs and priorities.
Monitoring of trade and
trade-related measures
10.
The TPRM requires Members, in between their reviews, to provide
information on significant trade policy changes. The WTO Secretariat uses this
and other information to prepare, on a regular basis, reports on the trade and
trade-related developments of Members and Observer Governments. The information is consolidated and presented in the Director‑General's
Annual Report on Developments in the International Trading Environment, as
called for by paragraph G of Annex 3 of the Marrakesh Agreement. Cooperation
from Members in collecting this information is improving.
11.
The latest trade
monitoring report covered measures taken during the period from mid‑October
2015 to mid‑May 2016.[6] The report provided information on the latest trends and
developments with respect to trade-restrictive measures as well as those
facilitating trade. The report drew
attention to a significant increase in the number of trade-restrictive measures
implemented by Members compared to that at the time of the previous report. The
overall stockpile of restrictive measures recorded for Members grew by 11%
during this last review period, largely due to the slow rate at which Members
have been eliminating previous trade restrictions. The report underscored the
need, in the midst of a time of economic and financial uncertainty, for WTO
Members, individually and collectively, to resist protectionist measures.
12. The Director‑General's 2016 Annual
Report on Developments in the International Trading Environment will be
discussed by the TPRB in December 2016.
Annex I
TRADE POLICY REVIEWS
WTO
Members reviewed, 1989-2016
Europe/Middle East
|
Asia/Pacific
|
Africa
|
America
|
Albania (2)
|
Australia (7)
|
Angolab (2)
|
Argentina (4)
|
Armenia
|
Bangladeshb (4)
|
Beninb, 2 (3)
|
Antigua and Barbuda2 (3)
|
Austria1
|
Brunei Darussalam (3)
|
Botswana2 (4)
|
Barbados (3)
|
Bahrain, Kingdom of2 (3)
|
Cambodiab
|
Burkina Fasob, 2 (3)
|
Belize (2)
|
Bulgaria1
|
China (6)
|
Burundib, 2 (2)
|
Bolivia, Plurinational State of (3)
|
Croatia1
|
Fiji (3)
|
Cabo Verde
|
Brazil (6)
|
Cyprus1
|
Hong Kong, China (7)
|
Cameroon2 (4)
|
Canada (10)
|
Czech Republic1 (2)
|
India (6)
|
Central African Republicb, 2(2)
|
Chile (5)
|
European Union (12)
|
Indonesia (6)
|
Chadb, 2 (2)
|
Colombia (4)
|
Finland1
|
Japan (12)
|
Congo, Dem. Rep. of theb (2)
|
Costa Rica (4)
|
Georgia (2)
|
Korea, Rep. of (7)
|
Congo, Rep. of 2 (2)
|
Dominica2 (3)
|
Hungary1 (2)
|
Kyrgyz Republic (2)
|
Côte d'Ivoire (2)
|
Dominican Republic (4)
|
Iceland (4)
|
Macao, China (4)
|
Djiboutib, 2 (2)
|
Ecuador (2)
|
Israel (4)
|
Malaysia (6)
|
Egypt (3)
|
El Salvador (4)
|
Jordan (2)_
|
Maldives (3)
|
Gabon2 (3)
|
Guatemala (3)
|
Kuwait, the State of
|
Mongolia (2)
|
The Gambiab (2)
|
Grenada2 (3)
|
Liechtenstein2 (4)
|
Myanmarb
|
Ghana (4)
|
Guyana (3)
|
Moldova, Rep. of
|
Nepalb
|
Guinea, Republic ofb (3)
|
Haitib (2)
|
Norway (6)
|
New Zealand (5)
|
Guinea-Bissaub
|
Honduras (3)
|
Oman2 (2)
|
Pakistan (4)
|
Kenya2 (4)
|
Jamaica (3)
|
Poland1 (2)
|
Papua New Guinea (2)
|
Lesothob, 2 (4)
|
Mexico (5)
|
Qatar2 (2)
|
Philippines (4)_
|
Madagascarb (3)
|
Nicaragua (3)
|
Romania1 (3)_
|
_Singapore (7)
|
Malawib (3)
|
Panama (2)
|
_Russian Federationa
|
Solomon Islandsb (3)
|
Malib, 2 (3)
|
Paraguay (3)
|
_Saudi Arabia, Kingdom
of (2)
|
Sri Lanka (4)
|
_Mauritaniab (2)
|
Peru (4)
|
_Slovak Republic1
(2)
|
Chinese Taipei (3)
|
Mauritius2 (4)
|
St. Kitts and Nevis2 (3)
|
Slovenia1
|
Thailand (7)
|
Morocco (5)
|
St. Lucia2 (3)
|
Sweden1 (2)
|
Tonga
|
Mozambiqueb (2)
|
St. Vincent & Grenadines2 (3)
|
Switzerland2 (6)
|
Viet Nam
|
Namibia2 (4)
|
Suriname (2)
|
The FYR of Macedonia
|
|
Nigerb, 2 (2)
|
Trinidad and Tobago (3)
|
Turkey (6)
|
|
Nigeria (4)
|
United States of America (13)
|
Ukrainea
|
|
Rwandab (2)
|
Uruguay (4)
|
United Arab Emirates (3)
|
|
Senegalb, 2 (3)
|
Venezuela, Bolivarian Rep. of (2)
|
|
|
Sierra Leoneb
|
|
|
|
South Africa2 (5)
|
|
|
|
Swaziland2 (4)
|
|
|
|
Tanzaniab, 2 (3)
|
|
|
|
Togob (3)
|
|
|
|
Tunisia (3)
|
|
|
|
Ugandab, 2 (4)
|
|
|
|
Zambiab (4)
|
|
|
|
Zimbabwe (2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
49 Members (85 reviews)
|
29 Members (122 reviews)
|
42 Members (121 reviews)
|
33 Members (124 reviews)
|
The parentheses indicate the number of reviews completed (where this is
greater than one).
a First
review in 2016.
b Least-developed
Member.
1 Now
included in European Union (EU-28).
2 Joint
review but counted as individual Members for statistical purposes from 2009.
Reviews conducted at end-2016 = 452 reviews at 345 TPRB meetings
WTO Members reviewed = 153 out of 164
Least-developed WTO Members reviewed = 31 out of 36
Annex II
Trade
policy reviews conducted in 2016
Member
|
Meeting date
|
Review cycle (years)
|
Georgia (2)
|
19 and 21 January
|
6
|
Morocco (5)
|
2 and 4 February
|
6
|
Fiji (3)
|
23 and 25 February
|
6
|
Turkey (6)
|
15 and 17 March
|
4
|
Maldives (3)
|
21 and 23 March
|
6
|
Saudi Arabia, Kingdom of (2)
|
4 and 6 April
|
4
|
Ukraine (1)
|
19 and 21 April
|
6
|
Malawib (3)
|
27 and 29 April
|
6
|
Honduras (3)
|
2 and 4 May
|
6
|
Albaniaa (2)
|
11 and 13 May
|
6
|
United Arab Emirates (3)
|
1 and 3 June
|
4
|
Zambiab (4)
|
21 and 23 June
|
6
|
Tunisia (3)
|
13 and 15 July
|
6
|
China (6)
|
20 and 22 July
|
2
|
Singaporea (7)
|
26 and 28 July
|
4
|
El Salvador (4)
|
14 and 16 September
|
6
|
Russian Federation (1)
|
28 and 30 September
|
4
|
Korea, Republic of (7)
|
11 and 13 October
|
4
|
Democratic Rep. of the Congob (2)
|
25 and 27 October
|
6
|
Sri Lanka (4)
|
1 and 3 November
|
6
|
Guatemalaa (3)
|
16 and 18 November
|
6
|
Solomon Islandsb (3)
|
13 and 15 December
|
6
|
United States of America (13)
|
19 and 21 December
|
2
|
Note: Figures in parentheses indicate the total
number of reviews that will have been conducted by the end of 2016.
a Alternative timeline.
b Least-developed country.
Annex III
Programme
of reviews for 2017
Member
|
Meeting dates (scheduled)
|
Sierra Leonea
|
14 and 16 February
|
Japanb
|
8 and 10 March
|
Mozambiquea
|
22 and 24 March
|
Mexicob
|
5 and 7 April
|
Belize
|
24 and 26 April
|
Switzerland and Liechtenstein
|
16 and 18 May
|
Nigeria
|
13 and 15 June
|
Brazil
|
20 and 22 June
|
European Unionb
|
5 and 7 July
|
Jamaica
|
13 and 15 September
|
Paraguayb
|
20 and 22 September
|
Iceland
|
4 and 6 October
|
WAEMU (Benina, Burkina Fasoa,
Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea-Bissaua, Malia, Nigera,
Senegala and Togoa)
|
25 and 27 October
|
Bolivia, Plurinational State ofb
|
14 and 16 November
|
Cambodiaa
|
21 and 23 November
|
The Gambiaa, b
|
6 and 8 December
|
a Least-developed country.
b Alternative timeline.
ANNEX IV
32
Candidates for review in 2018
(Due date in parentheses)
Member
|
Armenia
(2016)
|
Nepala
(2018)
|
Bangladesha
(2018)
|
Nicaragua
(2018)
|
Burundia
(2018)
|
Norway
(2018)
|
China
(2018)
|
Papua
New Guinea (2016)
|
Colombia
(2018)
|
Philippines
(2018)
|
Cuba
(2001)
|
Rwandaa
(2018)
|
Ecuador
(2017)
|
Samoa
(2018)
|
Egypt
(2011)
|
Chinese
Taipei (2018)
|
Guinea, Rep. ofa (2017)
|
Tanzaniaa
(2018)
|
Hong Kong, China (2018)
|
Trinidad
and Tobago (2018)
|
Israel
(2018)
|
Ugandaa
(2018)
|
Kenya
(2018)
|
United
States (2018)
|
Kuwait
(2018)
|
Uruguay
(2018)
|
Malaysia
(2018)
|
Vanuatua
(2018)
|
Mauritaniaa
(2017)
|
Venezuela,
Bolivarian Rep. of (2008)
|
Montenegro
(2018)
|
Zimbabwe
(2017)
|
a Least-developed country.
__________
[1] WTO document WT/MIN(13)/5 of 17 October 2013.
[2] Members not yet reviewed by end-2016
are: Afghanistan; Cuba; Kazakhstan; Lao People's Dem. Rep; Liberia; Montenegro;
Samoa; Seychelles; Tajikistan; Vanuatu; and Yemen.
[3] Russian Federation and Ukraine.
[4] The TPR of Sierra Leone has been postponed at its request.
[5] First reviews are due for Vanuatu
in 2018, for Lao People's Democratic Republic in 2019, for Yemen in 2020, and
for Afghanistan and Liberia in 2022.
[6] An informal
meeting of the TPRB was held on 25 July 2016 to discuss the trade monitoring
report contained in document WT/TPR/OV/W/10.