OVERVIEW OF DEVELOPMENTS
IN THE INTERNATIONAL TRADING ENVIRONMENT
Annual
Report by the DIRECTOR-GENERAL[1]
(Mid-October
2014 to mid-October 2015)
Table of contents
KEY FINDINGS. 3
EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY. 6
1
INTRODUCTION.. 7
2
RECENT ECONOMIC AND TRADE DEVELOPMENTS. 9
2.1 Overview.. 9
2.2 Economic Developments. 9
2.3 Merchandise Trade. 11
2.4 Trade in Commercial Services. 14
2.5 Trade Forecast and Economic Outlook. 14
3
TRADE AND TRADE-RELATED POLICY DEVELOPMENTS. 19
3.1 Overview.. 19
3.2 Trade-Remedy Trends. 22
3.3 Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures
(SPS) 33
3.4 Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT) 39
3.5 Trade Concerns Raised in Other WTO
Bodies. 44
3.6 Policy Developments in Agriculture. 48
3.7 General Economic Support 53
3.8 An Overview of Trade Policy Reviews. 54
3.9 Regional Trade Agreements. 65
3.10 Trade Facilitation. 67
3.11 ITA Expansion. 68
3.12 Aid for Trade. 68
3.13 Trade Financing. 69
3.14 Government Procurement 70
3.15 Dispute Settlement 70
4
POLICY DEVELOPMENTS IN TRADE IN SERVICES. 70
5
transparency of trade policies. 84
5.1 Notifications and Surveillance in WTO
Councils and Committees. 84
5.2 Agriculture. 84
5.3 Quantitative
Restrictions (QRs) 88
5.4 Import
Licensing. 89
5.5 Rules of Origin. 90
5.6 Customs Valuation. 91
5.7 Preshipment Inspection. 92
5.8 Integrated Database. 92
5.9 Anti-Dumping. 94
5.10 Subsidies and Countervailing Measures. 95
5.11 State-Trading Enterprises. 95
5.12 Balance-of-Payments Restrictions. 96
5.13 Regional Trade Agreements. 96
5.14 Preferential Trade Arrangements. 97
5.15 Government Procurement 98
5.16 TRIPS. 98
5.17 Services. 99
ANNEX 1. 101
Measures facilitating trade. 101
ANNEX 2. 122
Trade remedies. 122
ANNEX 3. 152
Other trade-related measures. 152
ANNEX 4. 173
GENERAL ECONOMIC SUPPORT MEASURES. 173
APPENDIX. 189
·
In the reporting
period between mid-October 2014 and mid-October 2015, WTO Members applied 178
new trade-restrictive measures. This equates to a monthly average of just under
15 new measures per month which is stable and comparable to the previous
reporting period.
·
The overall
stockpile of restrictive measures introduced by WTO Members nevertheless
continues to grow. Of the 2,557 trade-restrictive measures, including trade
remedies, introduced by WTO Members since 2008 and recorded by this exercise,
only 642 had been removed by mid-October 2015.
·
The total number
of those restrictive measures still in place now stands at 1,915 – up by 17%
compared to the last annual report. 75% of trade-restrictive measures
implemented since 2008 remain in place.
·
Although WTO
Members are eliminating some of their trade-restrictive measures, the rate at
which this is done remains insufficient to seriously dent the stockpile.
·
More
encouragingly the report finds that a total of 222 measures aimed at
facilitating trade were taken, – a monthly average of almost 19 measures – the second
highest number since the beginning of the monitoring exercise.
·
The number of
trade remedy investigations by WTO Members has fallen during this reporting
period. This decline is primarily
because of a drop in the number of anti-dumping initiations and confirms a
trend identified in the last monitoring report.
·
During this
review period, global economic growth remained modest, and continued to be
unevenly distributed across countries and regions. The downturn in world trade
observed at the time of the last monitoring report continued in the second
quarter of the year.
·
The WTO
Secretariat recently (30 September 2015) lowered its forecast for
world merchandise trade volume growth in 2015 from 3.3% to 2.8% and reduced its
estimate for 2016 from 4.0% to 3.9%.
·
Looking towards
the 10th Ministerial Conference in Nairobi in December, WTO Members
should reflect on the central role of the multilateral trading system as a
predictable and transparent framework helping Members resist protectionist
pressures and as a stable and inclusive platform for pursuing further multilateral
trade liberalization.
Trade-restrictive measures,
excluding trade remedies (average per month)
Note: Values are rounded.
Source: WTO
Secretariat.
Trade-restrictive measures, mid-October 2014 to mid-October 2015
Source: WTO
Secretariat.
Trade-facilitating measures, excluding trade remedies (average per
month)
Note: Values are rounded.
Source: WTO Secretariat.
Trade-facilitating measures,
mid-October 2014 to mid-October 2015
Source: WTO
Secretariat.
Stockpile of trade-restrictive measures
Note: Totals
include measures listed in Annex 3 and initiations of trade remedy actions.
Source: WTO Secretariat.
This trade-monitoring report reviews
trade-related developments during the period from 16 October 2014 to 15
October 2015.
The report confirms that WTO Members continue
to show some restraint in taking new trade‑restrictive measures with the
introduction of such measures remaining relatively stable since 2012. During
the period under review, 178 new trade-restrictive measures were put in place –
an average of just under 15 new measures per month.
More encouragingly, WTO Members continued to
adopt measures aimed at facilitating trade, both temporary and permanent in
nature. Members implemented 222 new trade-facilitating measures during the
period under review – an average of almost 19 measures per month, the second highest
number since the beginning of the monitoring exercise.
Nevertheless, the slow pace of removal of
previous restrictions means that the overall stock of restrictive measures is
continuing to increase. Of the 2,557 restrictions (including trade remedies)
recorded by the monitoring exercise since October 2008, only 642 have been
removed. In other words, the total number of those restrictive measures still
in place currently stands at 1,915 – up by almost 17% compared to the last annual
overview. The addition of new restrictive measures, combined with a slow
removal rate, remains a persistent concern with 75% of all restrictions
measures implemented since 2008 still in place. The longer‑term trend in the
number of trade‑restrictive measures is an area where continued vigilance remains
imperative.
The downturn in world trade observed in the last monitoring report
continued in the second quarter of 2015. Global economic growth was modest
during the review period and continues to be unevenly distributed across
countries and regions. Prices for primary commodities including oil are down
sharply from last year, squeezing a number of important exporters. Exchange
rates have undergone important shifts since the last report and speculation
surrounding monetary policy alongside recurring bouts of volatility in
financial markets has stoked uncertainty. In light of these developments, the
Secretariat recently (30 September 2015) lowered its forecast for world
merchandise trade volume growth in 2015 to 2.8%, and reduced its estimate for
2016 to 3.9%.
In the area of trade remedies, the decelerating trend observed in the
previous report continued. This owes particularly to the decline in the number
of initiations of anti-dumping investigations. Concerning anti-dumping and countervailing measures applied on the basis
of investigations initiated in 2008 and 2009 (coinciding with the onset of the
financial crisis), the data on extensions of measures pursuant to sunset
reviews versus expired measures show no discernible change from the pattern
observed in prior periods.
During the review period, the WTO's TBT and
SPS Committees saw significant developments. The SPS Committee has witnessed a persistent
growth in notifications from developing countries leading to the highest number
of notifications to date. An increase in the number of notifications does not,
however, automatically imply greater use of measures taken for protectionist
purposes. Another noteworthy development was the significant increase in the
number of specific trade concerns (STCs) raised in the TBT Committee.
This report shows that WTO Members introduced
128 new general economic support measures – an average of almost 11 new
measures per month, and a significant increase from the previous report. The
main beneficiaries were selected industries in the agricultural sector, oil and
gas industries, the automotive sector and assistance schemes for exports and
for SMEs.
In the area of
services the period under review witnessed several important policy
developments in such diverse sectors as financial services, telecommunications
and ICT, audio-visual services, construction services, energy and transport
services, services supplied through the movement of natural persons and a
number of other sectors. The large majority of the policies adopted during the
period under review reflect trade-liberalizing measures.
Several other
important trade-related developments also took place during 2015. These include
the adoption of the Trade Facilitation Agreement, the expansion of the
Information Technology Agreement, the Global Review of Aid for Trade and new
initiatives in the area of Regional Trade Agreements.
The overall assessment of this monitoring
report is that the uncertain global economic outlook continues to weigh on international
trade flows. It shows that the continuing increase in the stock of
trade-restrictive measures recorded since 2008 remains of concern. Looking towards
the 10th Ministerial Conference in Nairobi in December, WTO Members should
reflect on the central role of the multilateral trading system as a predictable
and transparent framework helping Members resist protectionist pressures and as
a stable and inclusive platform for pursuing further multilateral trade
liberalization.
1.1. This report is submitted to the Trade Policy Review Body (TPRB)
pursuant to Paragraph G of the trade policy review mandate in Annex 3 to the
WTO Agreement, which provides for an annual report by the Director-General to
assist the TPRB in undertaking its annual overview of developments in the
international trading environment that are having an impact on the multilateral
trading system. It builds on the Director-General's report to the TPRB on
trade-related developments circulated to Members on 3 July 2015.[2] Unless otherwise
indicated, the report covers the period 16 October 2014 to 15 October 2015. As
in the past, measures implemented outside the reviewed period are not included
in the Annexes.
1.2. This report is intended to be purely factual and is issued under
the sole responsibility of the Director-General. It has no legal effect on the
rights and obligations of Members, nor does it have any legal implication with
respect to the conformity of any measure noted in the report with any WTO
Agreement or any provision thereof. This report is without prejudice to
Members' negotiating positions in the Doha Round.
1.3. At the
WTO Ministerial Conference in December 2011, Ministers recognized the regular
work undertaken by the TPRB on the monitoring exercise of trade and
trade-related measures, took note of the work initially done in the context of
the global financial and economic crisis, and directed it to be continued and
strengthened. Ministers invited the Director-General to continue presenting his
trade‑monitoring reports on a regular basis, and asked the TPRB to consider
these monitoring reports in addition to its meeting to undertake the Annual
Overview of Developments in the International Trading Environment. Ministers
committed to duly comply with the existing transparency obligations and
reporting requirements needed for the preparation of these monitoring reports,
and to continue to support and cooperate with the WTO Secretariat in a
constructive fashion.[3]
1.4. Section
2 of the overview provides a review of recent economic and trade trends.
Section 3 presents an account of selected trade and trade-related developments
during the period under review. Section 4 reviews policy developments in trade
in services. Finally, Section 5 provides an overview of compliance and
timeliness of Members' notifications to the WTO. Annexes to the report list
specific new trade policy measures of individual Members taken during
the period under review in four categories: trade-facilitating measures (Annex
1); trade‑remedy actions (Annex 2); other trade and trade-related measures
(Annex 3); and general economic support measures (Annex 4). Specific
developments related to Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) measures and Technical
Barriers to Trade (TBT) are covered separately in Section 3. Specific measures
of individual Members and Observers in the area of trade in services are
described in Section 4.
1.5. Information on the measures included in the Annexes to this report
and, with respect to services in Section 4, has been collected from inputs
submitted by WTO Members and Observers, as well as from other official and
public sources. Replies to the request of the Director-General for
information on measures taken during the period under review were received from
76 Members (counting the European Union (EU) and its member States separately)
(Box 1), which represents 47% of the membership. This is an increase of 10%
compared to the participation in the 2014 annual report.[4] One Observer also replied to the request for information. The WTO
Secretariat has drawn on these replies, as well as on a variety of other
sources, to prepare this report. All country‑specific information collected was
sent for verification to the relevant delegation. As in the past,
participation in the verification process was uneven, and in several instances
the Secretariat received only partial responses and often after the indicated
deadline. Where it has not been possible to confirm the information, this is
noted in the Annexes.[5]
Box 1 Replies to the
Director-General's request for information[6]
Albania
Argentina
Australia
Azerbaijan*
Barbados
Brazil
Cabo Verde
Canada
Chile
China, Republic of
Colombia
Costa Rica
Cuba
Dominican Republic
Egypt
European Union
The Gambia
|
Georgia
Guatemala
Hong Kong, China
India
Indonesia
Japan
Korea, Republic of
Macao, China
Malaysia
Mauritius
Mexico
Moldova, Republic of
Montenegro
New Zealand
Norway
Paraguay
Peru
|
Philippines
Russian Federation
Saudi Arabia, Kingdom of
Serbia
Seychelles
Singapore
South Africa
St. Vincent and the Grenadines
Switzerland
Chinese Taipei
Thailand
Tunisia
Turkey
Ukraine
United States of America
Uruguay
|
* Observer
WTO
Members and Observers Participating in the WTO Monitoring Exercise
2.1. The WTO downgraded, on 30 September, its forecast for world trade
after declines in the first two quarters of 2015 reduced the potential
expansion for the year and clouded the outlook for 2016. The Secretariat now
expects merchandise trade to grow 2.8% in volume terms in 2015 (down from 3.3%
in April) and 3.9% in 2016 (down from 4.0% previously).
2.2. These downward revisions reflect a number of factors that have
weighed on world trade and output recently, including the rebalancing of the
Chinese economy away from investment and towards consumption, declines in
primary commodity prices that have hit export revenues and imports of
resource-based economies, as well as strong exchange rate fluctuations and
volatility in financial markets. Uncertainty over the timing and pace of
expected interest rate rises in the United States has also raised the prospect
of capital flow reversals in developing countries and clouded the outlook for
the global economy going forward.
2.3. If the September forecast holds, 2015 will be the fourth consecutive
year with merchandise trade growth of less than 3%, and the fourth year where
world trade has grown at approximately the same rate as world GDP, rather than
twice as fast, as in the 1990s and early 2000s. The current forecast indicates
faster trade growth of 3.9% in 2016, but this rate of increase is still well
below the average of 5% since 1990.
2.4. The distribution of economic activity across countries and regions
continues to be uneven, and economic data remain mixed. After a slow start with
0.6% annualized GDP growth in the first quarter, the United States saw
output growth rebound to 3.9% in the second quarter before dropping to 1.8% in
the third quarter. Recent U.S. employment reports also indicate weaker labour
market conditions in Q3, which could presage slower growth in the second half
of the year. U.S. output in the first three quarters of 2015 was up 2.5% over
2014, roughly in line with the IMF forecast for the year overall. The EU has also shown signs of resilience
recently, particularly in formerly distressed economies such as Spain and
Ireland. Annualized GDP growth of EU
member States averaged 2.2% in Q1 and 1.8% in Q2, but unemployment remains
high. EU output was up 1.8% year-on-year in the first half of 2015, also in
line with IMF predictions. Meanwhile, Japan's growth has been highly variable,
rising from 1.3% in the fourth quarter of last year to 4.5% in Q1, then falling
back to -1.2% in Q2. Japan's
year-over-year output growth in the first half of 2015 was flat at 0.0%, below
IMF projections.
2.5. Quarter-on-quarter GDP growth in China picked up from 1.4% in Q1
(equivalent to an annual rate of 5.7%) to 1.7% in Q2 (equal to 7.0% annually)
and 1.8% in Q3 (equal to 7.3% annually). Growth rates of this magnitude are
consistent with government targets of near 7% growth for the year, but other
forward looking measures of economic activity, including the composite leading
indicators (CLIs) of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD), point to below trend growth in coming quarters. Meanwhile, India recorded strong growth of
8.2% in Q1 and 6.5% in Q2 according to data from the OECD. Natural resource exporters had the weakest performances
among major economies in Q2, including Brazil (-7.2%), the Russian Federation (‑7.8%)
and Canada (-0.5%).
2.6. Large exchange rate fluctuations since the middle of 2014 reflect
changes in economic prospects and policy expectations in major economies, and
have exerted a strong influence on nominal dollar denominated trade statistics.
These exchange rate movements are illustrated in Chart 2.1, which shows
nominal effective exchange rate indices for selected economies through August
2015 from the Bank for International Settlements (BIS).
Chart 2.1 Exchange rate indices for
selected economies,
January 2012 – September 2015a
(Index, January 2012 = 100)
a Nominal effective
exchange rate indices against a broad basket of currencies.
Source: Bank for International Settlements (BIS).
2.7. The strongest appreciations over the past year were recorded by the
U.S. dollar and the Chinese yuan. The
dollar was up 15% year-on-year in September against the currencies of its
trading partners, while the yuan was up 9%. The loosening of the yuan's link to
the dollar in September initially produced a month-on-month bilateral
depreciation of around 3% against the U.S. currency, but against a broader
basket of currencies the yuan was only down 0.2% for the month. On the other hand, values of commodity-based
currencies have plunged, including the Russian rouble (down 36% year-on-year in
August) and the Brazilian real (down 34% over the same period).
2.8. Dollar appreciation can cause trade denominated in other currencies
(e.g. intra-EU trade) to be undervalued when measured in dollars, thereby
distorting growth rates and other calculations.
As a result, trade statistics in nominal dollar terms must be
interpreted with caution under current circumstances.
2.9. Primary commodity prices, including oil prices, have not recovered
since the last monitoring report and have in fact continued to decline. Recent trends are illustrated in Chart 2.2, which shows International
Monetary Fund (IMF) commodity price indices through September. Lower prices for
fuels (down 50% year-on-year in the latest month) are partly explained by new
sources of supply. Investment in oil
production from unconventional sources has fallen in North America as prices
have declined, but output from existing capacity remains strong. Another
contributor to falling prices is the appreciation of the dollar, which now
commands more goods and services than it did a year ago. There has
traditionally been an inverse relationship between dollar denominated commodity
prices and the exchange value of the U.S. currency, with appreciations causing
commodity prices in dollars to fall.
Chart
2.2 Prices of primary commodities, January 2012 - September 2015
(Indices, January 2012 = 100)
Source: IMF Primary Commodity
Prices.
2.10. The IMF released its latest World Economic Outlook (WEO) on
6 October with projections for world GDP and trade in 2015 and 2016. GDP
estimates received modest downward revisions but the organization's trade
numbers were reduced sharply, bringing them more in line with WTO forecasts. The
IMF expects world GDP at purchasing power parity to grow 3.1% in 2015 and 3.6%
in 2016. Risks are tilted to the downside and include financial shocks
stemming from exchange rate movements and commodity price declines.
2.11. Chart 2.3 shows year-on-year growth in the dollar value of
merchandise trade (red line), as well as relative contributions to this growth
from developed and developing economies (stacked bars). The dollar value of
world trade was down sharply in the first and second quarters of 2015, around
13% in both periods compared to 2014. These drops were entirely attributable to
changes in export and import prices since quarterly trade volume indices
jointly prepared by the WTO and the United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development (UNCTAD) show positive year-on-year growth over the same period
(+3.1% in Q1 and +1.4% in Q2 on the export side). Very little useful
information can be discerned from the contributions of developed and developing
countries to trade growth in dollar terms in the current circumstance of strong
dollar appreciation. However, the fact that these contributions are of similar
magnitude suggests that both groups of countries are equally affected by the appreciation
of the dollar.
2.12. Trade statistics in volume terms frequently provide a more accurate
picture of trade developments since they are adjusted to account for
fluctuations in prices and exchange rates. These data are illustrated by Chart
2.4, which shows seasonally-adjusted quarterly merchandise trade volume indices
for Brazil, developing Asia (including China and India), the EU, Japan and the
United States from 2010Q1 to 2015Q2. These data present a rather negative trend
of trade in the first half of 2015, especially with regards to exports of
developing Asia and imports of South America.
Chart
2.3 Contributions to year-on-year growth in world merchandise trade,
2012Q1-2015Q2
(Percentage change in US$ values)
a Includes
significant re-exports. Also includes the Commonwealth of Independent States
(CIS).
Note: Due
to scarce data availability, Africa and the Middle East are under-represented
in world totals.
Source: WTO
Secretariat estimates, based on data compiled from IMF International Financial
Statistics; Eurostat Comext Database; Global Trade Atlas; and national
statistics.
Chart 2.4
Volume of exports and imports of selected economies,
2010Q1 – 2015Q2
(Seasonally adjusted volume indices, 2010Q1 =
100)
Note: Data
for the EU, Japan and the United States were obtained from national statistical
sources, while figures for Brazil and developing Asia are seasonally‑adjusted
Secretariat estimates.
Source: WTO
and UNCTAD Secretariats.
2.13. Exports of the United States were flat in Q2 (up 1.0%, not
annualized) after registering a large drop in Q1 (-3.9%). U.S. exports in Q2
also hardly changed compared to the same quarter in the previous year (up just
0.3%). The reverse was the case on the import side, with a modest
quarter-on-quarter decline in Q2 (-1.0%) and a stronger increase in Q1 (+2.3%).
Year-on-year import growth was very strong at 6.3% in Q2, which would have
helped cushion the recent declines in imports of developing countries.
2.14. Extra-EU exports were up 0.8% quarter-on-quarter in Q2 while
extra-EU imports were down 3.1% quarter-on-quarter. Meanwhile, trade between EU
member States (i.e. intra-EU trade) was up slightly, 0.9% as measured by
exports. Year-on-year growth in intra-EU trade was strong at 3.7% as measured
by exports.
2.15. Brazil's exports surged in the first half of 2015, rising 11.5%
since the final quarter of 2014. In contrast, the country's imports were down
9.6% over the same period, and down 17% since 2014Q1. Exports and imports of
developing Asia were also unusually weak in the first half of the year, with
declines of 3.4% on the export side and 1.9% on the import side in Q2 since the
last quarter of 2014.
2.16. Monthly merchandise trade statistics in current U.S. dollar terms
are more timely than quarterly statistics in volume terms and are available for
a larger set of countries (Chart 2.5). However, these data are also subject to
price distortions and should therefore be interpreted with caution. Export and
import values are down in most countries in the first half of 2015, but this
may simply be due to the fact that they are measured in U.S. dollars. For
example, Germany's exports and imports were both down 14% year-on-year in July
when measured in dollar terms, but they were up 6% when measured in euros.
2.17. Chart 2.6 shows year-on-year growth in the dollar value of
commercial services trade for selected economies from 2014Q2 to 2015Q2. These
data are also affected by the recent appreciation of the U.S. dollar in much
the same way that merchandise trade values are. As a result, they must also be
interpreted with caution. Countries whose currencies experienced significant
depreciations against the U.S. dollar by 2015Q1 (e.g. Brazil, the EU, India,
Japan, and the Russian Federation) all recorded sharp slowdowns in services
trade in 2015Q1 and 2015Q2, on both the export and import sides, while other
countries (China and the United States) did not register similar declines. In
most cases, declines in services trade in percentage terms were smaller than
the percentage declines in currency values, which suggests that the volume of
commercial services trade has continued to rise. However, it remains difficult to draw useful
conclusions from nominal trade statistics in the presence of strong exchange
rate movements.
2.18. Table 2.1 shows the latest WTO trade forecasts for 2015 and
2016, updated on 30 September 2015. These estimates depend upon consensus
estimates of real GDP growth at market exchange rates, which are largely
compatible with the IMF outlook. As noted previously, the WTO expects world
merchandise trade volume as measured by the average of exports and imports to
grow 2.8% in 2015 and to expand by 3.9% in 2016. Exports from developed
economies should increase by 3.0% this year and by 3.9% next year, while
exports of developing economies are projected to grow more slowly at 2.4% in
2015 and 3.8% in 2016. Developed economies' imports should grow by 3.1% in 2015
and 3.2% 2016, while those of developing economies should expand 2.5% this year
and 5.2% next year.
Chart 2.5 Merchandise exports and imports of selected economies,
January 2010-August 2015
(US$ billion)
Source: IMF
International Financial Statistics, Global Trade Information Services GTA
database, national statistics.
Chart 2.6 Commercial services exports and imports of selected economies,
2014Q2‑2015Q2
(Year-on-year % change in current US$ values)
Note: Figures
for China are preliminary.
Source: WTO and UNCTAD
Secretariats.
2.19. Exports of developing Asia received a strong downward revision for
2015, to 3.1% from 5.0% previously. This is mostly due to falling
intra-regional trade as China's demand for imported goods has eased. The
downward revision to Asia on the import side was even stronger, to 2.6% from
5.1% previously. The product composition of China's merchandise imports
suggests that some of the slowdown may be related to the country's ongoing
transition from investment to consumption led growth. Large year-on-year
declines in quantities of imported machinery (-9%) and metals (iron ore -10%,
copper -6%) were recorded in customs statistics for August, while strong
increases were seen in agricultural goods, including cereal grains (+130%) and
oilseeds (+33%).
2.20. Another noteworthy revision was applied to imports of South and
Central America in 2015, as the regional estimate was lowered to -5.6% from
-0.5% previously. Much of this was due
to a sharp decline in Brazil's import demand, which in turn affected exports of
neighbouring countries. A rebound in
imports of South and Central America is expected in 2016 as Brazil's GDP growth
stabilizes and its imports begin to recover from a low base.
Table
2.1 Merchandise trade volume and real GDP, 2011-2016
(Annual percentage change)
|
2011
|
2012
|
2013
|
2014
|
2015a
|
2016a
|
Volume of
world merchandise trade
|
5.3
|
2.2
|
2.5
|
2.5
|
2.8
|
3.9
|
Exports
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Developed economies
|
5.1
|
1.1
|
2.2
|
2.0
|
3.0
|
3.9
|
Developing economies
|
5.9
|
3.7
|
3.8
|
3.1
|
2.4
|
3.8
|
North America
|
6.6
|
4.4
|
2.7
|
4.2
|
4.4
|
3.9
|
South and Central America
|
6.4
|
0.9
|
1.9
|
-1.3
|
0.5
|
3.1
|
Europe
|
5.5
|
0.8
|
2.4
|
1.6
|
2.8
|
3.7
|
Asia
|
6.4
|
2.7
|
5.0
|
4.7
|
3.1
|
5.4
|
Other regionsb
|
2.3
|
3.9
|
0.7
|
-0.4
|
0.5
|
0.5
|
Imports
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Developed economies
|
3.4
|
0.0
|
-0.1
|
2.9
|
3.1
|
3.2
|
Developing economies
|
7.7
|
4.9
|
5.2
|
1.8
|
2.5
|
5.2
|
North America
|
4.3
|
3.2
|
1.2
|
4.6
|
6.4
|
5.2
|
South and Central America
|
12.1
|
2.3
|
3.4
|
-2.4
|
-5.6
|
5.7
|
Europe
|
3.2
|
-1.8
|
-0.2
|
2.3
|
3.2
|
3.4
|
Asia
|
6.5
|
3.7
|
4.8
|
3.4
|
2.6
|
4.3
|
Other regionsb
|
7.8
|
9.9
|
4.1
|
-1.4
|
-1.5
|
0.5
|
Real GDP at market
exchange rates (2005)
|
2.8
|
2.3
|
2.3
|
2.5
|
2.5
|
2.8
|
Developed economies
|
1.5
|
1.1
|
1.3
|
1.6
|
1.9
|
2.1
|
Developing economies
|
5.9
|
4.6
|
4.5
|
4.2
|
3.5
|
4.2
|
North America
|
1.9
|
2.4
|
2.1
|
2.4
|
2.5
|
2.7
|
South and Central America
|
5.1
|
2.8
|
3.3
|
1.0
|
-1.1
|
0.4
|
Europe
|
2.0
|
-0.2
|
0.4
|
1.3
|
1.8
|
1.9
|
Asia
|
4.2
|
4.4
|
4.5
|
4.0
|
4.0
|
4.2
|
Other regionsb
|
4.1
|
3.7
|
2.6
|
2.6
|
1.4
|
2.9
|
a Figures
for 2015 and 2016 are projections.
b Other regions
comprise Africa, the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) and the Middle
East.
Source: WTO Secretariat for
trade, consensus estimates for GDP.
3.1. The following sections provide a more in-depth analysis of selected
trade and trade-related policy developments, including some areas which saw
especially noteworthy events during the period under review.
3.2. The trade measures compiled for this report are presented in three
categories: (i) measures that clearly facilitate trade (Annex 1); (ii) trade‑remedy
measures (Annex 2); and (iii) other trade and trade-related measures
(Annex 3). The total number of measures in these three categories recorded over
the period mid-October 2014 to mid‑October 2015 is 697. This comprises 222 trade‑facilitating
measures, 297 trade‑remedy measures and 178 other trade and trade‑related
measures.
3.3. The 222 trade‑facilitating measures (Table 3.1) recorded during the twelve-month
period covered by this report represent an absolute increase over the previous
period[7], but more importantly is
the highest monthly average of such measures recorded over the last four monitoring
reports. Over 72% of these trade‑facilitating measures consist of measures that
provide for tariff reductions, sometimes applied on a temporary basis. The
trade‑facilitating measures recorded by this monitoring report cover 0.91% of
world merchandise imports (US$170.3 billion) compared to 6.4% (US$1,183.4 billion)
reported in the last annual overview.[8]
Table 3.1 Measures facilitating
trade (Annex 1)
Type of measure
|
Mid-October 2011 to
mid-October 2012
|
Mid-October 2012 to
mid-November 2013
|
Mid-November 2013 to mid‑October 2014
|
Mid-October 2014 to mid‑October 2015
|
Import
|
136
|
101
|
168
|
192
|
- Tariff
|
120
|
82
|
145
|
160
|
- Customs procedures
|
13
|
15
|
18
|
24
|
- Tax
|
2
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
- Quantitative
restrictions
|
1
|
1
|
4
|
4
|
Export
|
18
|
6
|
9
|
26
|
- Duties
|
7
|
3
|
4
|
13
|
- Quantitative
restrictions
|
11
|
3
|
3
|
1
|
- Other
|
0
|
0
|
2
|
12
|
Other
|
8
|
0
|
0
|
4
|
Total
|
162
|
107
|
177
|
222
|
Average
per month
|
13.5
|
8.2
|
16.1
|
18.5
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.4. The principal product sectors (HS
chapters) benefiting from the trade-facilitating
measures were: mineral fuels and oils; precious metals (gold); machinery and
mechanical appliances; electrical machinery and equipment; and vehicles and
parts thereof (mainly of motorcycles).[9]
3.5. Trade‑remedy measures taken between
mid-October 2014 and mid-October 2015 are listed in Annex 2.[10] As a share of all trade and trade-related measures recorded for the
review period, trade remedies make up almost 43%, down from 49% in the previous
annual report. Out of the 297 trade remedy measures recorded (Table 3.2), 241,
or around 81%, were anti-dumping actions. In line with the trend identified in recent
monitoring reports, more initiations were recorded than terminations. However,
the monthly average of trade remedy actions recorded for this exercise was down
compared to previous reports.
Table 3.2 Trade remedy measures
(Annex 2)[11]
Type of measure
|
Mid-October 2012
to mid-November
2013
|
Mid-November 2013
to mid-October 2014
|
Mid-October 2014 to
mid-October 2015
|
|
Initiations
|
Terminations
|
Total
|
Initiations
|
Terminations
|
Total
|
Initiations
|
Terminations
|
Total
|
Trade-remedy
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Anti-dumping
|
156
|
112
|
268
|
134
|
133
|
267
|
130
|
111
|
241
|
Countervailing
|
24
|
9
|
33
|
21
|
15
|
36
|
21
|
14
|
35
|
Safeguard
|
37
|
17
|
54
|
16
|
18
|
34
|
14
|
7
|
21
|
Total
|
217
|
138
|
355
|
171
|
166
|
337
|
165
|
132
|
297
|
Average
per month
|
16.7
|
10.6
|
27.3
|
15.5
|
15.1
|
30.6
|
13.8
|
11.0
|
24.8
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.6. Out of the total number of
trade-remedy measures, 165 were initiations of new trade‑remedy investigations
covering 0.17% of world merchandise imports (US$32.2 billion), and 132 measures
were terminations of either investigations or existing duties covering less
than 0.1% of world imports (US$12 billion).[12]
3.7. The number of other trade and trade-related measures recorded during
the review period (Annex 3) was 178, compared to 168 recorded for the year-end
monitoring report in 2014. However, the monthly average of the introduction of
such measures has declined slightly in the current period, and remains below
the monthly average of trade-facilitating measures (Table 3.1). Out of the 178
measures listed in Annex 3, some 136 measures were applied to imports. As has
been the case in the past, the most prevalent import measure remains tariffs,
accounting for almost 65% of import measures in Annex 3 (Table 3.3).
Table 3.3 Other trade and
trade-related measures (Annex 3)
Type of measure
|
Mid-October 2011 to mid‑October 2012
|
Mid-October 2012 to mid‑November
2013
|
Mid-November 2013 to mid‑October 2014
|
Mid-October 2014 to mid‑October 2015
|
Import
|
118
|
153
|
119
|
136
|
- Tariff
|
54
|
106
|
74
|
88
|
- Customs procedures
|
38
|
25
|
26
|
20
|
- Tax
|
6
|
6
|
7
|
11
|
- Quantitative restrictions
|
20
|
15
|
11
|
11
|
- Other
|
0
|
1
|
1
|
6
|
Export
|
32
|
27
|
36
|
31
|
- Duties
|
8
|
4
|
12
|
13
|
- Quantitative restrictions
|
24
|
11
|
12
|
5
|
- Other
|
0
|
12
|
12
|
13
|
Other
|
14
|
10
|
13
|
11
|
Total
|
164
|
190
|
168
|
178
|
Average per month
|
13.7
|
14.6
|
15.3
|
14.8
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.8. Other trade and trade-related
measures recorded over the review period cover a wide range of products. The
main product sectors (HS chapters) targeted were: mineral
fuels and oils; iron and steel; vegetable fats and oils; electrical machinery
and equipment; machinery and mechanical appliances; and vehicles and parts
thereof, accounting for 1.23% of world merchandise imports (US$228.3 billion).[13]
3.9. In the previous annual overview, the product sectors most heavily
affected were: iron and steel; organic chemicals; electrical machinery
and mechanical appliances; certain vehicles and
parts thereof; and articles of apparel and clothing accessories (accounting for 1.17% of world merchandise imports (US$214.5 billion)).
3.10. Continuing a positive trend identified in the 2014 annual overview,
the number of trade‑facilitating measures remains higher than the number of
other trade and trade‑related measures. In other words, as can be seen from a
comparison of Table 3.1 and Table 3.3, according to the number of measures
recorded by the monitoring exercise since the end of 2013, WTO Members have
introduced more trade‑facilitating measures than other trade and trade‑related
measures, although the value of merchandise imports covered by
trade-facilitating measures is lower.
3.11. The total number of what can be considered as trade‑restrictive
measures (including trade remedy measures) introduced by WTO Members since
October 2008, and recorded by the periodic monitoring reports is 2,557.[14] According to information
recorded for this exercise, as of mid-October 2015, 642, or around a
quarter, of these measures had been removed leaving the stockpile of measures
still in place at 1,915 – an increase of almost 17% since October 2014.[15] Chart 3.1 compares
the stockpile of restrictive measures at mid-October 2010 with that of mid-October
2015.
Chart 3.1 Stockpile of trade-restrictive
measures
Note: Totals include
measures listed in Annex 3 and initiations of trade remedy actions.
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.12. Overall, and despite the introduction of more trade-facilitating
than trade-restrictive measures, existing trade restrictions are not being
eliminated at a rate which significantly dents the stockpile of
trade-restrictive measures. This remains an area of concern for global trade –
systemically as well as for the day‑to-day trade flows.
3.13. This analysis provides an assessment of trends in trade-remedy actions
during the period from July 2012 – June 2013 ("first period") in
comparison with July 2013 – June 2014 ("second period") and July 2014 – June 2015
("current period").[16] Concerning anti-dumping,
data for the current period indicate a slight decrease in the number of new
investigations initiated.[17] The number of safeguard
investigations initiated also decreased. The number of countervail
investigations initiated, however, remained steady between the second and
current periods. The total number of initiations for the latter two types of
trade-remedy investigations remained considerably lower than for anti‑dumping.
3.14. Global anti-dumping initiations
decreased by 12%, from 266 during the second period to 234 during the current
period. (Table 3.4). However, initiations in the current period (233) were
still more numerous than those reported in the first period (220).
Table
3.4 Initiations of anti-dumping investigations
(Counted
on the basis of exporting countries affected)
Reporting Member
|
July 2012 - June 2013
|
July 2013 - June 2014
|
July 2014 - June 2015
|
Argentina
|
14
|
11
|
6
|
Australia
|
11
|
26
|
14
|
Brazil
|
38
|
66
|
18
|
Canada
|
11
|
10
|
12
|
Chile
|
5
|
0
|
0
|
China
|
13
|
7
|
6
|
Colombia
|
10
|
6
|
7
|
Dominican Republic
|
0
|
2
|
0
|
Egypt
|
0
|
2
|
10
|
European Union
|
9
|
4
|
14
|
Guatemala
|
0
|
1
|
0
|
India
|
31
|
25
|
37
|
Indonesia
|
0
|
14
|
16
|
Israel
|
3
|
0
|
0
|
Japan
|
0
|
1
|
2
|
Korea, Republic of
|
4
|
9
|
2
|
Malaysia
|
13
|
7
|
13
|
Mexico
|
6
|
5
|
17
|
Morocco
|
5
|
1
|
2
|
New Zealand
|
1
|
0
|
0
|
Pakistan
|
4
|
6
|
3
|
Peru
|
0
|
1
|
0
|
Philippines
|
1
|
0
|
0
|
Russian Federation
|
0
|
4
|
5
|
South Africa
|
6
|
6
|
1
|
Chinese Taipei
|
2
|
1
|
0
|
Thailand
|
5
|
0
|
1
|
Trinidad and Tobago
|
0
|
0
|
1
|
Turkey
|
12
|
4
|
22
|
Ukraine
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
United States
|
11
|
45
|
21
|
Viet Nam
|
4
|
0
|
0
|
Total
|
220
|
266
|
233
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.15. Chart 3.2 shows that the number of
anti-dumping investigations initiated increased from 2011 until it peaked in
2013 with 287 measures. The number of investigations has declined since then, a
decline which has continued into the first half of 2015. However, early
indications show a notable increase in the number of investigations launched in
the second half of 2015, suggesting that this decline may be reversed.
Chart
3.2 Total anti-dumping investigation initiations by reporting Member (2008-15a)
a Data for 2015 relate to the January
to June period.
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.16. While anti-dumping investigations
do not necessarily lead to the imposition of measures, a rise in the number of
investigations initiated is an early indicator suggesting a likely rise in the
number of measures imposed.
3.17. Regarding the Members taking
actions, Table 3.4 shows that Brazil initiated the most investigations (122) over the
three periods and accounted for approximately 20% of investigations. However,
Brazil's actions peaked in the second period at 66 investigations, before
falling to 18 in the current period. India was the second most active Member in
relation to anti‑dumping, initiating 93 investigations, approximately 15% of
the total. After a decline in the number of investigations that it initiated in
the second period, from 31 to 25 investigations, India increased its activity
in the current period, initiating 37 cases. The United
States was the third largest user of
anti-dumping accounting for 77 investigations, or approximately 10% of
initiations. The United States significantly increased its anti-dumping activity in the second period
before halving the number of investigations it initiated in the current period.
Australia was the fourth largest user of anti-dumping over the three 12-month
periods but initiated only 51 investigations, less than half the number
initiated by Brazil, the largest user of this trade remedy. Significant
increases in the use of anti-dumping in the current period were seen from Egypt
(with 10 initiations), the EU (with 14 initiations), Mexico (with 17
initiations), and Turkey (with 22 initiations).
3.18. Chart 3.3 shows that there was
little change in terms of the breakdown of products affected by anti-dumping
investigations initiated during the three periods examined, with the majority
of initiations focused on products in the metals, plastics and rubber, and
chemicals sectors.
3.19. Metal products were subject to the
most initiations in each period, accounting for 28% of all initiations in the
first period, 34% in the second period and 37% in the current period. In each
period, at least 60 initiations targeted metals, of which 75% on average
focused on steel products. Over the three periods combined, the United States (51), Australia (34) and Brazil
(30) accounted for more than half of the 238 initiations on metals. These
initiations targeted mostly metal products from China (66, of which 47 involved
steel products), the Republic of Korea (25, of which 18 involved steel) and
Chinese Taipei (20, of which 18 involved steel). In many instances,
investigations were launched on the same product from several exporting
countries. For instance, there were 19 investigations into cold rolled
stainless steel, 18 investigations into oil country tubular goods and 12 into
grain oriented electrical steel.
3.20. Chemical products accounted for the
second largest share of initiations over the three reporting periods, with a
17% share of initiations in the first period, an 18% share in the second period
and a 24% share in the current period. India accounted for 55 of the 142 new
investigations on products in this sector over the three reporting periods,
with 25 conducted by Brazil and 11 conducted by China. These initiations
targeted mostly chemical products from China (37), the United
States (17), the Republic of Korea (10) and the EU
(9). Similarly to metals sector investigations, investigations into chemicals
frequently targeted the same product from different countries – 35 products
accounted for 117 of the investigations in this area.
3.21. Plastics and rubber ranked third
over the three periods examined, accounting for 20% of all initiations in the
first period, 16% in the second period, and 15% in the current period. Half of
the 121 plastics and rubber investigations were initiated by Brazil (60), and
the next largest user in this sector was India with 10 investigations. China was
once again the main target of investigations in this sector (23), followed by
India (11), the Republic of Korea (9) and Chinese Taipei (8).
3.22. Machinery, which accounted for 7%
of all initiations on average over the three periods, ranked fourth and textiles
ranked fifth, accounting for 6%.
3.23. In terms of countries affected by
new anti-dumping investigations, 44 exporting Members were affected during the
first period, while 50 were affected during the second period and 42 in the
current period. China remained, by far, the Member most affected by
anti-dumping initiations during the three reporting periods – investigations
into Chinese products accounted for 28% of all investigations during these
periods. The second most affected Member during the three reporting periods –
the Republic of Korea – accounted for 8% of the total initiations during these
periods, followed by Chinese Taipei, at 6%.
3.24. Table 3.5 shows that global
initiations of countervailing duty investigations has remained constant in the
second and current periods, with 39 new investigations reported, compared to 38 in
the second period and 26 in the first period. The main users of countervailing
measures over the three periods were Canada and the United
States.
Table
3.5 Initiations of countervailing duty investigations
(Counted on the basis of exporting countries affected)
Reporting Member
|
July 2012 - June 2013
|
July 2013 - June 2014
|
July 2014 - June 2015
|
Australia
|
3
|
2
|
0
|
Brazil
|
3
|
0
|
1
|
Canada
|
5
|
3
|
11
|
China
|
2
|
1
|
0
|
Egypt
|
0
|
1
|
5
|
European Union
|
5
|
5
|
1
|
India
|
0
|
1
|
0
|
Mexico
|
0
|
1
|
0
|
Peru
|
0
|
0
|
1
|
Russian Federation
|
0
|
0
|
1
|
Turkey
|
0
|
0
|
1
|
Ukraine
|
0
|
0
|
1
|
United States
|
8
|
24
|
17
|
Total
|
26
|
38
|
39
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
Chart 3.3 Anti-dumping initiations by product
Source: WTO
Secretariat.
3.25. Chart 3.4, reflecting annual
figures, shows an upward trend in countervail initiations since 2010,
notwithstanding some fluctuation in 2012. In fact, the number of initiations
recorded in 2014 (45) exceeds the previous peak of 41 initiations observed in
1999.[18]
Chart
3.4 Countervailing investigation initiations by WTO Members, (2008 2015a)
a Data for 2015 relate to the January
to June period.
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.26. Among the thirteen Members using
countervail during the three periods examined, the United
States, which accounted for approximately 50% of all initiations in these periods, initiated the most new
investigations. Canada, the second largest user, accounted for approximately 20%,
while the EU accounted for 10%. The remaining 20% of investigations were
conducted by ten different countries, including notably Egypt, which
initiated five investigations in the current period. Over the three periods
examined, 80% of countervail investigations were conducted concurrently with an
anti-dumping investigation.
3.27. Concerning the types of products
affected by countervail investigations, Chart 3.5 shows that metals accounted
for most of the initiations reported over the three reporting periods,
occupying a 31% share of all initiations in the first period, a 53% share in
the second period and a 51% share in the current period. For the three periods
combined, 48 of the 103 total initiations recorded covered metals, and 29 of
these focused on steel products. The United States initiated 19 of the 29 investigations of steel products. Eleven of
the 29 steel-related initiations targeted products from China and five targeted
products from India.
3.28. Chemicals were the second
most-targeted sector with 13 initiations, followed closely by plastics with 12
initiations. The United States initiated the largest number of investigations against the chemical
sector, with seven initiations. Egypt, however, had the largest number of
initiations in the plastics sector (five) as it investigated imports of
polyethylene terephthalate (PET) from multiple sources.
Chart
3.5 Countervailing duty initiations by product
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.29. In terms of countries affected by
new countervail investigations, 11 exporting Members were affected during the
first, 12 during the second and 18 during the current period. Similarly to
anti-dumping, China was the most affected Member throughout the periods
reviewed. Investigations into Chinese products accounted for 36% of all
investigations during these periods. India, the second most affected Member
during the three reporting periods, accounted for 14% of all initiations during
these periods, followed by Turkey, which accounted for 7%.
3.30. Initiations of safeguard
investigations declined across all three periods, from 25 in the first period,
to 21 in the second, and finally to 13 in the current period (Table 3.6).
Table 3.6 Initiations of safeguard investigations
(Number of new investigations)
Reporting Member
|
July 2012 - June 2013
|
July 2013 - June 2014
|
July 2014 - June 2015
|
Australia
|
2
|
0
|
0
|
Chile
|
2
|
0
|
0
|
Colombia
|
0
|
4
|
0
|
Costa Rica
|
0
|
1
|
0
|
Ecuador
|
0
|
0
|
1
|
Egypt
|
2
|
0
|
3
|
India
|
3
|
6
|
1
|
Indonesia
|
5
|
3
|
0
|
Jordan
|
0
|
0
|
1
|
Kyrgyz Rep.
|
0
|
1
|
0
|
Malaysia
|
0
|
0
|
1
|
Morocco
|
1
|
1
|
1
|
Philippines
|
0
|
2
|
0
|
Russian Federation
|
3
|
0
|
0
|
South Africa
|
2
|
0
|
0
|
Chinese Taipei
|
0
|
1
|
0
|
Thailand
|
2
|
1
|
0
|
Tunisia
|
0
|
0
|
2
|
Turkey
|
1
|
1
|
3
|
Ukraine
|
1
|
0
|
0
|
Viet Nam
|
1
|
0
|
0
|
Total
|
25
|
21
|
13
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.31. Chart 3.6 shows a downward trend in
safeguard initiations since 2013. It is noteworthy that the figures for 2009
and 2012, of 25 and 24, respectively, fall short of the peak of 34 initiations
observed in 2002.[19] Based on the small number of initiations in the first half of 2015, it
appears that the downward trend in the number of safeguard investigations
initiated is continuing.
3.32. Table 3.6 shows that India and Indonesia were the most active Members throughout
the reporting periods, accounting respectively for 10 and 8 of the aggregate 59
new investigations. Egypt and Turkey, with a total of five investigations each,
were also active in the periods examined. In the first six months of 2015, only
Egypt, Morocco and Turkey initiated an investigation.
3.33. In terms of product coverage, Chart
3.7 shows that safeguard investigations focused on a diverse range of sectors.
As with anti-dumping and countervail initiations, metal products were the most
affected by safeguard initiations and were the target of investigations in each
of the three periods. Metals accounted for 20% of all safeguard initiations in
the first period, 48% of initiations in the second period and 23% of
initiations in the current period. Colombia (4 investigations), India (3
investigations) and Indonesia (3 investigations) accounted for over half the
aggregate of 19 new investigations into metals.
3.34. Chemicals ranked as the second most‑targeted
sector overall, accounting for 16% of all initiations in the first period and 14%
in the second period. However, no Member initiated a safeguard investigation
into chemicals in the current period. India initiated five of the aggregate of seven
new investigations into this sector.
3.35. Prepared foodstuffs and paper
products were equally the third most targeted sectors, accounting for seven
investigations each across the three periods.
Chart 3.6 Safeguard investigation initiations by WTO Members (2008-2015a)
a Data for 2015 relate
to the January to June period.
Source: WTO
Secretariat.
Chart
3.7 Safeguard initiations by product
Source: WTO Secretariat.
Sunset Reviews
3.36. This section examines the effect the global financial crisis may
have had on anti-dumping and countervailing actions, by analysing the extent to
which measures imposed following the financial crisis have been extended or
have expired (or have otherwise been terminated) – the latter possibly
suggesting that the financial crisis could have been a factor that contributed
to the imposition of the measure. This section, therefore, examines measures
imposed as a result of investigations initiated in 2008, before the financial
crisis, as well as 2009 and 2010, when the full effects of the financial crisis
were being felt.[20]
3.37. The relevant WTO Agreements stipulate that anti-dumping and
countervailing measures can remain in force only for as long as necessary to
counteract injury caused by dumped or subsidised imports, and must expire no
later than five years after their imposition unless it is determined, through a
review, that removal of a measure would likely lead to a continuation or
recurrence of dumping or subsidisation and injury. In such a case, the measure
can be extended for up to a further five years. This review process is often
referred to as a sunset review. Investigating authorities generally invite
applications for a sunset review before a measure expires, and in the absence
of a review, they allow the measure to lapse.
3.38. As of 30 June 2015, measures imposed as a result of investigations
initiated in 2008-2010 are in various stages of their lifecycle. Some measures
are still within the initial five-year imposition period, some are under review[21], some have been extended
and some have expired.
3.39. Chart 3.8 shows the status of AD and CVD measures resulting from
investigations initiated in 2008, 2009 and 2010 by as at 30 June 2015.
Chart
3.8 Status of measures resulting from AD and CVD investigations
initiated in 2008, 2009 and 2010 as at 30 June 2015
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.40. Of the investigations initiated in 2008, only two of the resulting
167 measures have not yet been subject to expiry action (either a sunset review
or termination), as opposed to 63 of the 164 measures for 2009. The vast
majority of measures resulting from investigations initiated in 2010 (89 out of
111) have not yet been subject to any expiry action.
Table 3.7 Proportion of expiring measures that were subject to a sunset
review for all WTO Members (based on the year the investigation was initiated)
Expiring measures
|
Investigation initiated in
|
2008
|
2009
|
2010a
|
Not
reviewed
|
39%
|
37%
|
32%
|
Reviewed
|
61%
|
63%
|
68%
|
a Only
22 measures resulting from investigations initiated in 2010 have so far expired
or been subject to review.
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.41. Table 3.7 shows the proportion of measures that were due to expire
for which a sunset review has been conducted; noting that measures not reviewed
will automatically expire. For measures resulting from investigations initiated
in 2009 ("the 2009 measures"), 63% were reviewed, similar to the 61%
found for 2008 ("the 2008 measures"). Thus, a similar proportion of
the 2008 measures (investigations started before the financial crisis) and 2009
measures (investigations started after the financial crisis had begun) expired
without review. It is still too early to draw conclusions in relation to the
measures based on investigations initiated in 2010.
3.42. As at 30 June 2015, 44 sunset reviews had been completed for
measures resulting from investigations initiated in 2008, nine for 2009 and
seven for 2010, as shown in Table 3.8 below. For 2008 and 2009 measures which
were reviewed, the relevant Member found that the expiry of the measure would
lead to a continuation or recurrence of dumping/subsidisation and injury and
extended the measures in 89% of cases – showing no change in relation to the
financial crisis.
3.43. Based on the data currently available, there is no discernible
change in extension versus expiry of measures coinciding with the financial
crisis. As further time passes and additional data become available, other trends
may reveal themselves.
Table
3.8 Results from completed reviews (based on the year the investigation
was initiated)
|
Investigation initiated in
|
|
2008
|
2009
|
2010
|
Number of completed reviews
|
44
|
9
|
7
|
Measure extended
|
89%
|
89%
|
71%
|
Expiry of measure
|
11%
|
11%
|
29%
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.44. Under
the SPS Agreement, WTO Members are obliged to provide an advance notice of
intention to introduce new or modified SPS measures[23], or to notify immediately
when emergency measures are imposed. The main objective of complying with the
SPS notification obligations is to inform other Members about new or changed
regulations that may significantly affect trade. Therefore, an increased number
of notifications does not automatically imply greater use of protectionist
measures, but rather enhanced transparency regarding food safety, animal and
plant health measures, many or most of which are presumable legitimate
health-protection measures.
3.45. In
the period from October 2014 through September 2015, 1,758 SPS notifications
(regular and emergency, including addenda) were submitted[24] to the WTO, resulting in an
increase of 19% in total notified measures compared to the previous period (1 October
2013 to 30 September 2014). Notifications from developing-country
Members accounted for 69% of the total number. In the previous year, the
total number of notifications and the proportion of measures notified by
developing-country Members were lower: from October 2013 through September
2014, a total of 1,479 notifications (regular and emergency, including addenda)
were submitted, of which 61% were notified by developing-country Members.
3.46. From
October 2014 through September 2015, WTO Members submitted 1,596 regular SPS
notifications (including addenda), 68% of which were submitted by
developing-country Members. Compared to the previous period (2013-2014), there
was a 19% increase in the total number of regular notifications and a 40%
increase in regular notifications by developing-country Members.
3.47. The
number of notifications of emergency measures (including addenda) also
increased compared to the previous period (Chart 3.9), representing a 14%
increase in the total number of emergency notifications (including addenda). The
number of emergency notifications made by developing countries stayed roughly
the same, and consequently their proportion decreased from 91% to 84%. These
high percentage figures are consistent with the general trend of the majority
of emergency measures being notified by developing-country Members. This might
stem from the fact that they do not have as extensive SPS regulatory systems as
developed-country Members do, and consequently, when facing emergency
challenges, they are more likely to have to introduce new regulations or change
existing ones.
Chart 3.9 Number of SPS notifications
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.48. Many
Members are following the recommendation to notify SPS measures even when these
are based on a relevant international standard, as this substantially increases
transparency regarding SPS measures. Of the 1,189 regular notifications
(excluding addenda) submitted from October 2014 through September 2015, 636
(about 53% of the total) indicated that at least one
international standard, guideline or recommendation was applicable to the
notified measure
(Chart 3.10). Of these, around 69% indicated that the proposed measure was
in conformity with the existing international standard.
3.49. International standards often provide useful guidance regarding
measures to address disease outbreaks and other emergency situations. Indeed,
about 92% (121 in total) of the 131 emergency notifications (excluding
addenda) submitted from October 2014 through September 2015 indicated that
an international standard, guideline or recommendation was applicable to the
notified measure (Chart 3.11). Of these, all but one indicated that the measure
was in conformity with the existing international standard.
Chart 3.10 Regular SPS notifications and international standards
Note: Codex Alimentarius (Codex), World Organisation
for Animal Health (OIE) and International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC).
Source: WTO Secretariat.
Chart 3.11 Emergency SPS notifications and international standards
Note: Codex Alimentarius (Codex), World Organisation
for Animal Health (OIE) and International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC).
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.50. Of the 1,189 regular notifications (excluding addenda) submitted
from October 2014 through September 2015, the majority were related to food
safety and plant protection.[25] The remaining
notifications related to the protection of humans from animal diseases or plant
pests, the protection of the Member's territory from other damage from pests,
and animal health. Most of the regular notifications identified more than one
objective per measure.
3.51. Of the 131 emergency measures (excluding addenda) notified in the
same period, the majority related to animal health, followed by measures
related to the protection of humans from animal diseases or plant pests, food
safety, plant protection and the protection of the Member's territory from
other damage from pests. Similarly, the majority of emergency notifications
during this period identified more than one objective per measure.
3.52. While no formal provision for "counter notification"
exists, concerns regarding the failure to notify an SPS measure, or regarding a
notified measure, can be raised as a specific trade concern (STCs) at any of
the three regular meetings of the SPS Committee each year. In the two Committee
meetings of March and July 2015, 14 new STCs were raised. Five of these new
STCs related to food safety, another five to animal health, two to plant health
and another two were related to other concerns (Table 3.9). Furthermore, at the
March 2015 meeting, one STC was reported as resolved.[26]
Table 3.9 SPS specific trade concerns raised between March and July 2015
STC
|
Document Title
|
Members
maintaining the measure
|
Members raising
the concern
|
Members supporting
the concern
|
Date raised
|
Primary objective
|
|
383
|
China's measures on bovine meat
|
China
|
India
|
|
26/03/2015
|
Animal health
|
|
384
|
General import restrictions due to
African swine fever
|
Certain Members
|
European Union
|
|
26/03/2015
|
Animal health
|
|
385
|
General import restrictions due to highly
pathogenic avian influenza
|
Certain Members
|
European Union
|
|
26/03/2015
|
Animal health
|
|
|
386
|
Mexico's measures on imports of hibiscus
flowers
|
Mexico
|
Nigeria
|
Burkina Faso, Senegal
|
26/03/2015
|
Plant health
|
|
387
|
Chinese Taipei's strengthened import
restrictions on food with regard to radionuclides
|
Chinese Taipei
|
Japan
|
|
26/03/2015
|
Food safety
|
|
388
|
United States proposed rule for user fees
for agricultural quarantine and inspection services
|
United States
|
Mexico
|
|
26/03/2015
|
Other concerns
|
|
|
389
|
Chinese import regime, including
quarantine and testing procedures for fish
|
China
|
Norway
|
|
15/07/2015
|
Food safety
|
|
390
|
The Russian Federation's import
restrictions on processed fishery products from Estonia and Latvia
|
Russian Federation
|
European Union
|
|
15/07/2015
|
Food safety
|
|
391
|
Malaysia's import restrictions related to
approval of poultry meat plants
|
Malaysia
|
Brazil
|
|
15/07/2015
|
Other concerns
|
|
|
392
|
China's import restrictions due to
African swine fever
|
China
|
European Union
|
|
15/07/2015
|
Animal health
|
|
393
|
The Republic of Korea's import
restrictions due to African swine fever
|
Korea,
Rep. of
|
European Union
|
|
15/07/2015
|
Animal health
|
|
394
|
Costa Rica's temporary suspension of the
issuing of phytosanitary import certificates for avocados
|
Costa Rica
|
Guatemala, Mexico
|
South Africa, United States
|
15/07/2015
|
Plant health
|
|
395
|
China's proposed amendments to the
implementation regulations on safety assessment of agricultural GMOs
|
China
|
Paraguay, United States
|
|
15/07/2015
|
Food safety
|
|
396
|
EU proposal to amend regulation (EC) No.
1829/2003 to allow EU member States to restrict or prohibit the use of
genetically modified food and feed
|
European Union
|
Argentina, Paraguay, United States
|
Brazil, Canada, Uruguay
|
15/07/2015
|
Food safety
|
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.53. Nineteen previously raised STCs were discussed at the March and July
2015 SPS Committee meetings. Of these previously raised STCs, four addressed
persistent problems that have been discussed seven times or more. In
particular, two STCs have been discussed on 18 or more occasions (Table 3.10).
In addition, three STCs raised for the first time in March 2015 were discussed
again in July 2015.[27]
Table
3.10 Previously-raised SPS specific trade concerns discussed in March
and July 2015
STC
|
Document title
|
Members maintaining the measure
|
Members raising the concern
|
Members supporting the concern
|
First date raised
|
Times raised
|
193
|
General import restrictions
due to bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE)
|
Certain Members
|
European Union,
United States
|
Canada, Switzerland, Uruguay
|
01/06/2001
|
24
|
238
|
Application and modification of the EU
Regulation on Novel Foods
|
European Union
|
Colombia, Ecuador, Peru
|
Argentina, Benin,
Bolivia-Plurinational State of, Brazil, Chile, China, Costa Rica, Cuba, El
Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Nicaragua, Paraguay,
Philippines, Uruguay, Bolivarian Rep. of Venezuela
|
01/03/2006
|
18
|
289
|
Measures on catfish
|
United States
|
China
|
|
28/10/2009
|
4
|
330
|
Indonesia's port
closures
|
Indonesia
|
Chile
|
Argentina, Australia, Canada, Chile,
Chinese Taipei, Japan, Rep. of Korea, South Africa, Thailand, Uruguay
|
27/03/2012
|
7
|
340
|
Requirements for importation of sheep
meat
|
Turkey
|
Australia
|
United States
|
18/10/2012
|
7
|
346
|
Ban on Bisphenol A (BPA)
|
European Union, France
|
United States
|
Brazil
|
21/03/2013
|
2
|
354
|
Import restrictions in response to the
nuclear power plant accident
|
China; Chinese Taipei; Hong Kong, China;
certain Members
|
Japan
|
|
27/06/2013
|
5
|
356
|
Phytosanitary measures on citrus black
spot
|
European Union
|
South Africa
|
Argentina
|
27/06/2013
|
4
|
358
|
Import conditions for pork and pork
products
|
India
|
European Union
|
Canada
|
16/10/2013
|
5
|
359
|
Strengthened import restrictions on food
and feeds with regard to radionuclides
|
Korea, Rep. of
|
Japan
|
|
16/10/2013
|
4
|
373
|
United States high cost of certification
for mango exports
|
United States
|
India
|
Dominican Republic
|
09/07/2014
|
3
|
374
|
EU ban on certain vegetables from India
|
European Union
|
India
|
Nigeria
|
09/07/2014
|
3
|
375
|
United States non‑acceptance of OIE
categorization for BSE
|
United States
|
India
|
|
09/07/2014
|
3
|
376
|
Australia's non-acceptance of OIE categorization
for BSE
|
Australia
|
India
|
|
09/07/2014
|
3
|
378
|
EU withdrawal of equivalence for
processed organic products
|
European Union
|
India
|
|
09/07/2014
|
3
|
382
|
EU revised proposal for categorization of
compounds as endocrine disruptors
|
European Union
|
United States
|
Argentina, Brazil,
Canada, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, India, Kenya, Madagascar,
Malaysia, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, South Africa, Uruguay
|
25/03/2014
|
2
|
383
|
China's measures on bovine meat
|
China
|
India
|
|
26/03/2015
|
1
|
387
|
Chinese Taipei's import restrictions on
Japanese foods in response to the nuclear plant accident
|
Chinese Taipei
|
Japan
|
|
26/03/2015
|
1
|
388
|
United States' proposed rule for user
fees for agricultural quarantine and inspection
|
United States
|
Mexico
|
|
26/03/2015
|
1
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.54. Analysing the March 2015 and July 2015 SPS Committee meetings, 36%
of all STCs raised for the first time concerned food safety, 36% concerned
measures covering animal health, 14% covered plant health and 14% related to
other types of concerns.[28] Regarding previously-raised
STCs in the reviewed period, 32% concerned animal health, 32% concerned
measures covering food safety, 21% covered plant health and 16% related to
other types of concerns.[29] Of the total raised or
discussed STCs in the reviewed period, 33% concerned measures covering animal
health, 33% covered food safety, 18% concerned plant health and 15% of total
STCs related to other types of concerns.
3.55. Under the TBT Agreement, WTO Members are obliged to notify their
intention to introduce new or modified TBT measures, or to notify immediately
after adopted emergency measures are imposed. The main objective of complying
with the TBT notification obligations is to inform other Members about new or
changed regulations that may significantly affect trade.[30] Therefore, an increased
number of notifications does not necessarily imply greater use of protectionist
or unnecessarily trade-restrictive measures. TBT notification obligations are
meant to promote enhanced transparency regarding measures taken to address
legitimate policy objectives, such as the protection of human, animal or plant
life or health, or the environment.
3.56. During
the period from 1 January to 25 September 2015
("review period"), WTO Members
submitted 1,039 regular notifications of TBT measures[31], of which around 84% were
submitted by developing-country Members.[32] This overall number of 1,039
notifications is markedly lower than in the period January 2014 –
September 2014, although the proportion from developing
countries is only slightly higher.[33] The United
States submitted
the highest number of notifications during the review period (218), followed by
Brazil (89) and the Republic of Korea (65). The
main objectives[34] indicated in these
notifications were: "protection of human health or
safety" (47%); "prevention of deceptive practices and consumer
protection" (18%); and "protection of the environment" (13%).
3.57. Any Member may raise Specific Trade Concerns (STCs) with
respect to TBT measures taken or proposed by other Members.[35] These STCs are frequently
discussed in the regular meetings of the TBT Committee, with between 40 to
50 STCs discussed per meeting in recent years (Chart 3.12). Depending on
the extent of the trade disruption and importance of the issue to the Members
raising the STC, the same measure may come up at one or more meetings of the
TBT Committee. For example, a STC may be discussed at only one meeting (as a new STC), and subsequently a resolution may be found; on the
other hand, an STC may be discussed at subsequent meetings to the one in which it
was first raised (previously raised STC), usually
reserved for long standing and more serious concerns. Trends with respect to
such "persistently raised STCs" are briefly discussed below.
3.58. Since 1995 and up to 25 September 2015, Members have raised 473 new STCs. In 2014, a record of 47 new
STCs were raised, the most in any given year since 1995. An upward trend in
STCs has been observed since 2005 (see Chart 3.12). 2014 was also the second
highest year in the overall number of STCs (new and previously-raised)
discussed (85).[36] So far in 2015, fewer new STCs have been raised as compared to recent years, but
the number of previous STCs is higher than in any year after 2012, and already
the second peak in the history of the TBT Committee, with one TBT Committee
meeting still to come in November 2015. While Members are flagging fewer
new TBT issues in the Committee, issues from past years that have become
entrenched in legislation are the focus of persistent concerns.
3.59. As illustrated by Chart 3.13, there is a marked correlation between
the number of new notifications and new STCs raised each year. On average,
since 1995, 66% of STCs discussed in TBT Committee meetings relate to notified
measures.[37]
3.60. Members raised 20 new STCs during the Committee meetings that fell
within the reviewed period (March and June 2015). Overall, 73 new and
previously-raised STCs were discussed, keeping with the trend of a greater
number of STCs being discussed per meeting as well as per year. The list of all
new concerns raised in the March and June 2015 meetings is provided in Table 3.11.
3.61. Chart 3.14 illustrates that the number of STCs discussed in the TBT
Committee annually has grown significantly between 2005 and 2014 (from 33 to
148). This upward trend, which is likely to be maintained in 2015, shows that
the Committee has spent more time discussing STCs than any other item on the
agenda (only an average of around 11 STCs were discussed per meeting in 2005
while that figure was 49 in 2014).
Chart 3.12 Number of STCs raised with respect to Members' TBT measures per
year
Note: This chart counts the number of TBT
measures discussed as STCs per year. Data for 2015 do not include STCs raised
at the November 2015 TBT Committee meeting. Previously raised concerns are
counted only once even if they are raised in subsequent meetings.
Source: WTO Secretariat.
Chart
3.13 Number of notifications versus number of new STCs
Note: STCs raised in November 2015 are not
included.
Source: WTO Secretariat. WTO document G/TBT/36, 23
February 2015.
Chart 3.14 STCs discussed per committee meeting, 2005 – 2015
Note: This chart counts the number of STCs on
the agenda of the TBT Committee per meeting. Note that the same STC can be
raised at all three meetings in a year and, in this chart, is counted under all
three meetings. Data for 2015 do not include STCs raised at the November 2015
TBT Committee meeting.
Source: WTO Secretariat. WTO document G/TBT/36, 23
February 2015.
3.62. Around 26% of the 73 STCs (new and previous) raised during the review period concern measures
regulating alcohol (6), cosmetics (6), tobacco (5) and nutrition (2). Besides these areas, STCs from the review
period addressed a range of issues, including two that are becoming more
frequently discussed in the Committee: IT and environment. Trade concerns
related to toy safety also featured on the agenda, with a total of five trade
concerns among which two were new. Regulations by the EU and Chinese Taipei on Genetically
Modified Organisms (GMOs) in food and crops were the subject of two new
specific trade concerns.
Table
3.11 New STCs raised during the March and June 2015 TBT Committee
meetings
Member maintaining the measure (in alphabetical order)
|
STC title
|
Stated objective
|
Product coverage
|
Member(s) raising the concern
|
Canada
|
Tobacco Reduction (Flavored Tobacco
Products) Amendment Act, 2013 – Bill 206 (ID 463)
|
Protection of human health and safety
|
Flavoured tobacco products
|
Indonesia
|
Brazil
|
Draft Ordinance Act Nº. 374, 27 November 2014 (Portaria SDA/MAPA
374/2014) establishes quality requirements for wine and derivatives of grape
and wine, G/TBT/N/BRA/613
|
Prevention of
deceptive practices and consumer protection; Quality requirements
|
Wine; Grape juice, sweetened or not;
Vinegar. Wine of fresh grapes, including fortified wines; grape other than
that of heading 20.09. (HS: 2204), Vinegar and substitutes for vinegar
obtained from acetic acid.
|
European Union
|
China
|
Administrative Measure on Cosmetics Labelling (AMCL) (ID 456)
|
Integrating,
summarizing and adjusting the relevant existing regulations and standards to
promote the norm, healthy development of the industry.
|
Cosmetics
|
Canada; Japan; Republic of Korea; United States; European
Union
|
China
|
Banking IT Equipment Security Regulation
(ID 457)
|
To strengthen the security of the information network
|
IT banking system
|
Canada; Japan; United States; European
Union
|
China
|
Registration Fees for Drugs and Medical
Device Products
|
N/A
|
Medical Devices
|
Canada; United States; Republic of
Korea
|
China
|
Technical Specification for Natural
Rubber
|
N/A
|
Natural Rubber
|
Indonesia; Malaysia
|
Ecuador
|
Emergency Technical Regulation (RTE) No.
088: "Surface tension agents", of the Ecuadorian Standardization
Institute (INEN) G/TBT/N/ECU/117 (ID 458)
|
Protection of human health and safety; protection of the environment;
prevention of deceptive practices
|
Surface tension agents
|
Mexico
|
European Union
|
Proposed modification of Regulation (EC) 1829/2003 referring to
genetically modified organisms, G/TBT/N/EU/284
|
Allow Member
States to take into account other considerations than those assessed under
the EU procedure of authorisation
|
Genetically
modified food and feed
|
Argentina; Paraguay; United States; Canada;
Brazil
|
France
|
Ban on BPA in toys
|
|
Toys
|
United States
|
Indonesia
|
Regulation of the Minister of Agriculture No. 39/Permentan/PD.4,
10 December 2014, concerning Importation of Carcass, Meat and/or
Processed Meat Products into the Territory of the Republic of Indonesia, and
Regulation of the Minister of Agriculture No. 02/Permentan/PD.4, 10 January
2015, concerning the Amendment of the Regulation of the Minister for
Agriculture No. 39/Permentan/PD.4, 10 December 2014 (ID 461)
|
Protection of
human health and safety; protection of the environment
|
Meat
|
Australia; Canada; European Union
|
Indonesia
|
MOI 69/2014 Article 3: LCR Requirements
for LTE Devices - Requirement that Domestic Component Level (TKDN) of LTE TDD
& FDD broadband services equipment
|
N/A
|
Telecommunication devices-LTE Products
|
United States; Canada; Japan; Australia;
European Union
|
Japan
|
Wood Use Points Programme (ID 459)
|
Protection of the environment;
development in rural areas
|
Wood
|
Russian Federation
|
Mexico
|
Standard on
non-alcoholic and soft drinks (ID 462)
|
N/A
|
Juices and non-alcoholic drinks
|
El Salvador
|
Norway
|
Draft amendments to the Tobacco Control
Act and the Tobacco Labelling Regulations relating to Standardised Tobacco
Products
|
Protection of human health and safety
|
Tobacco
|
Indonesia; Dominican Republic; Zimbabwe;
Cuba
|
Russian Federation
|
Technical Regulations on Safety of
Railway Transport (TR CU No. 002/2011 and No. 003/2011) (ID 460)
|
Protection of human health and safety
|
Railway transport
|
Ukraine
|
Russian Federation
|
Measure affecting import of Ukrainian
food salt
|
Consumer Protection
|
Food salt
|
Ukraine
|
Sweden
|
Chemical Taxation for Certain Electronics
|
N/A
|
Electronics
|
Republic of Korea
|
Chinese Taipei
|
GMO Labelling
|
Protection of
consumer rights
|
Pre-packaged
food, unpackaged food and food additives
|
Canada; United States; New Zealand
|
Chinese Taipei
|
Additional labelling standard of prefecture of origin for foods
from Japan
|
Validation of
area of production
|
Food
|
Japan
|
Turkey
|
Toy Communique 01/2015
|
Protection of
human health and safety
|
Toys
|
United States
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.63. Eight of the 53
previously-raised STCs (Table 3.12) during the review period addressed persistent
concerns that have been discussed in the Committee for a number of years (10 or
more times). The majority (62%) of the persistently raised STCs relate to the
objective of the protection of human health and safety. Overall, cosmetics and
IT products constitute the most frequently raised product categories.
Table
3.12 Persistently raised STCs
|
Persistently raised STCs
(March and June 2015 TBT Committee meetings)
|
Frequency
|
1
|
India -
Pneumatic tyres and tubes for automotive vehicles.
|
27 times
|
2
|
India - Drugs
and Cosmetics Rules 2007.
|
20 times
|
3
|
China -
Provisions for the Administration of Cosmetics Application.
|
15 times
|
4
|
India - New Telecommunications related Rules (Department of
Telecommunications, No. 842-725/2005-VAS/Vol.III (3 December 2009); No.
10-15/2009-AS-III/193 (18 March 2010); and Nos.
10-15/2009-AS.III/Vol.II/(Pt.)/(25-29) (28 July 2010); Department of
Telecommunications, No. 10-15/2009-AS.III/Vol.II/(Pt.)/(30) (28 July 2010)
and accompanying template, "Security and Business Continuity
Agreement").
|
15 times
|
5
|
China – Requirements for information security products,
including, inter alia, the Office of State Commercial Cryptography
Administration (OSCCA) 1999 Regulation on commercial encryption products and
its on-going revision and the Multi-Level Protection Scheme (MLPS).
|
14 times
|
6
|
Russian Federation – Draft
on Technical Regulation of Alcohol Drinks Safety (published on 24 October
2011).
|
11 times
|
7
|
Republic of Korea – Regulation on Registration and Evaluation of
Chemical Material.
|
11 times
|
8
|
Indonesia - Technical Guidelines for the Implementation of the
Adoption and Supervision of Indonesian National Standards for Obligatory Toy
Safety.
|
11 times
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.64. During the period covered by this
report a number of other trade concerns were raised by Members in formal
meetings of various WTO bodies.[38] With a view to increasing transparency, this
section aims to provide a brief and factual overview of such concerns raised
between mid‑October 2014 and mid-October 2015.[39] As this section does not
seek to reproduce the full substantive description of the trade concerns
described by Members, a specific reference is made to the relevant formal meeting
where a particular issue was raised. For the full account and context of the
concerns, Members are invited to consult the records of the respective WTO
bodies. The list of concerns and issues mentioned in this section is not exhaustive.
3.65. At the meeting of Council for Trade in Goods (CTG) on 26
March 2015[40] new concerns were raised on (i) the restrictive measures on automobiles
adopted by Ecuador (Japan) and (ii) Ecuador's Resolution 11-2015
establishing a temporary import surcharge for balance‑of‑payments (BOPs)
reasons (Japan). The latest measure has been also raised in the Committee on
Balance‑of‑Payments.
3.66. The above-mentioned concerns were
reiterated at the CTG meeting of 26 June 2015[41] together with other
concerns which had been previously raised on (i) Nigeria's restrictions/ban on imports
of sea products (Iceland and Norway); (ii) Nigeria's local‑content measures in
the energy sector, which had also been raised in 2011, 2014 and in the April
2015 TRIMs Committee (EU and the United States); (iii) the Russian Federation's
measures particularly affecting the automotive sector where local content
requirements are imposed to obtain preferential treatment in the assembly
process, and the subsidies provided to domestic producers in the areas of energy consumption; production of ecologically‑friendly vehicles;
employment and; development (Australia, Canada, EU, Japan, New Zealand, Ukraine
and the United States); (iv) Indonesia's trade and
investment restrictions, including import licensing
requirements, unique technical regulations and conformity assessment
procedures, pre‑shipment inspection requirements, export restrictions, and
local content and domestic manufacturing requirements (Australia, Brazil, Canada, EU, Japan, New
Zealand, Chinese Taipei and the United States). At the same meeting new concerns were expressed on (i) Pakistan's discriminatory taxes implemented with Regulatory Order No. 1125 (Canada, EU, Norway, Switzerland, Chinese Taipei
and the United States) also raised at the Committee of Market Access and during
Pakistan's recent Trade Policy Review and; (ii) the EU's low pace in
compensation negotiations following the accession of Croatia (Brazil).
3.67. At the meeting, of the Committee on Market Access on 4 June 2015[42], Switzerland raised the issue
of the discrepancy between bound and applied duties on cigarettes implemented
by the Kingdom of Bahrain. At the same meeting the EU expressed its concerns on
Pakistan's discriminatory taxation between imported products and like domestic
products, an issue which had been previously raised in Pakistan's recent Trade
Policy Review. At the 29 September 2015 meeting[43], concerns were reiterated
on customs duties on cigarettes implemented by the Kingdom of Bahrain
(Switzerland) and Pakistan's discriminatory taxes (EU). New concerns were
raised on (i) Colombia's excise taxes on alcoholic beverages (EU); (ii)
Argentina's tax discrimination against imported vehicles (EU); (iii) certain import restrictions imposed by Haiti (Dominican Republic); and (iv)
on Nigeria's import restrictions (Chile).
3.68. In the Committee on
Agriculture (CoA)[44] a number of questions and concerns were raised with respect to Members'
individual notifications and on implementation-related issues under
Article 18.6. During the period concerned, a total of 401 questions were
discussed, including on individual notifications (303 questions) and under Article
18.6 (91 questions), as well as on overdue notifications (7 questions).
Additional details regarding these questions and concerns can be found in Section
3.6 of the report.
3.69. At the meeting of the Committee on Customs Valuation[45] concerns were reiterated on
issues previously raised on (i) the
alleged use by Armenia of reference prices (the United States); and (ii) Indonesia's
lack of notifications on Pre-Shipment Inspection measures (the United States).
3.70. A number of concerns were
raised at the meeting of the Committee on Import
Licensing[46] on (i) Angola's Joint Executive Decree 22/15
regulating the importation, distribution and sale of food/non-food products
(EU); (ii) India's import licensing system on marble and marble
products (EU); (iii) Nigeria's licensing procedures on importation of
maritime pelagic fish (EU); (iv) Turkey's surveillance licensing regime on
import authorisation of old, second‑hand and renovated goods, and its import
regime for non-fuel petroleum products (EU); (v) Mexico's automatic licensing
procedures on certain steel products (the United States); (vi) issues related
to the product coverage and implementation of the import licensing regime of Viet
Nam (the United States); (vii) Brazil's non‑automatic licensing measures
on the importation of nitrocellulose (the United States); (viii) Indonesia's
import licensing regime on cellular phones, handheld computers and tablets (the
United States); (ix) India's import licensing requirements on boric acid (the
United States); (x) Bangladesh's import licensing procedures and in particular with respect to the
importation of medicines (the United States); and (xi)
Indonesia's import licensing regulations on carcasses and processed meat
products (Australia).
3.71. In the upcoming meeting of the Committee scheduled for the 20
October[47], a number of trade
concerns have been included in the agenda. Some of them are issues which have
been raised in previous meetings as for example, India's import procedures on
marble and marble products (EU) and Brazil's regulatory requirements for
imports of nitrocellulose (EU). The United States will make statements on Indonesia's import licensing regime for
cell phones, handheld computers and tablets, India's import licensing
requirements on boric acid, Mexico's steel import licensing program,
Bangladesh's import licensing procedures as well as Viet Nam's imports of
distilled spirits. New trade concerns will be raised on (i) Indonesia's new
regulation on tyre imports (EU) and (ii) India's amendments in the import
policy conditions applicable to apples (EU and the United States).
3.72. A number of new concerns were
expressed at the 16 April 2015 meeting of Trade-Related Investment Measures (TRIMs) Committee[48] on (i) China's local content requirements for purchases of technology
by the banking sector (the United States and Japan); (ii) Indonesia's local content requirement for 4G LTE mobile
devices (the United States); (iii) India's local content requirement in
solar power generation projects (EU); (iv) Turkey's local content requirements in the electricity generation
(EU); (v) the support measures by the Russian Federation for the automotive
sector (EU and Japan) and; (vi) the Russian Federation's local
content requirements for purchases by state-owned enterprises (EU and the United States). Other concerns expressed at the meeting include
issues previously raised on (i)
certain preferences granted by India to domestically manufactured electronic
goods and telecommunication products (EU); (ii) measures by Indonesia
addressing local content in investment in the telecommunications sector
(Japan); (iii) Indonesia's local content provisions in the energy sector (EU, Japan
and the United States); (iv) local content measures taken by Nigeria
in the energy sector (EU); (v) local content requirements in some U.S.
renewable energy programmes (India); (vi) the Russian Federation's local
content requirements for agricultural equipment (EU); (vii) Indonesia's
minimum local product requirements for modern retail sector (EU, Japan and the
United States) and; (viii) restrictions of Indonesia's newly
adopted Industry Law and Trade
Law (EU, Japan and the United States).
3.73. One new concern was expressed
at the TRIMs Committee of 5 October 2015[49] relating to the Republic of Korea's assistance
measures for agricultural machinery (Japan). Other concerns expressed at the
meeting included issues previously raised on: (i) India's local content
requirement in solar power generation projects (EU); (ii) Indonesia's local
content requirement for 4G LTE mobile devices (the United States); (iii)
Indonesia's local content provisions in the energy sector (EU, Japan and the United
States); (iv) measures by Indonesia addressing local content in investment in
the telecommunications sector (Japan and the United States); (v) Indonesia's
minimum local product requirements for modern retail sector (EU, Japan and the United
States) and; (vi) restrictions of Indonesia's newly adopted Industry Law
and Trade Law (EU, Japan and the United States); (vii) local content
measures taken by Nigeria in the energy sector (EU and the United States); (viii) support measures by the Russian
Federation for the automotive sector (EU, Japan); (ix) the Russian Federation's
local content requirements for purchases by state-owned enterprises (EU and the
United States); (x) the Russian Federation's local content requirements for
agricultural equipment (EU and the United States) and; (xi) local content
requirements in some U.S. renewable energy programmes (India).
3.74. In the Committee on
Safeguards[50], concerns were raised at the 27 October 2014
meeting and the 27 April 2015 meeting regarding (i) Colombia's bars and rods of
low-carbon steel; (ii) Ecuador's wood and bamboo flooring and accessories
thereof; (iii) Egypt's steel rebar; white sugar and; automotive batteries; (iv)
India's seamless pipes, tubes and hollow profiles of iron or non-alloy steel;
saturated fatty alcohols; flexible slabstock polyol and; not-alloyed ingots of
unwrought aluminium; (v) Indonesia's coated paper and paperboard, not including
banknotes; cotton yarn other than sewing; wheat flour; flat-rolled product of
iron or non-alloy and; I and H sections of other alloy steel; (vi) Malaysia's
hot-rolled steel plate; (vii) Morocco's cold-rolled sheets and plated or coated
sheets and; wire rods and reinforcing bars; (viii) Philippines' steel angle
bars and; newsprint; (ix) South Africa's frozen potato chips; (x) Thailand's
non-alloy hot rolled steel flat products; (xi) Tunisia's fibreboard of wood
and; glass bottles; (xii) Turkey's polyethylene terephthalate; printing,
writing and copying paper; terephthalic acid; wallpaper and similar
wallcoverings and; transmission apparatus incorporating reception apparatus
(cellular) portable telephone and; (xiii) Ukraine's tableware and kitchenware
of porcelain and; casing and pump‑compressor seamless steel pipes.
3.75. Members also discussed the
Russian Federation's alleged non-notification of certain safeguard actions
initiated before its accession to the WTO and the Kingdom of Bahrain's alleged
delay in notifying its safeguard legislation.
3.76. In the Committee on Subsidies and Countervailing
Measures[51] concerns were raised at the 28 October 2014 and 28 April 2015
meetings in respect of countervailing duty actions on (i) India's investigation
on imports of casting for wind operated electricity generators (China);
(ii) U.S.' investigation on imports of certain crystalline silicon
photovoltaic products (China); U.S. measures on Turkish iron and steel
products (Turkey) and; (iv) Ukraine's investigation on imports of light motor
vehicles (the Russian Federation). With respect to notifications, concerns were
raised about the non‑notification of alleged subsidies by India and China, and
requests were made to China for more information on certain alleged subsidy
programmes (the United States). On subsidies, concerns were raised on (i) certain local content
requirements in renewable energy sector subsidy schemes in the United States (Russian
Federation and India); (ii) Japan's support for the Mitsubishi Regional Jet
project in the aircraft sector (Brazil); (iii) India's sugar subsidies provided
under its Sugar Development Fund (Australia); (iv) support provided by
Canada for the development of a new cement facility in Quebec (the United States)
and; (v) India's export subsidies in the textile and apparel sector (the United States).
3.77. At the 29 October 2014 and 29
April 2015 meetings of the Committee on Anti-Dumping
Practices[52] concerns were raised on (i) Argentina's
investigation on imports of copper-based fungicides (Chile); review of the
anti-dumping measure on air-conditioning products (Thailand) and; the sunset
review and change of circumstances review on locks and chains (Peru);
(ii) Australia's investigation into rod in coils (Turkey); on imports of
quenched and tempered steel plate (Japan) and; on steel
reinforcing bar (Turkey); (iii) Brazil's investigation
on biaxially-oriented polypropylene (Peru, Chile and Colombia) and; on bus and
truck tyres (Korea, Rep. of); (iv) China's investigation on optical fibre
preform (Japan); on methyl methacrylate (Japan) and; sunset review on polyvinyl
chloride (Japan); (v) the Dominican Republic's imposition of definitive
measures on steel rods and bars for concrete reinforcement (Turkey); (vi) the
EU's simultaneous anti-dumping and countervailing investigation on imports of
stainless steel cold rolled flat products (China); the measures on ammonium
nitrate, seamless pipes and tubes, welded tubes and pipes (Russian Federation)
and; the investigations on aluminium foils and grain oriented flat rolled
products of silicon electrical steel (Russian Federation); (vii) India's
investigation on flexible slab stock polyol (Australia); on ethyl hexanol and
butanol (EU); on acetone, purified terephthalic acid and phenol (Korea, Rep.
of); on investigation and measures on sodium nitrate (Ukraine);
(viii) Indonesia's initiation of an investigation against wheat flour
(Turkey) and; the sunset review on hot rolled coil (Korea, Rep. of and the
Russian Federation) and; (ix) the Republic of Korea's investigation on valves for pneumatic transmissions (Japan).
3.78. Concerns were also raised on (x) Mexico's measures on
certain steel products, thick hot rolled coils, thin hot rolled coils, thick hot
rolled plate and cold rolled coils (Russian Federation) and; preliminary
determination in the investigation on ammonium sulphate (the United States); (xi) Morocco's
final determination regarding the investigation on imports
of hot rolled steel sheets (Turkey); (xii) Philippines' provisional
anti-dumping measures on wheat flour (Turkey); (xiii) South Africa's
investigation on frozen chicken (EU); (xiv) Turkey's investigation on cotton (the United States); (xv) Ukraine's interim review of anti-dumping measures on nitrate
ammonium (Russian Federation); partial interim review of measures on float
glass (Russian Federation); measures on point works (Russian Federation);
(xvi) the U.S. investigation on imports of grain‑oriented electrical steel
(Russian Federation); the great length of U.S. anti-dumping measures against
certain Japanese products (Japan); the investigation on non-oriented electrical
steel (Japan); (xvii) the preliminary and final determinations made by Viet Nam
on exports of cold rolled stainless steel (Malaysia) and; (xviii) the expiry
review of the measure imposed by the EU
on imports of ammonium nitrate (Russian Federation). Other trade concerns were
raised in relation to certain practices of Members on product scope
determinations in anti-dumping investigations by the Russian Federation.
Finally, Mexico raised concerns over Colombia's investigation on DOP plasticizers, while Peru
voiced concerns over Argentina's sunset review
on fasteners.
3.79. In the meetings of the Committee on
Balance-of-Payments (BOPs) Restrictions consultations were held with
Ukraine[53] and Ecuador[54] and trade concerns were
raised by a number of Members on the introduction of an import surcharge for
BOP purposes.
3.80. At the Council for Trade in Services (CTS) meeting of 28 November 2014[55] concerns were raised on Ukraine's reforms of its Unified Gas
Transportation System (Russian Federation). These concerns were reiterated at
the meetings of 18 March, 3 June 2015 and 15 October 2015.[56]
3.81. Concerns previously raised at the
Council for Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual
Property Rights (TRIPS)[57] with respect to Australia's measures related to plain packaging of
tobacco products and their compatibility with the TRIPS Agreement (Cuba,
Dominican Republic, Honduras, Indonesia, Nicaragua, Ukraine and Zimbabwe) were
reiterated in the first meeting in 2015[58] (Cuba, Dominican Republic, Honduras, Indonesia, Nicaragua, Nigeria and
Zimbabwe).
3.82. In the Committee on
Trade and Development (CTD), several least-developed countries
(LDCs) raised concerns with the lack of progress in the implementation of the
duty-free and quota-free (DFQF) market access decision for LDCs. A request was
made for the Secretariat to assist in an assessment of the implementation of
the DFQF decision.[59] In the CTD's Dedicated Session on Small Economies, a predominant trade
concern, in the period under review, was how small and vulnerable economies
could better integrate into global value chains in goods and services trade. A
Secretariat report on this subject was discussed by Members.[60]
3.83. In the Committee on Government Procurement[61] concerns were raised regarding a number of "Buy American" or
similar legislative initiatives (Canada) and were reiterated in its first
meeting of 2015[62] (Canada).
3.84. The Committee on Agriculture (CoA)
provides a forum for Members to discuss matters related to agriculture trade
and to consult on matters relating to the Members' implementation of
commitments under the AoA, including rules-based commitments. The review work
by the CoA is based on notifications Members make on their commitments. There
is also a provision in Article 18.6 that allows Members to raise any matter
relevant to the implementation of the commitments under the AoA.
3.85. In the framework of the CoA
meetings in November 2014, March 2015, June 2015 and September 2015, Members
posed a total of 401 questions, including both questions on individual
notifications and under Article 18.6, with more than half of those questions (246)
directed at issues related to domestic support notifications or implementation
of domestic support commitments.
3.86. In total, nine Members raised 92
questions on 41 implementation-related issues (Article 18.6) in the above‑mentioned
meetings. As can be seen in Chart 3.15, 2014 is the year which has had the
largest number of questions raised under Article 18.6.
Chart 3.15 Number of questions
raised under Article 18.6 (1995-2015a)
a Until 15 October
2015.
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.87. Out of the 41 implementation‑related
issues raised in the CoA in the review period, 24 issues were discussed
for the first time, whereas the remaining issues had been discussed one or more
times in previous years under matters raised under Article 18.6. Table 3.13
indicates the specific issues relating to implementation commitments that were
discussed for the first time in the CoA during these three CoA meetings.
Table 3.13 New Article 18.6
issues
CoA
meeting number
|
COA
meeting date
|
Question
raised by
|
Answered
by
|
Question
summary
|
Products
|
78, 77, 76
|
24/09/2015
04/06/2015 04/03/2015
|
United States
|
India
|
Cotton policies
|
Cotton
|
78, 77
|
24/09/2015
04/06/2015
|
European Union
|
China
|
Maize subsidies
|
Corn
|
78, 77
|
25/09/2015
04/06/2015
|
Australia, New Zealand
|
Switzerland
|
Switzerland's
export subsidy budget
|
|
78, 76
|
13/11/2014
04/03/2015
|
European Union,
United States
|
Russian Federation
|
Agricultural
support for 2015
|
|
78, 76
|
13/11/2014
04/03/2015
|
New Zealand,
United States
|
Canada
|
Tariff-rate quota
for cheese
|
Cheese
|
77, 76
|
04/06/2015
04/03/2015
|
Australia, European
Union
|
Pakistan
|
Pakistan's wheat
export subsidies
|
Wheat
|
77, 76
|
04/06/2015
04/03/2015
|
Australia, Brazil,
European Union
|
Thailand
|
Thailand's sugar
policies
|
Sugar, cane or beet
sugar
|
77, 73
|
04/06/2015
04/03/2015
|
Australia
|
Indonesia
|
Regulation on
importation of meat
|
Bovine
|
78
|
24/09/2015
|
Australia
|
European Union
|
Dairy policies
|
Dairy, milk, milk
powders, butter, cheese
|
78
|
24/09/2015
|
United States
|
India
|
Export assistance programmes
|
Meat, bovine, swine, sheep and
goat, poultry, horses, milk, sugar, cane or beet sugar
|
78
|
24/09/2015
|
European Union, New Zealand,
United States, Chile
|
India
|
Importation of apples
|
Fruit
|
78
|
24/09/2015
|
Australia
|
India
|
Minimum indicative
export quotas for sugar
|
Sugar, cane or beet
sugar
|
78
|
24/09/2015
|
Australia
|
Indonesia
|
Restrictions on
importation of sugar
|
Sugar, cane or beet
sugar
|
78
|
24/09/2015
|
Australia, Thailand
|
Korea, Rep. of
|
Rice imports
|
Rice
|
78
|
24/09/2015
|
European Union
|
Russian Federation
|
Wheat export tax
|
Wheat
|
77
|
04/06/2015
|
European Union
|
Egypt
|
Egypt's domestic
support notifications
|
|
76
|
04/03/2015
|
Australia
|
United States
|
Export Credit
Guarantee Program
|
|
76
|
04/03/2015
|
European Union
|
Russian Federation
|
Grain exports
|
Cereals, wheat,
corn, rice, malt, coarse grains
|
76
|
04/03/2015
|
European Union
|
Angola
|
Angola's Joint
Executive Decree on import regulation
|
|
75
|
13/11/2014
|
European Union
|
Brazil
|
Tax credit
programmes
|
|
75
|
13/11/2014
|
Canada
|
Turkey
|
Agricultural credit
and investment subsidies
|
Bovine, swine
|
75
|
13/11/2014
|
European Union
|
Egypt
|
Egypt's domestic
support and export subsidies
|
|
75
|
13/11/2014
|
Canada
|
Jordan
|
Jordan's inflation
adjustments on the fixed external reference price
|
|
75
|
13/11/2014
|
Canada
|
Thailand
|
Thailand's Rice
Farmer Assistance Programme
|
Rice
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.88. A large number of the new issues related to the area of export
competition, such as the request for confirmation and clarification on the use
of export subsidies (i.e. China's maize subsidies[63],
EU dairy policies[64]
and India's export assistance programmes[65]),
export credits and export credit guarantees (i.e. Brazil's tax credit programme[66]
and the U.S. Export Credit Guarantee Programme[67]).
Other questions fell under the sphere of market access where Members requested
an explanation of measures that restricted, or had the potential to restrict,
the importation of a particular product (i.e., India's importation of apples[68]
and Indonesia's restrictions on the importation of sugar[69]
and its regulation on importation of meat[70]). Issues
were also raised in relation to policies falling in the area of domestic support
(i.e. India's cotton policies[71],
Turkey's agricultural credit and investment subsidies[72]). There
were two issues raised in relation to specific policy interventions in the area
of export restrictions (i.e. the Russian Federation's grain exports[73]
and its wheat export tax[74]).
3.89. Other measures that were discussed
related to follow-up questions on persistent areas of concern. Table 3.14 indicates
the issues that were discussed in November 2014 and March, June and September
2015.
Table 3.14 Questions
previously raised under Article 18.6
CoA
meeting number
|
COA
meeting date
|
Question
raised by
|
Answered
by
|
Question
summary
|
Products
|
Times
raised in the CoA (1995-2015)
|
78, 77, 76, 75
|
24/09/2015
04/06/2015 04/03/2015 13/11/2014
|
Canada, United
States
|
Costa Rica
|
Compliance with AMS
commitments
|
Rice
|
18
|
76, 75
|
04/03/2015
13/11/2014
|
United States
|
Thailand
|
Paddy pledging
scheme
|
Rice
|
16
|
78, 77, 76, 75
|
24/09/2015 04/06/2015 04/03/2015 13/11/2014
|
United States
|
Brazil
|
Domestic support programmes
|
|
13
|
76, 75
|
04/03/2015
13/11/2014
|
New Zealand, United
States
|
Canada
|
Dairy policies
|
Dairy, milk, milk
powders, butter, cheese
|
11
|
78, 77, 76, 75
|
24/09/2015 04/06/2015 04/03/2015 13/11/2014
|
Australia, Colombia, European Union
|
India
|
Sugar export subsidies
|
Sugar, cane or beet
sugar
|
11
|
78, 77, 76, 75
|
24/09/2015 04/06/2015 04/03/2015 13/11/2014
|
United States
|
Turkey
|
Destination of
wheat flour sale
|
Wheat
|
7
|
75
|
13/11/2014
|
United States
|
Saint Lucia
|
Domestic purchase
requirements for poultry and pork
|
Swine, poultry
|
5
|
78, 77, 75
|
24/09/2015 04/06/2015 13/11/2014
|
European Union
|
Turkey
|
Domestic support
and export subsidies
|
Fruit
|
5
|
75
|
13/11/2014
|
United States
|
Canada
|
Proposed changes to
tariff schedule
|
Dairy, milk, milk
powders, butter, cheese
|
4
|
76
|
04/03/2015
|
United States
|
China
|
Cotton domestic
support
|
Cotton
|
4
|
78
|
25/09/2015
|
Australia, New
Zealand
|
Sri Lanka
|
Sri Lanka's
increase in milk powder tariffs
|
Milk powders
|
4
|
78, 77
|
24/09/2015 04/06/2015
|
United States
|
China
|
TRQ underfill
|
Wheat, corn, rice
|
1a
|
76
|
04/03/2015
|
European Union
|
India
|
Exports of cereals
and rice
|
Cereals, wheat,
corn, rice, malt, coarse grains
|
1a
|
77
|
04/06/2015
|
European Union
|
Argentina
|
Domestic support notifications
|
|
1a
|
78
|
24/09/2015
|
European Union
|
India
|
Support price for wheat
|
Wheat
|
1a
|
77, 75
|
04/06/2015 13/11/2014
|
Australia
|
Turkey
|
Export subsidy programmes
|
|
1a
|
78, 77
|
24/09/2015 04/06/2015
|
United States
|
China
|
Cotton policies
|
Cotton
|
1*
|
a This is the first time the question
has been raised as such under Article 18.6 although questions have been raised
in the past under individual notifications or as part of a broader Article 18.6
question.
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.90. During the review process conducted
under the CoA Members requested clarification on a number of systemic concerns.
China's notified low tariff-rate quota (TRQ) fill rates had been the subject of
numerous questions in the past. At the June and September 2015 meetings, China's
TRQ underfill for wheat, corn and rice was questioned again, this time under
Article 18.6, with Members arguing that despite domestic prices being high and
international prices low, the TRQ fill rates continued to be low. China was
requested to clarify whether there was a requirement for non-STE end users to
purchase domestic stocks in order to receive a TRQ allocation. India's export
subsidies on sugar were once again the subject of questioning by a number of
Members during the four committee meetings covered by this report. Members
cited concerns regarding the WTO-consistency of this measure applied by India.
Turkey's domestic support and export subsidies were also the subject of concern
by Members. Turkey was requested to confirm that the exports subsidies provided
since 2001 had been within its WTO commitments and to provide its domestic
support notifications due from 2002 onwards. Brazil faced persistent requests
for data on domestic and international shipments of particular products made under
two of their domestic support programmes.
3.91. Based on information provided to the Secretariat or obtained through
other sources, Members implemented 128 new general economic support measures
during the period under review, at an average of almost 11 new measures per
month. This represents a significant increase from the preceding period, where
the monthly average indicated slightly more than 6 new measures implemented.[75]
Of the 128 new measures recorded for the current period, 33 were not confirmed
or verified by the Members concerned.
3.92. Annex 4 covers measures that provide economic assistance and
financial support targeted at specific sectors, including miscellaneous
financial aid schemes for specific industries, insurance support and export
credit. The main beneficiaries of the measures recorded in the period under
review were the agricultural sector, the oil and gas industries, the automotive
sector and assistance schemes for exports and for SMEs.[76]
Among the agriculture-related measures listed in Annex 4, many appear to grant
temporary support to producers of dairy, cereals, rice, pig meat and perishable
fruits and vegetables. Measures targeting the automotive sector mainly consist
of research and development projects, restructuring aid, compensation schemes
and support schemes for locally manufactured vehicles and auto-parts.
3.93. The 128 measures were put in place by 56 WTO Members[77],
with the EU and its member States accounting for nearly 40% of the total
measures recorded. As has been noted previously, this reflects the availability
of information regarding subsidies of this WTO Member.
3.94. As a transparency exercise, the monitoring exercise relies, to a
significant degree, on the participation of Members – either through voluntary
contributions or as part of the verification exercise. The latest monitoring
reports have confirmed that the definition of what constitutes general economic
support varies greatly among Members. As noted by a few delegations at the TPRB
meeting in July 2015, the format and coverage of Annex 4 measures would benefit
from a discussion regarding the nature of such measures and ways to make the
monitoring of general economic support more meaningful. At this juncture, it bears emphasizing that
the monitoring reports have no legal effects and imply no judgement with respect
to any of the measures or information contained therein.
3.95. It should also be highlighted that measures included in Annex 4 are
not limited to measures linked to the financial crisis. Although initial
monitoring reports included a substantial number of measures which, in spirit
as well as in words, were directly related to the crisis, other measures were clearly
not. Yet, their trade-related effects were potentially important. It is also
clear that even when subsidies are duly notified to the WTO this alone does not
mean that they should not feature as general economic support in Annex 4.
Similarly, Annex 4 is not intended to only capture when general economic
support is granted, but also when it is reduced or eliminated. A case in point are
measures reflecting reductions in gasoline support price schemes featured in
this report's Annex 4.
3.96. During the period under review, 18 Trade Policy Reviews (TPRs) were
undertaken.[78]
All of these TPRs provided the WTO membership with a better understanding of
trade and economic developments in each of the Members reviewed. The EU, Japan
and the United States had their twelfth TPR, whilst Canada completed its tenth
review. For Australia and Hong Kong, China it was their seventh TPR, the sixth
for India, and the fifth for Chile and New Zealand. The Dominican Republic and
Pakistan completed their fourth TPR, while Barbados, Brunei Darussalam, Guyana
and Madagascar had their third TPR. Angola had its second review; Cabo Verde
and the Republic of Moldova completed their first reviews. All of these
meetings enjoyed constructive and insightful discussions among participants.
3.97. Delegations analysed ways in which the Members under review had
dealt with the effects of the economic crisis and noted that most economies had
not resorted to outright protectionist measures. Many credited the multilateral
trading system with acting as an effective backdrop against such tendencies. At
the same time, delegations also outlined a number of issues where improvements
could be made. In particular, several Members were encouraged to address their
outstanding WTO notifications, improve the transparency of their SPS and TBT
regimes, eliminate tariff peaks in key sectors of their economies and reduce
the gap between applied and bound tariff rates. In the area of trade remedies,
it was noted that some Members had taken recourse to such measures more
frequently than others. A number of delegations emphasized the lack of
transparency of government procurement regimes in certain Members. Regarding
the Doha Development Agenda (DDA), delegations highlighted the active
participation of most WTO Members towards a successful conclusion of the
negotiations and congratulated the efforts of those Members that had ratified
the Trade Facilitation Agreement.
3.98. Table 3.15 shows a few key summary tariff indicators from WTO
Members reviewed over the period.
Table
3.15 Trade Policy Reviews from mid-November 2014 to end-October 2015 -
summary tariff indicators
|
Simple applied average (%)
|
Duty freea
|
Non-ad valorema
|
|
Total
|
WTO agriculture
|
WTO non-agriculture
|
|
|
Hong Kong, China
(2014)
|
0.0
|
0.0
|
0.0
|
100.0
|
0.0
|
United States
(2014)
|
4.8
|
9.0
|
4.0
|
36.8
|
10.9
|
Barbados (2014)
|
15.9
|
33.9
|
12.3
|
5.4
|
0.7
|
Brunei Darussalam
(2014)
|
1.7
|
0.0
|
2.0
|
76.9
|
0.6
|
Japan (FY2014/15)
|
5.8
|
14.9
|
3.7
|
40.4
|
6.7
|
Pakistan
(FY2014/15)
|
14.3
|
14.6
|
14.3
|
0.0
|
0.7
|
Australia (2014)
|
3.0
|
1.4
|
3.3
|
47.6
|
0.3
|
India (FY2014/15)
|
13.0
|
36.4
|
9.5
|
2.7
|
6.1
|
Canada (2014)
|
6.0
|
22.5
|
2.4
|
67.0
|
3.9
|
Chile (2014)
|
6.0
|
6.0
|
6.0
|
0.5
|
0.5
|
New Zealand (2014)
|
2.4
|
1.7
|
2.5
|
58.3
|
0.1
|
European Union
(2014)
|
6.4
|
14.4
|
4.3
|
25.1
|
10.6
|
Madagascar (2014)
|
12.2
|
14.4
|
11.8
|
5.5
|
0.3
|
Dominican Republic
(2014)
|
7.8
|
14.2
|
6.5
|
53.6
|
0.0
|
Guyana (2014)
|
12.1
|
22.7
|
10.0
|
9.5
|
0.0
|
Angola (2015)
|
10.9
|
23.3
|
9.1
|
0.0b
|
0.0
|
Cabo Verde (2015)
|
10.3
|
12.0
|
10.0
|
44.1
|
0.0
|
Moldova, Republic of (2015)
|
6.3
|
13.5
|
4.4
|
35.4
|
4.5
|
a % of total tariff lines.
b 56.1% of all tariff lines show a nuisance rate
(>0%=<2%).
Note: Calculations
are based on national tariff line levels; including AVEs as available, in case
of unavailability the ad valorem part
of alternate and compound rates is included;
excluding in-quota rates. Figure in brackets refer to the year of the
tariff schedule applied.
Source: WTO
calculations, based on data received by the authorities.
19 and 21
November 2014: Hong Kong, China
3.99. Hong Kong, China was commended for being one of the most liberal and
market-friendly economies, characterized by a sound legal system and
transparent regulatory settings. Particular mention was made of Hong Kong,
China's high levels of economic freedom and competitiveness, which are
reflected in the continued economic growth it has experienced, despite external
influences. During the period under review, Hong Kong, China also consolidated
its position as a major exporter and international centre for high-value added
services such as finance, transport, trade and logistics. In addition to this,
it was commended for having a strong commitment to the multilateral trading
system, not only in its support for the implementation of the Bali package, but
also in its proactive stance in the DDA negotiations and in plurilateral trade
initiatives (e.g. the revised Government Procurement Agreement (GPA), the
expansion of the Information Technology Agreement (ITA), and the Trade in
Services Agreement (TiSA). Hong Kong, China was also praised for being the
first WTO Member to notify the organization that it will implement all
provisions of the Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) upon its entry into force
without recourse to flexibility arrangements. Members also referred to Hong
Kong, China's active engagement in bilateral and regional trade agreements, its
financial integration with mainland China, its efforts to reach full
liberalization of services under the Closer Economic Partnership Arrangement (CEPA),
as well as its role as an offshore renminbi trading hub and platform for doing
business with China. Moreover, Members commended Hong Kong, China for its
efficient and speedy customs clearance procedures, its implementation of new
trade facilitation measures and the cessation of textiles import and export
licensing requirements. Mention was also made of recent legislative
developments, including new comprehensive competition legislation, a new Companies
Ordinance and the recent modernization of IP laws.
3.100. Despite these various achievements, delegations underlined some
challenges that Hong Kong, China should address. Among these were social
inequalities, affordable housing, and the need to preserve fiscal
sustainability in the face of an ageing population. With regards to trade
matters, Members encouraged Hong Kong, China to expand the coverage of its WTO
tariff bindings, to broaden the scope of the Competition Ordinance to include
sectors other than telecommunications, and to share the particulars of the
newly enacted IP legislation. In the context of TBT and SPS measures, Members
sought further clarification on SPS measures relating to imports of dairy
products, meat and high-risk food items, as well as to a proposed ban on
marketing of infant formula. In the context of services, some Members called
for a widening of GATS commitments, namely in the accounting, legal services
and veterinary sectors, but also regarding the temporary entry for business visitors,
contractual services suppliers and independent professionals.
16 and 18
December 2014: United States
3.101. Members commended the United States for its open and transparent
trade and investment regimes, its economic recovery and the expected spillover
effects through increased cross-border investment flows. Some delegations,
however, expressed concerns regarding the potential systemic effect of the U.S.
Quantitative Easing policy. As one of the world's largest economies and a key
player in the multilateral trading system, the U.S. has assumed a pivotal role
in the Doha Round and the post-Bali agenda, e.g. in concluding the Trade
Facilitation negotiations. Its leadership role is also patent in the regular
work of the Organization more broadly. LDCs in particular expressed
appreciation for preferences provided by the United States and for supporting bilateral aid and capacity building initiatives.
It was also recognized that the United States is pursuing trade liberalization on many fronts, including bilaterally,
plurilaterally and multilaterally, although the majority of U.S. trade still
took place under the MFN regime. Members noted that in the review period there
had been few policy changes which, on the one hand, indicated that the United
States had refrained from introducing
protectionist measures following the global financial crisis. However, on the
other hand, several delegations said that this also meant that long-standing
barriers in certain sectors still remained in place.
3.102. Members made reference to a number of systemic issues, including the
existence of tariff peaks especially in sectors of interest to developing
countries, notably agriculture, textiles and apparel, and tobacco; the need to
strike the right balance between enforcement and security, and thus to
re-examine the Secure Freight Initiative and Container Security Initiative; the
need to refrain from subsidizing the fishing industry; the fact that some
sectors, such as domestic maritime and air transport remained virtually closed
to foreign competition; and reforms in visas for foreign professionals, in
healthcare and health insurance, in the financial sector, and in the liquefied
natural gas (LNG) transport regime. LDCs noted the expiry of the generalized
system of preferences (GSP) and African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA)
programmes, urging the United States to renew them, and inquired about the status of the U.S. Duty Free
Quota Free (DSQF) commitment and details on its implementation and relation to
other preference programmes. On SPS measures, Members sought clarification
concerning the revised BSE regime and the additional requirements under the new
Food Safety Modernization Act. IP rights matters were raised by a number of
Members, who called for a reform of the judicial process for patents, as well
as to the Section 337 investigative process. Finally, regarding government
procurement, some Members pointed out the potential trade-diverting impact of
programmes such as "Make it in America" and "Select USA",
as well as the "Buy America Provision" in many federal and
sub-federal tendering processes. Some delegations also noted that the lack of
timely implementation of DSB panel decisions was problematic and that some
improvements could be made with respect to notifications. Several Members made
reference to the adoption of the new Farm Bill. While welcoming the elimination
of price support and export subsidies for dairy products, Members expressed
concern over the transition from direct payments to farmers towards programmes
of domestic support, the classification of the new programmes and the effect
they would have on the U.S. position in the DDA negotiations on agriculture.
Still in the context of agricultural issues, Members also sought clarification
on the changes in export credit, cotton and dairy regimes, and the reasons
behind low Tariff Rate Quota (TRQ) fill rates for some products.
27 and 29
January 2015: Barbados
3.103. At its third trade policy review, Barbados was commended for its
resilience and prudent macroeconomic policies in the aftermath of the global
economic crisis, including the implementation of a fiscal consolidation
programme. Members acknowledged that Barbados had put in place a medium-term
Growth and Development Strategy centred on Adjustment, Reform, Recovery and
Stability in an effort to address some shortcomings of its economy. Barbados' open economy and liberal trade and
investment regimes were also praised. With regards to the latter, Barbados was
encouraged to adopt an Investment Code to lock in investment guarantees and to
improve its ease of doing business indexes in order to attract foreign
investment. Members also praised Barbados' strong support for the multilateral
trading system and the role it has played in the DDA negotiations and, in
particular, its leadership role for small island developing states and small
vulnerable economies. Barbados' efforts towards liberalization at the regional
and bilateral level were also noted, including agreements reached through its
participation in CARICOM and the CARIFORUM-EU Economic Partnership Agreement
(EPA), signed in October 2008, and ratified in July 2014. Several Members
welcomed Barbados' adoption of trade facilitation measures, such as the
introduction of electronic customs clearance, mechanisms for advance ruling, and
risk assessment. Members enquired when Barbados would ratify the Trade
Facilitation Agreement and notify its commitments. Barbados was commended for
its competition policy legislation and enforcement, deemed to be of particular
importance for a small market. Members also welcomed Barbados' initiative to
consolidate its SPS regulatory functions under a single government agency and
to bring its plant and animal health and food safety systems in line with
international standards.
3.104. At the same time, it was also noted that Barbados' economy is
especially vulnerable to exogenous shocks due to its a narrow economic base,
over-reliance on imports and tourism services and susceptibility to the
vagaries of the environment. These factors help explain how the country was
severely affected by the global economic crisis, registering a sharp decline in
tourism revenue and a weak GDP growth. Members expressed concern regarding the
precarious fiscal position and consequent rise in the debt ratio to 126% of
GDP. Furthermore, some Members expressed concern regarding the dual licensing
regime for imports. Other matters of concern to Members included the
maintenance of tariff peaks, encouraging Barbados to narrow the gap between
applied and bound tariff rates, and the prevalence of high tariffs on certain
fish and textile and clothing products. Members also noted the large number of
tariff and fiscal concessions granted by Barbados to promote exports. Certain
Members sought clarification with regards to the licensing regime in the
tourism services sector. Some Members noted the absence of AD and CVD
legislation. Delegations noted that, during the period under review, Barbados
had continued to implement a number of incentive programmes targeted solely or
partly at the promotion of exports. Some of these programmes had been
identified by Barbados as export subsidies and notified to the WTO. Barbados
had also notified to the WTO the internal steps to be undertaken to bring these
subsidies into conformity with the SCM Agreement by 31 December 2015. Members
requested information on the steps taken since the last notification to ensure
the timely dismantlement of the measures.
3.105. Finally, some Members noted that some outstanding issues identified
in the previous TPR exercise had not been fully addressed. In the context of
IP, Members encouraged Barbados to align its legislation with WIPO treaties.
10 and 12
February 2015: Brunei Darussalam
3.106. Brunei Darussalam was commended for having further simplified and
liberalized its trade regime, notably by reducing its average MFN applied
tariff from 4.8% in 2007 to 1.7% in 2014. In fact, the country was able to
counter the effects of the global economic crisis with its macroeconomic
indicators remaining sound during the period under review, low inflation rate,
strong fiscal position and current account surplus. Members also praised Brunei
Darussalam for its strong support for the multilateral trading system, having
notified its Category A commitments under the TFA, and for its active use of
regional and bilateral trade agreements to deepen its integration into the
global economy. Members also noted that it has never made use of trade remedy
measures, and were pleased with the ongoing reforms in the area of customs
procedures, especially with the introduction of both e-Customs and the National
Single Window. Brunei Darussalam was equally commended for significant
legislative and regulatory reforms, which includes the strengthening of the
legal framework in areas such as business environment, financial services,
fisheries, IP, and TBT. In the area of energy, Members took note of the plans
to further strengthen upstream and downstream activities, ensure a reliable and
efficient supply and maximise economic spin-offs from the energy industry.
Members also welcomed the announcement that Brunei Darussalam will establish
government-linked companies to serve as a catalyst in areas where the private
sector has been constrained by lack of access to technology and resources.
3.107. Members also identified a number of points where improvements could
be made. In particular, Members encouraged Brunei Darussalam to diversify its
economy away from hydrocarbon resources, reduce existing restrictions and
barriers to FDI, promote a more business‑friendly environment, increase the participation
of the private sector in the economy and address its outstanding WTO
notifications. Members also encouraged Brunei Darussalam to complete additional
legislation on competition, while promoting greater transparency in government
decision-making on trade policy matters. Furthermore, delegations noted the
significant gap between Brunei Darussalam's bound and applied rates and the
effects this had on the predictability of the system. Some inquiries were
voiced regarding the increased coverage of excise duties. In the area of SPS
and TBT measures, clarifications were sought on specific issues such as the
Halal Certificate and the establishment of the National Standards Council.
Members also encouraged Brunei Darussalam to enhance transparency and notifications
in the elaboration and implementation of these kinds of measures. Some
delegations asked Brunei Darussalam to notify its state-trading enterprises and
to join or become an observer to the GPA. With regards to IP rights, Members
called on Brunei Darussalam to strengthen its institutional framework and
sought clarification regarding the new Patent Law. Members encouraged Brunei
Darussalam to promote foreign investment in the agriculture sector in order to
help the country achieve its food security and self-sufficiency objectives.
Energy reform was mentioned as a way to reduce the distortions affecting Brunei
Darussalam's efforts at diversifying its economy. In services, many delegations
encouraged Brunei Darussalam to increase its GATS commitments given the
potential for growth and diversification of the economy that the services
sector represents for this country.
9 and 11
March 2015: Japan
3.108. Members commended Japan's efforts
to overcome protracted deflation, revitalize the economy and continue reconstruction
following the devastating earthquake in 2011. Japan conducted a three-pronged
economic policy through the so-called "three arrows" of monetary
measures, fiscal flexibility and structural reform known as
"Abenomics". The third arrow of structural reform was launched under
the Japan Revitalization Strategy of 2013 (revised in 2014) and encompasses
plans and programmes to increase investment, improve productivity and enhance
trade. Members encouraged Japan to pursue structural reforms, including trade
and investment liberalization measures, so as to achieve strong economic
growth, encourage private investment, increase productivity and enhance
competitiveness. This would help Japan address long-standing structural
problems including an ageing population, labour shortages, and relatively low
FDI inflows. Members commended Japan's active role in the WTO and its
constructive participation in the negotiations leading to the Trade
Facilitation Agreement, as well as negotiations on services, environmental goods,
and expanding the scope of the Information Technology Agreement. Members also
appreciated its limited use of contingency trade remedies, as well as its
support for a wide range of technical cooperation activities. Finally, Members
commended its active participation in regional trade agreements.
3.109. Some concerns were raised on the
following matters: customs procedures for some agricultural products; the
alignment of TBT and SPS measures to international standards; barriers to
foreign enterprises in public tenders, the number of exemptions to the Anti-Monopoly
Act of 2013 and its implementation; visa requirements for, inter alia,
business travellers, IT professionals, trainees and health care workers; high
levels of support and protection for agriculture through high tariffs and
policies linked to prices, production or both; and programmes and subsidy
levels for fisheries. Members urged the opening up of the services sector, and
some inquiries were made regarding Japan Post and its privatization, as well as
the need for a level playing field in insurance.
24 and 26
March 2015: Pakistan
3.110. Members praised Pakistan for a resilient economy and the registered
positive growth, which is expected to expand further, as well as several of its
recent policies which demonstrate Pakistan's commitment to moving towards more
transparency and predictability. Several delegations welcomed the reform agenda
pursued under Vision 2025 and the Strategic Trade Policy Framework. Members
acknowledged Pakistan's successful democratic transition of power and its 18th
constitutional amendment. Pakistan was also commended for its constructive
approach to the DDA negotiations and its positive role in the formulation of
the Bali package and on the continuing post-Bali work programme. Delegations
also expressed appreciation for the submission of its Category A commitments
under the TFA and welcomed Pakistan as an observer to the GPA. Recent reforms
were deemed positive development, including the further liberalization of the
foreign investment regime, development of Special Economic Zones, enhanced
competition policy, upgraded port infrastructure, and the setting up of a
national single window.
3.111. Members also delineated a number of areas that could be improved.
Concerns were voiced regarding the large difference between applied and bound
rates, the abolition of duty-free tariff lines, the high degree of overall
tariff protection which favoured import substitution, the continued use of
ad-hoc trade policy instruments, such as special regulatory orders, which
undermined the predictability of the trade regime, as well as the high degree
of protection afforded to the automobile industry. Concerns were articulated
regarding subsidies promoting exports, building processing plants, providing
selected industries with preferential access to certain utilities and applying
mark-up rates for export finance schemes to promote certain products. Other
issues included the support price for wheat, pricing in the pharmaceutical
industry, import licensing procedures, safeguard mechanisms, the number of
anti-dumping investigations, the ban on the import of bovine products,
livestock and poultry and the lack of notifications (especially those
pertaining to agriculture and domestic support). More generally, Members encouraged
Pakistan to improve its business climate, further liberalize the trade regime
and ensure its predictability. Others mentioned the need to reduce state
intervention in the economy, provide adequate infrastructure facilities
especially those related to the power sector and improve the fiscal situation
by broadening the tax base.
21 and 23
April 2015: Australia
3.112. Members commended Australia's open and transparent trade regime and
a steady economy which has experienced long-term uninterrupted real GDP growth.
Several Members noted Australia's strong commitment not only in the context of
the WTO, but also plurilateral and bilaterally. Delegations also welcomed
Australia's latest unilateral lowering of tariffs on apparel and certain
finished textile articles and footwear, tariff binding coverage, minimal
documentation requirements, changes made to the anti-dumping framework and the
computerized customs clearance. Members also expressed appreciation for
Australia's intention to ratify the WTO's Trade Facilitation Agreement.
3.113. Notwithstanding the dynamism, resilience and impressive performance
of its economy, delegations noted that Australia faces a number of challenges
posed, among others, by the effects of the terms of trade, the relatively
appreciated Australian dollar, the ageing population, and high reliance on the
mining sector. Members also delineated some areas for improvement. It was noted
by some that restrictions on foreign investment in Australia's most sensitive
sectors represented additional regulatory burdens. Furthermore, Members called
for improvements to the tariff structure and to the anti-dumping framework. On
SPS, concerns were raised on Australia's BSE import requirements' delayed
compliance with internationally recognized standards. Despite welcoming reforms
aimed at developing a biosecurity system, Members noted that the regime could
benefit from further clarity and transparency with regards to its import risk
analysis process, as well as from a cost-benefit analysis and simplification at
the legislative level. Regarding government procurement, Australia was
encouraged to accede to the revised GPA, as well as to open up its regime,
particularly at the sub-federal level. Finally, some Members urged Australia to
reconsider taxes such as the luxury car tax and to liberalize the maritime
cabotage system, allowing foreign vessels registration in the Australian
General Register or in the International Shipping Register.
2 and 4
June 2015: India
3.114. India was commended for its accelerating economic growth and milder
inflation in recent years. Members also recognized the important role that
India plays in the global economy as one of the largest developing countries.
India's active participation in the multilateral trading system and the key
role it plays in the DDA negotiations were also acknowledged. Members welcomed
India's various economic and trade policy reforms, namely its efforts to
introduce a nationwide Goods and Services Tax, the removal of some subsidies
and price controls on fossil fuels, its measures to improve business and
investment environment, including "make in India" initiatives, and
the establishment of an e-business portal. Members equally noted India's
increased involvement in regional trade agreements and its recent initiatives
to improve transparency and predictability of its trade and related policies,
such as inviting public comments on new legislation. Members also appreciated
that India has been providing duty free and quota free access for LDC exports
and the trade facilitation measures undertaken, such as the adoption of
self-assessment in customs procedures.
3.115. At the same time, delegations noted some areas for improvement, e.g.
in addressing structural bottlenecks, including fiscal deficits, shortfalls in
infrastructure such as education, health care, transportation, power supply,
delays in project approvals, difficulties in land acquisition, low
manufacturing base and agricultural productivity and cumbersome labour market
regulations. Furthermore, Members encouraged India to pursue tax reforms, which
could increase government revenues and investment in infrastructure. In the
context of the DDA negotiations, Members urged India to submit its Category A
notification under the Agreement on Trade Facilitation, to expedite the
ratification process, as well as to implement the Information Technology
Agreement. Members also encouraged India to provide timely public consultations
on draft regulations, submit notifications on a regular basis to the WTO, and
provide a reasonable period between the announcement of new regulations and
their entering into force. India was also encouraged to simplify its rules of
origin requirements. Given the weight of the services sector in India's
economy, Members urged further liberalization in this area, particularly
concerning distribution and e-commerce. Other areas of concern included tariff
increases, the complexity and uncertainty in tariffs (including an additional
duty and a special additional duty), the large difference between applied and
bound rates, customs valuation, import licensing requirements, the frequent use
of contingency measures, TBT and SPS measures and their relation to
international standards and India's recourse to export restrictions and minimum
export prices. Concerns were also voiced by some Members regarding subsidies on
agriculture, food and fertilizers, as well as local content requirements and
India's IP laws, in particular regarding the protection of trade secrets and
test data. Delegations also voiced concerns over high agricultural tariffs and
domestic supply conditions for agricultural products, calling for a balance
between food security and a predictable trade regime, as well as the
liberalization of the agricultural sector through the lowering and
simplification of tariffs.
15 and 17
June 2015: Canada
3.116. At Canada's tenth TPR, Members highlighted the transparency and
openness of Canadian trade and investment policies, as well as the resilience
of its economy. Members congratulated Canada for its general resistance to
impose protectionist measures since its last review. Canada was equally
commended for its active role in many trade policy areas, within and outside
the WTO and at plurilateral and regional levels. In particular, Members praised
the leadership role Canada has assumed in the context of the DDA and the
post-Bali process. Many developing countries, LDCs and SVEs expressed
appreciation for Canada's support in terms of Aid-for-Trade, S&D treatment,
preferences, financial aid and assistance, and LDC services waiver. In addition
to this, Canada was praised for its role in the trade facilitation negotiations
and for its commitment to accept and implement the TFA expeditiously. With
regards to its trade policies, Members welcomed Canada's autonomous tariff
liberalization and tariff simplification efforts, the programmes aimed at
reducing the time and procedures for customs clearance and its commitment to
extend procurement opportunities to the provinces and territories, including
several crown corporations.
3.117. A number of areas for improvement were identified. Firstly, Members
highlighted Canada's need to diversify its economy, due to its over-reliance on
the United States as the major destination for its exports, as well as its
narrow product base, which predominantly encompasses energy and mineral
products. Some Members also wondered if Canada would revise its investment
legislation or remove barriers in certain sectors in order to counter the
slowdown of FDI. Some clarifications were sought concerning the deregulation of
services trade. In light of the country's unique system of government, some
Members inquired if there were plans to revise Canada's agreement governing
internal trade (AIT) or otherwise put in place mechanisms to ensure compliance
with its international obligations. Many Members also questioned Canada's
alcoholic beverage distribution and tax regime, in particular compliance with
national treatment provisions. Members noted the increased use of trade
remedies and encouraged Canada to resort to these types of measures with
restraint. Other issues raised included the continued use of export
restrictions in certain sectors, the large number of targeted programmes that
provide support and incentives to Canadian businesses, pharmaceutical patent
approvals and regulations on pirated and counterfeited goods. On agriculture,
Members voiced concern over high tariffs, high subsidies and domestic support
and supply management channels, in particular for dairy and poultry products.
Clothing, apparel and footwear were also identified as sectors subject to high
tariffs. Members encouraged Canada to step up its liberalization efforts in
these areas.
23 and 25
June 2015: Chile
3.118. Members commended Chile's overall open, transparent and predictable
trade and investment regimes and praised it for quickly recovering from the
global economic crisis due to, inter alia, the
prudent management of economic policies. Delegations also noted Chile's
constructive engagement in the multilateral trading system (and in particular
its active participation in the "Friends of Fish Group"), its
accession to the OECD and its implementation of its DFQF Scheme for LDCs. Other
noteworthy developments included the implementation of trade facilitation
measures, the standardization of customs procedures, the implementation of a
single window for exports, the creation of Tax and Customs Courts and Chile's
unilateral tariff reduction, which resulted in an almost flat tariff structure,
consisting of two rates of 0% and 6%. Members noted with interest that Chile is
in the process of drafting new foreign investment legislation and sought more
information on this initiative. Some delegations mentioned the programme
implemented to promote the registration of geographical indications and the
country's scant use of contingency measures. The drafting of a new competition
law was welcomed by Members. Delegations praised the performance of Chile's
financial sector, and noted with appreciation the efforts already undertaken by
Chile to implement the Basel II and III capital adequacy rules.
3.119. At the same time, Members felt that
in a few specific areas Chile could improve its trade regime. Despite the government's extensive reform agenda encompassing
taxation, the labour market and education and the steps taken to improve the
quality and access to the latter, income inequality remains a problem. Notwithstanding
Chile's active engagement in RTAs, being one of the WTO Members with the
largest number of trade agreements, Members expressed concern over the
complexity of the rules of origin provisions in these. Members urged Chile to
ratify the TFA and to reconsider the requirement to use customs agents for
inward clearance. Some delegations also expressed concern regarding Chile's
price band system, which they felt to be a source of uncertainty. Moreover, although
under Chilean law anti-dumping and countervailing measures can only be applied
for one year with no possibility of renewal, Members expressed concern over the
extension of the possible application and renewal period for safeguard measures
from one to two years.
3.120. In the area of government procurement, some encouraged the
simplification of administrative procedures, and urged Chile to become a party
to the GPA. Others expressed concern and sought more information regarding
specific support programmes to assist sectors such as mining and renewable
energy and noted that some of them had not been notified to the WTO. Some
concerns were also voiced concerning Chile's heavy reliance on a few markets
for its exports and on a product base heavily dependent on mining and
agricultural products. Other specific issues mentioned included export support
measures, programmes implemented by the Chilean Economic Development Agency,
the compliance of Chile's new food labelling requirements with the SPS Agreement,
copyright and the protection of encrypted programmes, the control of material
provided via the Internet, the protection of pharmaceuticals and
agro-chemicals, the improved protection of plants and the ratification of the
International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV)
Convention.
29 June and
1 July 2015: New Zealand
3.121. New Zealand was praised for its liberal economic policies and good
economic performance during review period. Members praised New Zealand for
sound macroeconomic policies that underpinned GDP growth. Delegations also
acknowledged New Zealand's strong commitment to the multilateral trading
system, as well as its active engagement in RTAs. Other developments welcomed
by Members included: the improvement of customs procedures; the expected
ratification of the TFA in advance of MC10; its accession to the GPA. Also
raised were: the modernization of its trade remedies legislation, namely
through the introduction of a public interest test and the modernization of its
IP legislation, including its plans to amend and bring into effect legislation
on the registration of geographical indications for wines and spirits; the
country's liberal agricultural regime, reflected in the fact that New Zealand
has the lowest producer support level among OECD economies; and the reforms
undertaken in the financial and telecommunications sector.
3.122. At the same time, Members also identified some areas for improvement
including high foreign debt, weak external demand, low labour productivity, volatile
international commodity prices, diversification of the economy and export base
and participation in global value chains. More specifically, Members encouraged
New Zealand to reduce the existing gap between applied and bound MFN rates, and
to lower high tariffs in textiles and tariff escalation in other product lines.
On trade remedies, New Zealand was encouraged to provide more transparency
throughout the various stages of antidumping investigations. In the area of
SPS, Members expressed concern over New Zealand's biosecurity system. Members
encouraged New Zealand to reform its procedures for introducing Import Health
Standards and to develop such standards for products of plant origin. New
Zealand was also urged to harmonize its national standards with international
standards in order to facilitate the free flow of goods. Many delegations
encouraged New Zealand to provide more information with regards to its
accession to the GPA. In the field of IP, New Zealand was urged to extend
its plans on registration of geographical indicators (GIs) for wine and spirits
to foodstuffs. In agriculture, some Members called for increased transparency
and competition in the dairy sector and enquired about the quasi-monopoly of
kiwifruit exports by a state-trading company. Some urged New Zealand to
continue liberalizing its transport and telecommunications sectors by removing
restrictions to foreign investment and promoting competition in several
services markets. New Zealand was also encouraged to reconsider restrictions to
foreign investment in sensitive sectors and to improve its FDI screening
process. Some Members sought clarification on procedures, requirements, and
time-frames for foreign investment applications, urging New Zealand to assess
the impact of these measures on current and future foreign investments.
6 and 8
July 2015: European Union
3.123. In its 12th trade policy review, Members highlighted the importance
of the EU in the multilateral trading system as the biggest trading entity in
the world and as the first or second biggest trading partner for the majority
of WTO Members. The EU was commended for showing encouraging signs of recovery
in the aftermath of the financial crisis with growth in 2015 expected to be
stronger than previous estimates had indicated. This was said to be in part
attributable to the policy of the European Central Bank and lower oil prices.
Members welcomed the initiatives for strengthening the Economic and Monetary
Union, the Investment Plan for Europe, the Digital Single Market and other measures.
Nevertheless, some delegations expressed concern regarding the economic
performance of one Member of the EU and the effects that such performance may
have on the euro area. In the WTO context, the EU was praised for its active
participation in the monitoring and negotiating pillars of the organization and
for its support for Aid for Trade and the progress made on the TFA. Several
delegations applauded the openness and transparency of the EU economy, the
unprecedented level of integration achieved among its member States, the low
number of trade restrictions, the expansion of the network of trade agreements
and reforms carried out in the financial sector aimed at improving the
stability of the sector and at building a banking union and a capital market
union. Others referred to the important reforms in the telecoms sector.
3.124. Some areas for improvement were highlighted by various delegations.
Firstly, several delegations felt that some sectors such as agriculture and
fisheries and some fibre products remained protected by relatively high
tariffs. Tariff peaks, tariff escalation, tariff quotas and non‑ad valorem tariffs in this area were also said to further
add to the complexity of the EU's tariff system. In the realm of trade
remedies, delegations expressed concern about the investigative procedures and
the application of existing measures. Concerns was also voiced regarding
several aspects related to the development, adoption and application of TBT and
SPS measures, in particular those SPS measures which are not based on a
scientific assessment of risk. With regards to government procurement, Members
remained concerned about the ability of third suppliers, particularly SMEs from
outside the EU, to access its government procurement market. Despite welcoming
the expansion the network of trade agreements, Members expressed some
apprehension that such agreements could reduce the benefits of existing trade
arrangements. Finally, concerning the EU's agriculture and fisheries policies,
delegations remained concerned about the level of subsidies and the level of
border protection applied in these two sectors.
14 and 16
July 2015: Madagascar
3.125. Members noted Madagascar's weak economic growth and slow recovery
from a six-year socio-political crisis with rising poverty levels and sluggish
economic development. Nevertheless, delegations commended Madagascar for its
efforts in trade facilitation, including introduction of the Electronic Single
Window, progress made towards paperless customs clearance procedures and the possibility
of border control institutions to transmit their respective authorizations
electronically to customs. Members praised Madagascar for renouncing the use of
minimum import values for customs valuation purposes and noted that tariff
reductions, mainly on agricultural inputs, have lowered Madagascar's average
applied MFN rates from 13% in 2008 to 12.2% in 2015. Several delegations
welcomed Madagascar's new mining policy and sought information about
opportunities for foreign operators. Others welcomed Madagascar's plan to
broaden its GATS commitments in professional, communication, financial and
tourism services.
3.126. At the same time, delegations also highlighted several aspects where
there was room for improvement. These included rebuilding infrastructure in the
energy and transportation sectors to accelerate the recovery of the economy.
Members also encouraged improvements to the investment approval process and the
overall business environment, including law enforcement, access to credit,
construction permits and to property ownership. Members also sought information
on measures to effectively boost the country's weak agricultural production as
well as actions envisaged to halt the illegal logging, poaching and export of
wild animals and their subsequent exports. Over-fishing in Madagascar's
continental waters by unregulated foreign fleets was mentioned by some
delegations. Despite the improvements made in customs procedures, the number of
border control institutions remained excessive and Madagascar was encouraged to
restructure its border control, ratify the TFA and take steps toward
notification of its TFA commitment categories. Delegations also sought
clarification on the impact of cargo tracking and urged Madagascar to make
customs fees reflect the cost of services rendered. Furthermore, some expressed
concern that applied rates exceed the corresponding bound levels on 52 lines
and urged Madagascar to address this inconsistency. Clarifications were sought
on the progress towards the conclusion of the Tripartite Free Trade
negotiations between Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA), East
African Community (EAC) and Southern African Development Community (SADC) and
also on the effects of the implementation of the EPA with the EU. Several delegations
also called for an upgrade of the TBT and SPS regimes, particularly to boost
exports, and for the establishment of the appropriate national committees and
coordination mechanisms. Other areas where further clarification was sought
included the continued non-reimbursement of VAT credits to exporters, prospects
for reform of the Export Free Zone scheme, the numerous levies on exports, the
implementation of the WIPO Internet Treaties, the possible extension of the
term of protection for software and the protection of trademarks and
geographical indications. Members urged Madagascar to pursue an agenda of
continued liberalization and structural reforms.
22 and 24
July 2015: Dominican Republic
3.127. Members praised the Dominican Republic's open and transparent trade
regime. Members also noted that trade in goods and services, investment flows
and remittances, as well as strong activity in mining, construction, tourism
and other services were important factors supporting the GDP growth at an
average annual rate of 4.4% in real terms. Members expressed interest in the
Dominican Republic's three pronged National Development Strategy, which focuses
on the key areas of education, electricity and fiscal reform, and encouraged
the country to continue to focus on policies to promote growth and social
inclusion. Delegations welcomed the economic reform agenda, including the 2012
tax reform process and TBT-related initiatives. On trade facilitation, Members
commended the implementation of a computerized customs clearance system, the
improvement of the risk management process and the elimination of certain
authorization requirements. Several delegations praised the Dominican
Republic's commitment to and active participation in the WTO and welcomed the
notification of its Category A commitments under the Trade Facilitation
Agreement. The Dominican Republic's participation in various free trade
agreements and in the Central American Integration System was also noted.
Delegations welcomed the introduction of measures to facilitate investment and
attract more FDI, such as the one-stop investment facility established in 2012.
Members also praised the government procurement regime for its transparency,
although the 20% set-aside in government procurement for SMEs was considered a preference
by some. The recently adopted procedures for the drafting and administration of
technical regulations in line with international standards was equally noted as
a positive development. Members acknowledged the Dominican Republic's
relatively low average tariff and the fact that about 54% of tariff lines were
zero-rated.
3.128. Members expressed concern over high tariffs on agricultural goods
and the lack of transparency and delays in the issuance of import permits, in
particular for the importation of animals and agricultural products. Mention
was also made of the obsolete SPS legislation. On IP, delegations inquired
about limiting simplified registration procedures to pharmaceutical products
and the practice and enforcement of IP rights. Members also noted the delays in
patent application reviews and marketing approval for pharmaceuticals and the
availability of pirated and counterfeit goods. On competition, concerns
included the fact that the competition authority is not operational and that
competition legislation remains pending. Some highlighted the persistent
problems in the electricity sector which they considered to be a hindrance to
the country's competitiveness and growth prospects. Delegations encouraged
further reforms to the investment regime through an increase of legal security
for FDI and addressing existing FDI restrictions and impediments for foreign
companies, including in distribution services.
15 and 17
September 2015: Guyana
3.129. Delegations praised Guyana's open
trade and investment regimes. Its robust economic growth over the past six
years, with GDP growing at an average annual rate of 4.7%, was due in large
part to foreign direct investment and private sector credit. Guyana's
commitment to the multilateral trading system and to a successful conclusion of
the DDA was highlighted. Members commended Guyana's active participation in
regional trade agreements which they hoped would strengthen the multilateral
trading system. Delegations welcomed Guyana's adoption of a number of trade
facilitation measures, such as risk management and encouraged the country to
submit its Category A notifications and to ratify the Trade Facilitation
Agreement. Members acknowledged several measures undertaken for the improvement of its
business and investment environment. These include the reduction of the
corporation tax rates and establishment of a credit reporting system. Members also welcomed the simplification of Guyana's SPS legislation
and inquired into the Guyanese government's priorities concerning government
procurement, competition policy and the management of state-owned enterprises.
The adoption of the Anti-Money Laundering Act was also deemed to be a positive
development. Regarding IP, Members noted that a new Copyright Bill was being
prepared and urged Guyana to effectively implement the TRIPS Agreement and
endorse other IP-related international conventions. On agriculture, Members
probed the country's agriculture diversification strategies. Some delegations
sought clarification on the details of the Guyana's support for its sugar
sector.
3.130. At the same time, delegations urged
Guyana to diversify its exports and economic structure, as well as to address
its persistent account deficit. Guyana was also encouraged to pursue further
structural reforms, prudent macroeconomic policies, good governance and
effective management of debt profiles. Delegations
encouraged Guyana to further liberalize its services sectors, particularly
telecommunications, and to enhance competition. Members invited Guyana to
submit its outstanding notifications to the WTO and improve transparency whilst
taking advantage of WTO technical assistance.
In addition to this, some delegations asserted that Guyana grants
non-national treatment to foreign products and investors, for instance, regarding
VAT and the environmental tax for beverages. Finally, Members urged Guyana to
close the gap between applied and bound tariff rates in order to enhance the
predictability of trade and to rectify the situation where some applied tariff
rates exceed their respective bound rates.
22 and 24
September 2015: Angola
3.131. Members praised Angola's impressive recovery from its civil war and
its economic performance that allowed for its graduation from LDC status. Such
economic growth – supported by heavy public investment in infrastructure and by
high world prices for its main exports – has, however, slowed down since 2009
as a consequence of the broader international context. Angola was also
commended for its active involvement in the WTO. Members inquired into the
country's participation in bilateral and regional trade agreements. Delegations welcomed a number of trade
facilitation measures recently enacted, including the elimination of
pre-shipment inspection. Angola was encouraged to submit its Category A notification
and ratify the TFA. Members also noted that Angola has yet to submit other
notifications on, among others, SPS, TBT, subsidies and state-trading
enterprises and suggested that Angola make use of technical assistance in order
to address these outstanding issues and better implement the WTO Agreements.
3.132. Members encouraged Angola to diversify its economy and move away
from its overdependence on oil resources. A number of delegations also
expressed their concerns over the outdated nature of Angola's IP regime,
advocating for an effective implementation of the TRIPS Agreement and the
broadening of Angola's participation in international conventions on IP.
Members also voiced their concerns over Angola's restrictions on payment
transfers, its visa issuance system and its regulatory and investment
procedures. Some delegations also sought further information on Angola's plans
to establish a one-stop shop for administrative procedures. Mention was also
made of a number of measures aimed at import substitution, as well as the
significant increase of applied tariff rates. Some Members were of the view
that Angola should move away from import substitution measures to lower import
tariffs on inputs and further trade facilitation measures which they believed
would reduce production costs and thus enhance competitiveness. Delegations
also encouraged Angola to address the instances where applied tariff rates
exceed their bound levels. Members sought further clarification on Angola's
agricultural policy aimed at food security, the sustainability of its fisheries
sector, the country's plans to broaden its GATS commitments, the Government's
priorities on a number of issues (including competition policy, SPS and TBT
regimes and state-trading and state-owned enterprises), the recently enacted
Decree on import quotas, as well as opportunities for foreign operators in the
mining sector.
6 and 8
October 2015: Cabo Verde
3.133. Members praised Cabo Verde's political stability, economic reform
and market liberalization, crediting much of its success to the involvement of
all domestic stakeholders. Cabo Verde was commended for graduating from Least Developed
Country status. Delegations acknowledged the challenges Cabo Verde faces
related to its relatively small population and its exposure to natural
disasters. Members
noted the enactment of a new Customs Code, a new investment law, a Code of
Fiscal Benefits, and a new framework law on sanitary and phytosanitary
measures. Members encouraged Cabo Verde to accompany these new legislative
developments with an effective implementation policy. The modernized fiscal
regime was noted as a significant achievement, as was the policy directed at
increased investment which encompasses a number of measures such as the
establishment of online business registration procedures, a single window for
investment, paperless customs clearance, efforts to create a unified platform
for customs, port and trade information systems.
3.134. Some Members also underlined the
creation of a National Trade Council as a permanent structure for formulating
and coordinating Cabo Verde's trade policies, in addition to the setting up of
a Trade Facilitation Committee. Delegations urged Cabo Verde to notify its
Category A commitments and complete the internal process for ratification of the
Trade Facilitation Agreement. Delegations supported the efforts made to
increase competitiveness and productivity and to diversify its economic base
away from the tourism sector. Inquiries were made into the links between fiscal
incentives and tariff exemptions and Cabo Verde's plans to increase its
exports, as well as customs user chargers and their relation with WTO rules.
Some encouraged Cabo Verde to improve the performance of public enterprises and
privatize the most commercially-oriented. Some delegations sought
clarifications on Cabo Verde's implementation of the Economic Community of
Western African States (ECOWAS) Common External Tariff which might entail
adjustments of Cabo Verde's tariff commitments in the WTO. Delegations noted that current applied MFN
tariffs are low, even though a few tariff lines exceeded their bound rates.
19 and 21
October: Republic of Moldova
3.135. The Republic of Moldova was praised for its good economic
performance and sound macroeconomic policies, which had allowed for GDP growth
despite various external shocks. The Republic of Moldova was also commended for
its strong commitment to the multilateral trading system. Delegations welcomed the
Republic of Moldova's submission of its Category A commitments in trade
facilitation, its efforts to reduce the number of outstanding WTO notifications
more broadly and the steps taken to improve customs procedures, including the
introduction of an Authorized Economic Operator programme. Members noted the
Republic of Moldova's engagement in RTAs and in particular its ambition to
accede to the EU. This had led the country to bring its legislative framework
in line with international best practices in areas such as SPS, TBT,
competition, state aid, government procurement, IP, energy, telecommunications
and civil aviation. Delegations praised the efforts undertaken to transform a
previously centrally-planned economy into a fully functioning market-driven
economy.
3.136. At the same time, Members expressed concern over persistent budget
and trade deficits and over-reliance on imported energy resources and
remittances. Delegations encouraged the Republic of Moldova to improve its
business environment, address governance issues and increase transparency and
predictability, persevering in the implementation of structural reforms.
Members urged the Republic of Moldova to ratify the Trade Facilitation
Agreement and the WTO Agreement on Government Procurement. Enquiries were also
made into import licensing, the regulatory framework for animal health control,
the privatization programme, enforcement of IP rights, agricultural policy and
the strengthening of the domestic banking system. Other issues of concern
included increases in the applied MFN tariff rate and the application of
tariffs in excess of their bound rates.
3.137. During the period 15 October 2014 to 15 October 2015, WTO Members
notified 11 RTAs to the WTO (24 notifications) as compared to 9 RTAs (16
notifications) during the previous period (15 November 2013 - 15 October
2014). As of 15 October 2015, the total number of RTAs notified to the WTO and
to the GATT before it, amounted to 265 (127 covering goods and services, 137 goods
only and one services only). The WTO Secretariat has also identified and
verified, through the respective parties, 75 RTAs that are in force, but not
yet notified to the WTO.[79]
3.138. Judging from overall notifications, RTA activity is strongest in
Europe (21% of RTAs in force), with successive EU enlargements and agreements
with countries in Eastern Europe and around the Mediterranean basin as well as
RTAs notified by the European Free Trade Area (EFTA); this is followed by East
Asia (16%) and South America and the CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States)
region (11% each) (Chart 3.17).[80]
These regions also continue to be active in RTA negotiations.
Chart 3.16 Number of physical RTAs that have entered into force since 2005
Source: WTO Secretariat.
Chart
3.17 Regional Trade
Agreements in force by Region
Source: WTO Secretariat.
3.139. In addition to their existing RTAs, most WTO Members are actively
negotiating new RTAs. While most negotiations are bilateral, a few have
elicited recent interest because they are between a number of members. These
include the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) Agreement, the Regional Closer
Economic Partnership (RCEP) Agreement, the Pacific Alliance involving parties
in the Asia‑Pacific, the Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)
Agreement across the Atlantic and the Tripartite Agreement on the African
Continent. They are of interest for a number of reasons, including the number
of parties they involve (26 for the Tripartite Agreement, although Libya and
Eritrea have not yet signed the Declaration, 16 for RCEP, 12 for the TPP and 4
currently for the Pacific Alliance), but also the share of global trade they
represent (around 44% for TTIP, 26% for TPP, 24% for RCEP, and 2.7% and 1.5%
respectively for the Pacific Alliance and the Tripartite Agreement). Of
interest also is that if these negotiations are brought to fruition, will they
consolidate the existing bilateral preferential relationships that already
exist among several parties. If at the very least they are able to do that, the
new generation of plurilateral agreements will contribute to a reduction of the
confusion created by the plethora of RTAs in existence today. The TPP
Agreement, for instance, which was concluded on 5 October 2015, appears to
allow cumulation of origin among all 12 parties which will benefit their
producers and exporters.
3.140. Although the text of the TPP is not
yet available, a summary of the chapters of the Agreement has been released. It
indicates that the TPP covers market access in goods and services, and related
issues such as SPS and TBT, trade facilitation, and trade defence. The
Agreement takes a "negative list" approach for services and
investment which assumes that unless scheduled in a list of non-conforming
measures, the sector or subsector is liberalized; in addition, there are
separate chapters on telecommunications, and financial services. Other issues
that are covered include IP rights, government procurement, competition, state-owned
enterprises, and labour and environment. Of considerable interest will also be
chapters on regulatory coherence, which will allow for
interagency consultation and coordination and will encourage widely-accepted
good regulatory practices; small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), which establishes
a SME Committee to review how well the TPP is serving SMEs, consider ways to
enhance its benefits and oversee cooperation or capacity building activities to
support SMEs; and competitiveness and business facilitation which creates
formal mechanisms to review the impact of the Agreement on competitiveness
through dialogues among governments and between governments, business and civil
society, focusing on deepening regional supply chains. Finally, there is also a
dispute settlement chapter as well as provisions for investor-state dispute
settlement in the Agreement.
3.141. The Agreement is expected to enter into force 60 days after internal
ratification procedures are complete in all 12 parties. If these are not
completed within two years, the Agreement will enter into force 60 days following the
end of the two years provided at least six of the 12 signatories, and who
account for 85% of the combined GDP of the original signatories, has ratified
the Agreement.
3.142. On 27 November 2014, Members adopted an amendment protocol to insert
the TFA into the existing WTO legal framework.[81]
This opened the door for domestic ratification processes to commence. Many
delegations quickly initiated their procedures and several were already able to
deposit their acceptance instruments. As at 15 October 2015, 49 Members
had successfully completed the process, bringing the Agreement closer to the
two‑thirds ratification threshold required for it to take legal effect.[82]
3.143. Delegations also continued to notify the commitments they will
immediately implement upon the TFA's entry into force (frequently referred to
as "category A commitments"). The Preparatory Committee received 24
additional notifications since the beginning of October 2014, coming not only
from developing countries but also from the least-developed world.[83]
This brought the overall number of submitted category A notifications to 72 as
at 15 October 2015.
3.144. Work also continued with respect to technical assistance and
capacity-building initiatives.
3.145. In 2014 the Director-General launched a new WTO Trade Facilitation
Facility (the Facility) to assist developing and LDC Members in implementing
the TFA. It became operational on 27 November 2014.
3.146. The Facility works closely with individual Members to ensure they
are receiving the information and support needed. It also provides information
on assistance programmes and, where needed, it can conduct match-making between
donors and recipients. The Facility supports Members' efforts to implement the
Agreement by acting as a repository for training materials, case studies and
best practices on implementation of the measures. It provides training programmes
and support materials to assist Members to fully understand their
obligations.
3.147. The Facility has conducted a number of activities aimed at raising
awareness and encouraging support for ratification and the entry into force of
the TFA. These activities are directed at many levels of decision-makers and
stake-holders including: Parliamentarians, Ministries, Geneva-based delegates,
capital-based trade officials and a broader range of interested stake-holders.
The Facility worked to expand an existing WTO technical assistance programme
for Parliamentarians to have a greater focus on trade facilitation. Trade
facilitation workshops for Parliamentarians have been conducted for African
countries (in cooperation with Morocco), the Eastern African Community, ASEAN
(in cooperation with Singapore), all Latin American countries, and the Pacific
Islands (in cooperation with the World Bank Group and the Pacific Islands
Forum). Future workshops will be conducted in other regions as needed.[84]
3.148. The Information Technology Agreement (ITA) continues to be an area
of significant ongoing activity and progress in the WTO. A new Agreement to
expand the ITA product coverage was finalised during the review period.
Following 17 rounds of negotiations, the ITA expansion deal was reached on
24 July 2015 with participants agreeing to add an additional list of
201 products for tariff elimination. Annual trade in these 201 products is
valued in excess of US$1.3 trillion per year and accounts for approximately 7%
of total global trade. The new Agreement covers new generation semi‑conductors,
semi-conductor manufacturing equipment, optical lenses, GPS navigation
equipment and medical equipment such as magnetic resonance imaging products and
ultra-sonic scanning apparatus.
3.149. Fifty-four WTO Members took part in the negotiations on expanded
coverage of the ITA, accounting for approximately 90% of world trade in the
products proposed for inclusion in the product expansion. On 12 October 2015,
25 Members have already accepted to adhere to the agreement (WT/L/956). The
Agreement also contains a commitment to work to tackle non-tariff barriers in
the IT sector, to keep the list of products covered under review and to
determine whether further expansion may be needed to reflect future
technological developments. The ITA Expansion Agreement is open to any other
Members wishing to join.
3.150. Beyond the monetary gains for the IT industry resulting from the
elimination of import duties, investors and traders would also gain from
significantly improved market access, predictability and certainty. This is
because a number of these products are either currently unbound or are bound at
high tariff levels. With the ITA product expansion, the participating Members
would have the legal obligation not to impose import duties on covered
products. The majority of tariffs under the terms of the Agreement will be
eliminated on the 201 products within three years, with reductions beginning in
2016. The ITA tariff elimination concessions by the participants to the
Expansion Agreement are implemented on a most-favoured nation (MFN) basis and
will benefit even countries that have not joined the ITA Expansion Agreement.
3.151. The Fifth Global Review of Aid for Trade held from 30 June to 2 July
2015 focused on the theme "Reducing Trade Costs for Inclusive, Sustainable
Growth". It provided an opportunity to discuss how the economic growth and
development prospects of developing countries and LDCs are constrained by high
trade costs – which hamper their regional integration and access to global
markets – and how Aid for Trade can assist in tackling the issue of reducing
trade costs. The Fifth Global Review was underpinned by an extensive monitoring
and evaluation (M&E) exercise which sought to examine the actions that are
being taken to reduce trade costs and their associated impacts. A total of 112
governments and ten regional economic communities and transport corridors
worldwide responded to the self-assessment questionnaire element of the
monitoring exercise. In addition, 116 case stories were submitted, including
from the private sector and academia, describing on-the-ground experiences.
3.152. The information collected from the M&E exercise provided the
narrative for the joint OECD‑WTO report on "Aid-for-Trade at a Glance
2015: Reducing Trade Costs for Inclusive, Sustainable Growth"
presented at the Fifth Global Review. For the first time, the report also
benefitted from contributions by the World Bank Group, the Executive
Secretariat for the Enhanced Integrated Framework, the International Trade
Centre, UNCTAD, and the World Economic Forum. The report confirmed that high
trade costs prevent many developing countries and LDCs from realizing their
full potential in global trade. LDCs, landlocked economies and the poorest and
most vulnerable in particular, face a comparative disadvantage when it comes to
exporting goods to global markets. The joint report also confirmed that Aid for
Trade is broadly correlated with increases in trade and that well‑designed
Aid-for-Trade interventions can be effective in reducing trade costs.
3.153. Key messages that emerged from the Review and monitoring exercise
included the expected benefits from implementation of the Trade Facilitation
Agreement, the economic opportunity of e-commerce and the negative impact of
non-tariff measures on raising trade costs. The importance of delivering
development outcomes at MC10 was also highlighted. Since the Aid‑for-Trade
Initiative was launched in 2006, a total of US$264.5 billion has been
disbursed for financing Aid-for-Trade programmes and projects, with
disbursements to LDCs amounting to US$64.9 billion. In 2013, the share of
Aid for Trade in sector-allocable aid increased from 31% to 38%. More than
three-quarters of total Aid for Trade has financed projects in four sectors
closely related to reducing trade costs: transport and storage (29%), energy
generation and supply (21%), agriculture (18%), and banking (10%).
3.154. Over the past 12 months, the WTO has been reviewing and discussing
the difficulties faced by SMEs in developing countries to access trade finance
after the 2008 financial crisis. Surveys by the African and Asian Development
Banks revealed that almost US$1 trillion in financing had been requested by
SMEs, but had been rejected with no alternative financing. The
Director-General's Expert Group on Trade Finance noted in March 2015 that, although
liquidity was sufficient in trade finance markets for the main trading nations,
many developing countries lacked both the capacity in the financial sector to
support trade and access to the international financial system. The situation was
aggravated after the onset of the financial crisis as global private financial
institutions withdrew from LDCs.
3.155. At the WTO special meeting of the Working Group on Trade, Debt and
Finance on 26‑27 March 2015, the Director-General acknowledged that lack
of trade finance could be the equivalent of a strong non‑tariff barrier to
trade. He insisted that, despite the comprehensive cooperation between the WTO
and multilateral development banks to foster the expansion of trade finance
facilitation programmes, much remained to be done. Discussions between Members
generally reflected that there was no quick fix for developing countries to
immediately benefit from efficient and cost-effective financial services for
traders. Efficiency gains depended on improved knowledge and skills in this
area. While trade flows were moving quickly in new directions (south‑south
trade), the financial networks in low-income countries – many of which dated
from the post-colonial period – had not yet fully caught up. Specific support
by multilateral development agencies was still needed. Several delegations
urged the WTO to become more involved in trade finance because of its
centrality in building overall trade infrastructures.
3.156. The Director-General noted that opportunities for growth and
development would be lost if large financing gaps were left unfilled. In his
keynote speech to the Third International Conference on Financing for
Development (July 2015), he called for a "broader and more systemic
approach" to the above-mentioned challenges in trade finance, with a view
to reducing the trade financing gaps around the world. He indicated that the
WTO would soon "be launching a new initiative with this goal in
mind", and would revert to Members and partner institutions as to the
specifics of such an initiative. Consultations at the technical level are
currently taking place to assess the feasibility of particular options and
solutions.
3.157. The membership of the Agreement
on Government Procurement (GPA) continues to grow. Following the deposit by
Montenegro and New Zealand of their instruments of accession, the Agreement
came into force for these two Members on 15 July 2015 and 12 August 2015,
respectively. This brings the total number of WTO Members covered by the
Agreement to 45. The number of WTO Members participating in the GPA Committee
as observers has also grown to 30 as a result of the grant of observer status
to Pakistan (11 February 2015), Costa Rica (3 June 2015), Thailand (3
June 2015), and Seychelles (16 September 2015).
3.158. Further additions to the membership of the Agreement are expected in
the short to medium term. In September 2015, negotiations were concluded with
respect to the Republic of Moldova's accession to the Agreement. Negotiations
on Ukraine's accession are also progressing well. Negotiations on Tajikistan's
and Australia's accessions have been initiated. Further discussions were held
on China's accession based on its fifth revised market access offer circulated
on 5 January 2015. Five other WTO Members — Albania, Georgia, Jordan, the
Kyrgyz Republic and Oman have applied to join the GPA. Another five WTO Members
have provisions regarding accession to the Agreement in their respective
Protocols of Accession to the WTO: Mongolia, the Russian Federation, the
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Seychelles and the former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia.
3.159. 2015 has witnessed the highest level of dispute settlement activity
since the inception of the WTO. Over the period January to the end of September
2015, there were 10 new requests for consultations, 15 new panels established
by the DSB, 6 Appellate Body proceedings, and 1 Article 21.3(c) award. As
of the end of September, there were 19 active ongoing panels, 5 compliance
panel proceedings under Article 21.5 (including the ongoing aircraft disputes),
3 panel requests pending before the DSB, and 1 arbitration under Article 22.6.
As in previous years, the subject-matter of WTO dispute settlement continues to
touch on many of the covered agreements: the 7 panel reports and 5 Appellate
Body Reports circulated over this nine-month period address a range of
provisions in the GATT 1994, the SCM Agreement, the Anti-Dumping Agreement, the
TBT Agreement, the SPS Agreement, the Agreement on Agriculture, the GATS, and
the DSU. Ongoing dispute settlement proceedings also involve claims under many
of these agreements, as well as a range of other covered agreements, including
but not limited to the Marrakesh Agreement, the TRIMs Agreement, the Import
Licensing Agreement, and the TRIPS Agreement. Nine of the 15 panels established
in this period concern trade remedies or subsidies. Several ongoing disputes
involve an exceptionally large number of complex issues. While this shows that
the Membership has great confidence in the system, it also means that, with
current staffing levels, the dispute settlement system is having trouble coping
with the workload. There have been delays at the panel stage as a result.
Another trend that continued in 2015 was the participation of both developed
and developing countries in the WTO dispute settlement system: almost all of
the 5 Appellate Body reports and 7 panel reports circulated over this period
involved at least one developing country Member as a party, either as the
complainant or the respondent.
4.1. In the area of services the period under review witnessed several
important policy developments in such diverse sectors as financial services,
telecommunications and ICT, audio‑visual services, construction services,
energy and transport services, services supplied through the movement of
natural persons and a number of other sectors. The large majority of the
policies adopted during the period under review reflect liberalizing measures.
Various Service Sectors
4.2. The Angolan new Private Investment Law
(Law 14/15) entered into force on 11 August 2015. The new law
(Article 2) applies to foreign investments, regardless of their amount, and to
national investments of an amount equal to or higher than Kz 50 million
(approx. US$399,000). Article 3 provides that foreign investors may benefit
from the incentives provided by the law (e.g. tax incentives) when
investments are equal to or higher than US$1 million, while Angolan investors
will receive those benefits if investments are equal to or higher than US$500,000.
In case of investment in prioritized sectors (Article 9), the law requires the
participation of Angolan citizens, state-owned companies or private Angolan
companies by at least 35%. Those sectors are energy and water, hospitality and
tourism, transport and logistics, civil construction, telecommunications and
information technologies, and mass media.[86]
4.3. In January 2015, China lifted
the country's overseas online single transaction limit from US$10,000 to
US$50,000. This, together with other measures such as the pilot cross-border
foreign exchange payments programme implemented in Shanghai, Beijing,
Chongqing, Zhejiang and Shenzhen in 2013, explains, according to the State
Administration of Foreign Exchange, the significant growth of China's
cross-border e-commerce trade flows, which have reached US$3.32 billion
since 2013.[87]
4.4. On 13 March 2015, China issued a new Industry Catalogue for Foreign
Investment, which entered into force on 10 April 2015, replacing the 2011
Catalogue. Similar to past versions, the 2015 Catalogue lists a number of
industries and classifies them according to whether foreign investment is
encouraged, restricted or prohibited. An industry which is not explicitly listed
is deemed to be one in which foreign investment is permitted. Compared to the
2011 Catalogue, the 2015 Catalogue has substantially reduced the number of
restricted industries from 79 to 38. However, certain service industries have
been added to the restricted and prohibited categories. The following are the
main changes in services-related industries.
Distribution
services
|
- The wholesale and retail of tobacco, cigarettes and other tobacco
products are newly added to the prohibited category.
- The direct selling, mail order, online sale, distribution of
audiovisual products, and the wholesale, retail and delivery of vegetable
oil, sugar, crude oil, pesticides and fertilizers are reclassified from the
restricted to the permitted category.
|
Education
services
|
- Higher educational institutions and childcare institutions have been
included in the restricted category, with the investment method limited to
the formation of cooperative joint ventures controlled by the Chinese party.
The same requirement for Chinese controlling shareholding applies to ordinary
high school education.
- Foreign investment in compulsory education remains prohibited.
|
Entertainment services
|
- Operation of entertainment places is moved from the restricted
category into the encouraged category with the requirement on joint venture
removed.
- Brokering and agency of stage performances remains restricted with
the additional requirement that the Chinese partner shall hold the majority
of shares.
|
Financial
services
|
- Foreign investment in finance companies, trust companies, currency
brokerage companies and insurance brokerage companies has been moved from
restricted to permitted.
- The business scope of securities companies has been expanded to
include the underwriting and sponsoring of yuan common shares, foreign
shares, government bonds and corporate bonds, the brokerage of foreign shares
and the brokerage and proprietary trading of government bonds and corporate
bonds.
- A foreign-invested securities company may further apply to
extend its business scope after two years of establishment provided certain
requirements are fulfilled.
- The foreign shareholding ratio allowed in securities companies has
been increased from 33.3% to 49%, which is consistent with the amended Rules
on the Establishment of Foreign-Invested Securities Companies issued by the
China Securities Regulatory Commission in 2012.
|
Health
services
|
- Foreign investment in medical institutions is reclassified into the
restricted category and is limited to the formation of equity or cooperative
joint venture.
|
Legal
services
|
- Consulting services on Chinese legal matters are added to the
prohibited category.
|
Telecommunications and internet related services
|
- Even though value-added telecommunications industries are still
listed in the restricted category, the foreign shareholding restriction on
e-commerce has been removed.
- Network publishing services are added to the prohibited category.
|
Transport
services
|
- Railway freight transport is removed from the restricted category.
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
4.5. In May 2015, China's State Council approved the three-year pilot
programme of the city of Beijing to further open up a number of services
sectors, including financial services, R&D, ICT, culture and entertainment,
education, health, tourism and business services.[88] The programme includes the
following measures:
·
air
transport: the requirement for the controlling
share to be held by the Chinese partner is removed in foreign invested aircraft
maintenance services;
·
business
services: foreign investors can own up to 70% in
joint-venture employment agencies in Zhongguancun (the IT business area), with
the minimum registered capital reduced to US$125,000 from US$300,000;
·
cultural
and entertainment services: fully-owned foreign
companies can set up brokerage agencies for stage performances in certain areas
of the capital;
·
engineering
services: foreign engineering design companies no
longer need to provide proof of a portfolio of work outside China to apply for
authorization to work in Beijing;
·
financial
services: foreign financial institutions will be
allowed to establish fully-owned banks or set up joint-venture banks with
Chinese private capital; and foreign investors will also be allowed to set up
credit investment companies as well as specialized medical insurance
institutions;
·
health
services: approval procedures for the establishment
of foreign invested medical institutions will be simplified; and
·
tourism:
Sino-foreign joint-venture travel agencies will be
allowed to provide outbound travel services (except to Chinese Taipei).
4.6. Earlier this year, India simplified
rules for foreign investment in different sectors by abolishing the various
sub-limits (or caps) on different categories of investment (e.g. foreign
portfolio investment, foreign direct investment) and the creation of an overall
cap for foreign investment for each sector.[89]
4.7. The Russian Federation's amended Law
on Foreign Investment in Strategic Companies[90] now also covers acquisitions of assets in
"strategic" companies if the value of these assets exceeds 25% of the
total value of the company's assets. Such transactions now require prior
approval by the Governmental Commission. In addition, the list of strategic
activities has been amended to include services rendered in ports in the
territory of the Russian Federation (a specific list of such services is to be
drawn up by the Government).
4.8. On 9 April 2015, the Bolivarian Republic of
Venezuela published a measure
(Providencia 011, in Official Gazette 40,636) that restricts the supply of
foreign exchange for travelling purposes or for credit card payments of goods
and services purchased from foreign suppliers through electronic commerce
transactions. The new regulations divide travel destinations into three groups,
and limit the maximum amount of dollars that travellers can spend on any given
trip, with, for example, dollar allocations for trips to the United States
dropping to US$700 from US$2,500. Only state-owned banks are allowed to operate
as foreign exchange brokers. The measure limits the amount of foreign exchange
available for credit card payments of goods and services purchased from foreign
suppliers to US$300 a year.[91]
Audio-visual and
telecommunications services
4.9. As of 1
September 2015, the Authority of Electronic and Postal Communications (AKEP) of
Albania has approved the abolition of
restrictions governing the use of 900 MHz, 1800 MHz and 2.1 GHz spectrum by the
country’s cellular telecom companies[92], and issued the individual
authorizations based on open bid for free remained frequencies in 900/1800 MHZ
as well as in 2.1 GHz and 2.6G Hz. Under the new rules, operators will be
allowed to choose whether to deploy their spectrum for 2G GSM, 3G UMTS, 4G LTE
or WiMAX platforms. In
parallel, a decision by AKEP will permit operators to refarm spectrum in the
900 MHz and 1800 MHz bands, with a view to maximizing the benefits of using of
frequencies based on technology neutrality.[93]
4.10. On 7 September
2015, Algeria's Regulatory Authority for Post and
Telecommunications (Autorité de Régulation de la Poste et des Télécommunications,
ARPT) approved the
interconnection offers submitted by domestic mobile operators Ooredoo Algeria
(Wataniya), Mobilis and Optimum Telecom Algeria (OTA, Djezzy), and fixed line provider Algerie Telecom (AT) for the period
1 July 2015 to 30 June 2016.[94]
4.11. On 18 December 2014, Argentina
enacted the "Digital Argentina" Law (Law 27078, Ley Argentina
Digital), a new telecommunications law replacing the existing legislation from
1972. The new law declares Information Technology and Communications (ICT) services
an "essential and strategic public service" and guarantees
"equal access" of citizens across the country. The measure allows operators
to provide bundled telephone, internet and cable television services, in
practice opening the supply of telephony safeguarding small and medium enterprises and cooperatives. The law also establishes the Federal Authority for Information
Technology and Communications (Autoridad de Aplicación de las Tecnologías de la
Información y las Comunicaciones), the new converged regulatory body
responsible for of all ICT-related matters.[95]
4.12. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC)
published a final decision on 24 August 2015 on mobile termination rates
for the period 1 January 2016 to 30 June 2019.[96] Under the decision, the wholesale price of
terminating calls on an Australian mobile network will be $A 0.017 (US$0.012)
per minute, less than half the current rate. For text messaging, operators will
be required to charge $A 0.03 per SMS to receive messages; a rate below
current commercial rates for SMS termination. The ACCC does not regulate retail
charges, either for mobile calls or SMS, but expects the savings to be passed
onto consumers.
4.13. On 24 September 2014, the Belgian
Institute for Postal Services and Telecommunications (BIPT), through a
Council's decision, confirmed the deregulation of fixed telephony services for
residential and business customers. The watchdog also decided to lift the price
control and transparency obligations imposed on fixed line incumbent, Belgacom,
at the retail level, as the market was increasingly facing competition.[97] This decision follows the EU's "recommendation on relevant
markets" which defines the telecom markets subject to regulation within
the EU in order to ensure sufficient competition between the operators, but
also allows national regulators to remove limits on wholesale prices of a
particular market if it is no longer dominated by a single operator.[98]
4.14. Belgium’s Court of Appeal upheld a ruling by the regulator which
will require regional cable TV, telephony and broadband operators Numericable,
Tecteo and Brutele to open their networks to rivals. In November 2014 the
appeal court ruled that Telenet should open its own infrastructure on a
wholesale basis.[99], [100]
4.15. In Brazil,
a law establishing new standards on telecommunication infrastructure deployment and sharing, referred to as the "Antenna
Law", was published and entered into force on 22 April 2015.[101] The Law makes it compulsory to share the excess capacity on
existing mobile network sections with a view to fostering the emergence of new
players as well as establishes new environmental standards.
4.16. In Decision No. 399 of 12 May 2015, Bulgaria's Commission on Protection of Competition imposed a
fine of Lev 3.75 million on Bulgarian Telecommunications Company (BTC) for abuse of dominance. The antitrust body found in favour of the
complaint by Eastern Telecommunications Company (ETC) that BTC had abused its dominant position by
terminating an interconnection agreement with ETC and imposing a contractual
clause to amend the relationship with ETC, putting ETC at a disadvantage to its competitors.[102]
4.17. In May 2015, Canada's
Radio-television and
Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) issued its final decisions on wholesale wireless roaming.[103] The regulator found that, under current market conditions, competition
in the wireless market is "likely not sustainable". It will therefore regulate the wholesale
roaming rates charged by the national cellular network companies. The CRTC says the action will reduce
barriers faced by mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs).[104]
4.18. In July
2015, the Canadian CRTC
announced new measures in the wholesale fixed broadband market, including a
ruling requiring the largest internet providers to open up their high speed
fibre-based access networks to smaller companies.[105] In its review, the CRTC found that the large
incumbents continue to possess market power in the provision of wholesale high
speed access services, leading it to require that they make their services,
such as fibre-to-the-premises (FTTP), available to competitors. The CRTC’s
decision also ends the currently mandated aggregated wholesale high speed
access and requires them to transition this access to a disaggregated
architecture over a three-year period.[106]
4.19. The Croatian Regulatory Authority for Network Industries (HAKOM)
issued a decision on the terms for internet provider (IP) interconnection. The decision
will ensure interoperability for the country’s IP‑based services providers.[107]
4.20. The Finnish Communications Regulatory
Authority (FICORA) announced four decisions regarding
companies determined to have significant market power in mobile voice call
termination. The decisions represent a tightening of the regulation of mobile
termination rates (MTRs) for all four operators concerned, involving for the
first time a cost-oriented maximum levy for MTRs.[108]
4.21. French telecom regulator Autorité de Régulation des
Communications Electroniques et des Postes (ARCEP) has adopted a decision on
the technical and operational processes of sharing fibre‑to-the-home (FTTH)
networks.[109] The decision regulates the terms defined by
operators for the provision of fibre-optic access to alternative providers and
includes various recommendations to promote improved interoperability between
operators on a non-discriminatory basis.[110]
4.22. The Italian
regulator, AGCOM, has announced that four of the country’s dominant mobile
virtual network operators (MVNOs) must apply the same mobile termination rate
(MTR) as network operators.[111] AGCOM completed an analysis of the market for voice call termination on
individual mobile networks, and says that these mobile resellers are subject to
an MTR of €0.0098 per
minute, covering the period 2014-2017. Although they do not own wireless
spectrum, these MVNOs provide voice termination to other operators over their
own infrastructure.[112]
4.23. The Liberia
Telecommunications Authority (LTA) completed its transition to a new technology neutral Universal Licence
Regime which will allow local operators to provide services based on a range of
technologies without having to seek individual licenses for each technology
employed.[113]
4.24. On 29 October 2014, the Ministry of Telecommunications and New
Technologies of Madagascar announced the enactment
of three decrees for the implementation of the law N° 2005‑023, passed nine
years ago and aimed to reform the telecom sector.[114] The implementing decrees
focus on the total liberalization of the telecommunications market and
establish minimum fees to obtain and renew licences. Furthermore, the rules
will allow the operators to introduce and provide services using new
technologies such as 4G. Finally, infrastructure sharing obligations are
imposed, in order to decrease the amount of pylons and reduce their impact on
the environment and on public health.
4.25. On 31 October 2014, the Regulations to the Foreign Investment Law
and to the National Foreign Investment Registry of Mexico
were amended. Among other issues, the amendments outline the information and
documents that are necessary to obtain a favourable opinion from the National
Commission of Foreign Investments (required by the Federal Telecommunications
Institute) to obtain the concession for broadcasting services involving the
participation of foreign investment, according to the Federal
Telecommunications and Broadcasting Law. In addition, the amendments simplify the
registration requirements imposed by the National Foreign Investment Registry.
4.26. On 26 June
2015, Mexico's Federal Telecommunications Institute (IFT) approved a resolution
establishing the technical and operational conditions necessary for the
effective unbundling of the local network of the country's dominant operator,
so that other telecom suppliers have access to the dominant operator's local
network infrastructure in order to provide telecommunication services. The
establishment of conditions for this process will help ensure effective access
to the local network of the dominant company in the telecommunications sector,
in order to remove barriers to competition and market entry.[115]
4.27. On 6 May 2015, the Ministry of Communications and Information
Technology (MCIT) of Myanmar
published its latest list of licences issued.[116] This covers licences to
provide Network Facilities Services (Individual), which permit licensees to
construct networks, lease access to service providers and offer any type of
public or private telecom service and Network Facilities (Class) concessions
that will permit licensees to deploy and maintain passive infrastructure and to
lease access to service providers. Between February 2014 and March 2015, 26
licences have been awarded to different operators.[117] In addition, for the first
time, two international mobile operators will launch services within the
territory.
4.28. On 7 October 2014, the President of the Office of Electronic
Communications of Poland issued a
resolution on deregulation of broadband access market in 76 municipalities.
This decision was the outcome of a previous analysis of the competitive
situation in each of the 3,000 municipal areas in Poland. This decision
regulates, for the first time since 2007, wholesale access to hi-speed internet
in a more comprehensive manner.[118]
4.29. On 14 October 2014, the President of the Russian
Federation enacted the Federal Law Amending the Law of the Russian
Federation on Mass Media. According to this Law, except as otherwise provided by an international agreement to which the Russian
Federation is a party, the ownership or control of the
share capital of mass media companies by a foreign State, an international
organisation, a citizen of the Russian Federation having the citizenship of
another state, a Russian legal person having a foreign stake in its charter
capital exceeding 20%, a foreign natural person, or a foreign legal person, is
limited to 20%. The law will enter into force on 1 January 2016.
4.30. The Russian Federation adopted a law on 21 July 2014 "on
clarifying the processing of personal data in information and
telecommunications networks".[119] The law obliges all
internet companies to store data about their Russian users only on servers
located in the Russian territory. It took effect on 1 September 2015 (amendment
adopted on 31 December 2014).
4.31. The President of Senegal signed
a decree in June 2015 that will give the country’s telecoms industry regulator,
l’Autorité de Régulation des Télécommunications et des Postes (ARTP), full powers to order domestic telecommunications
companies to divulge accurate information on topics such as communication
traffic volumes. Under the decree, the ARTP will
install and operate monitoring equipment for measuring the volume and quality
of telephone communications exchanged on the networks of domestic operators.[120]
4.32. On 6 March 2015, the House of Parliament of Sierra Leone
adopted the Telecommunications Amendment Act 2015. The amended bill repeals
section 33 of the Telecommunications Act 2006, which entrusted a monopoly over
the telecommunications international gateway to the incumbent operator, the
Sierra Leone Telecommunications Company (SIERRATEL). Before the liberalization,
SIERRATEL had the monopoly for a decade.[121]
4.33. In April 2014, South Africa
passed the Electronic Communications Amendment Act (No. 1 of 2014),
amending the Electronic Communications Act, 2005. Inter alia, the new Act
refines provisions relating to licensing; makes further provision towards
ensuring effective competition amongst persons licensed under the Act; and
removes regulatory bottlenecks.
4.34. The Spanish telecoms regulator (Comisión Nacional de Mercados y
Competencia (CNMC)) announced on 21 July 2015 that it has imposed fines for
both Telefónica España and Yoigo related to anti-competitive roaming agreement
between them. The CNMC specified that the current agreement between the companies
prevented Yoigo from reselling capacity on Telefónica’s network to third parties,
thus hindering Yoigo’s ability to work with mobile virtual network operators
(MVNOs), and constituted a restriction of competition.[122], [123]
4.35. The
telecom committee of Thailand's
National Broadcasting & Telecommunications (NBTC) approved in June 2015 new
significant market player (SMP) definitions for five telecom service categories
in total, divided into wholesale and retail segments, with operators classified
as SMPs subject to stricter rules and price caps. Under new SMP determinations
by the NBTC, all five of the country's mobile network operators are classified
as SMPs in the wholesale cellular network call termination segment. Under
previous market definitions, only the two largest cellular operators were
classified as SMPs in the mobile market as a whole based on a 25% market share
threshold.[124]
4.36. The President
of Ukraine signed a Law on
Electronic Commerce[125] which was adopted by the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine
on 3 September 2015. The Law establishes legal requirements and mechanisms for
remote conclusion and execution of transactions with the use of electronic
information and communication tools and technologies that will make it possible
to guarantee the legitimacy, transparency and reliability of such transactions
and accelerate the integration process into the global information space.[126]
4.37. On 26 February 2015, the United States
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) enacted the Open Internet Order
containing new rules on net neutrality that would apply to fixed and mobile
broadband service providers.[127] The Order focusses on four
points: no blocking, which means that internet service providers (ISP) may not
restrict access to legal content, applications, services or non-harmful
devises; no throttling, which means that no ISP should, intentionally, slow
down the content or speed up others; and no paid prioritization, i.e. ISP would
not be allowed to favour specific lawful internet traffic over other lawful
traffic, in exchange for special consideration of any kind. The new rules also impose
transparency requirements on broadband providers, forcing them to disclose such
information as promotional rates, fees and surcharges and data caps. In order
to apply these provisions, "broadband Internet Access service" is
reclassified as a Telecommunication Services under the Title II of the
Telecommunications Act.[128]
Construction services
4.38. India eased foreign
direct investment rules for the construction sector.[129] Under the new rules
effective 17 April 2014[130], 100% foreign investment,
without prior approval, is now allowed in townships, housing, built-up
infrastructure and construction-development projects with a minimum built area
of 20,000 square metres (down from a previous 50,000 square-metre threshold). Minimum
capitalization of US$10 million is required for wholly‑owned subsidiaries,
while minimum capital for joint-ventures with Indian partners amount to US$5
million.
Energy services
4.39. On 14 May 2015, Mexico's Energy
Regulatory Commission issued Resolution RES/308/2015, which enables the
Commission to issue general administrative provisions regarding licensing
models for activities such as transport, storage, distribution and public sale
of oil, natural gas and other derivatives, as well as management of integrated
systems. According to the government, this resolution brings legal security to
firms acting in the energy sector to the extent that it establishes final
models for licenses for the activities concerned.
Financial services
4.40. In July 2015, the Brazilian
National Council of Private Insurance (CNSP) issued resolutions 322 and 325,
which provide a five year timeframe for the gradual relaxation of the mandatory
cession requirements and the restrictions on intra-group transfers. Mandatory
cession to local reinsurers will be reduced from the current 40% to 30% from 1
January 2017, to 25% from 1 January 2018, to 20% from 1 January 2019, and
to 15% from 1 January 2020. Those limits will no longer be mandatory but
reinsurance companies established in Brazil will retain the right of first
refusal up those limits. Under the revised rules on intra-group prohibition,
the maximum limit for intra-group transfers (i.e. from an insurer or local
reinsurer to a company belonging to the same financial conglomerate) is to be
increased as follows: from the current 20% to 30% from 1 January 2017, to
45% from 1 January 2018, to 60% from 1 January 2019, and to 75% from 1 January
2020.
4.41. According to a circular released on 22 April 2015, starting 1 June, China's State Council will regulate the market access for
bank card transaction clearing institutions.[131] The circular lists the
requirements that need to be fulfilled in order to apply to set up a bank card
clearing institution and to conduct such business in China:
·
organizations will be able to engage in bank card clearing business
after their applications are approved by the authorities and licences issued;
·
the application requirements, covering various aspects, include a
minimum of yuan 1 billion (US$161 million) of registered capital;
·
the banking authorities should decide whether the applications are
approved within 90 working days after receiving the applications. The
applicants should complete preparatory work within one year after approval and
no clearing business is allowed during
the period;
·
applicants are required to officially start bankcard clearing services
within six months after receiving the business permits;
·
requirements are set on the organizations' business, including
protecting the information they acquire from bankcard clearing services;
·
overseas institutions that provide bankcard clearing services for
clients in China should establish foreign-invested enterprises in the country
according to law; and
·
organizations that have already started business should submit
applications for business permits or report their operations to authorities
within a year after the new rule takes effect or they will be forbidden to
continue the business.
4.42. The China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) issued the "Implementing
Measures on Administrative Licensing of Foreign-funded Banks", which
entered into force on 5 June 2015. These are complemented by the "Rules
for the Implementation of the Administrative Regulations of the People's
Republic of China on Foreign-invested Banks", which took effect on 1
September 2015. Together, these new measures lift a number of administrative
licensing requirements applicable to foreign-funded banks in China. The
following aspects of the Implementing Measures are worth noting:[132]
·
some aspects of licensing, which are currently subject to the CBRC's
jurisdiction, are delegated to local banking regulatory authorities;
·
the requirement of prior establishment of a representative office in
China has been removed for (i) the controlling or sole shareholder of a wholly‑foreign-owned
bank; (ii) the major or sole foreign shareholder of a Sino-foreign equity
joint venture bank; and (iii) setting up a foreign bank's branch in China;
·
a foreign-funded bank wishing to set up a branch will no longer need to
allocate an operation fund equivalent to no less than yuan 100 million to the
branch;
·
the requirements for foreign-invested banks to operate yuan business
have been loosened. For example, for an initial application, the bank only
needs to have an operating history in China of more than one year (as opposed
to the minimum three‑year track record currently required) and is no longer
required to submit profit records for its two previous years; and
·
once one branch has been approved to conduct business in yuan, new
branches can begin preparations to use yuan during their setup periods. After a
branch has been examined and approved by the regional CBRC branch, the bank
branch can apply to conduct business with yuan immediately after they open.
4.43. The People's Bank of China (PBOC) has issued the "Circular on
Engagement of Offshore RMB Clearing Banks and Offshore Participating Banks in
Bond Repurchase Business in the Inter‑bank Bond Market" in order to further
open up the domestic bond market. The Circular, which is part of China's
efforts to encourage greater global use of yuan, provides, inter alia,
that foreign banks allowed to engage in the bond repurchase business must be
approved by the PBOC to enter the inter-bank bond market and fall into one of
the following categories: (i) offshore authorised yuan clearing banks
incorporated in a foreign country/region which has established an yuan clearing
arrangement with China; or (ii) offshore banks participating in cross-border yuan
settlement in accordance with relevant PBOC regulations. An inter-bank bond
market settlement agency shall be appointed to handle the relevant trading and
settlement matters.[133]
4.44. On 22 July 2015, the China Insurance Regulatory Commission (CIRC)
released the "Interim Measures for Regulating the Internet Insurance
Business", which took effect on 1 October 2015. The measures allow both
domestic and foreign insurance companies to engage in internet insurance
business. In addition, for selected insurance products (e.g. accident
insurance, some life insurance policies, home property insurance, liability
insurance, credit insurance, and property insurance) the measures allow
insurers to expand their operations to provinces without the need to establish
a licensed branch office.[134]
4.45. The State Council of China
released a guideline in June 2015 that, among other things, will encourage domestic banks and institutions to launch cross-border
electronic payment businesses and advance pilot overseas payments in foreign
currencies. In addition,
the government will seek to foster both
public and private e-commerce platforms and support companies that provide
comprehensive international trade services, while welcoming cooperation between
domestic and foreign e-commerce enterprises.[135], [136]
4.46. In March 2015, India passed
the Insurance Laws (Amendment) Act, 2015[137], which increased foreign
equity ownership in Indian insurance firms from 26% to 49%.[138] Foreign investment of up
to 26% will be allowed without prior government approval, while any investment
above 26% and up to the cap of 49% will require prior government approval from
the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) of India. While the shareholding
cap has been increased, "ownership" and "control" of the company
must remain with Indian residents. Indian ownership is defined to mean more
than 50% of the share equity capital in the hands of Indian residents. Control has
been defined in line with the definition in the consolidated FDI Policy to
include the "right to appoint majority of directors or to control
management or policy decisions including by virtue of their shareholding or
management rights or shareholders agreements or voting agreements." The
Act also recognizes "health insurance" as an exclusive line of business,
and carves it out from general insurance. The amended Law also enables foreign
reinsurers to set up branches in India.
4.47. In line with the reforms of the insurance sector, on 24 April 2015 India
raised the limit of foreign direct investment in the pension sector also to 49%.
According to the press note No. 4 (2015 Series), no government approval is
required to acquire 26% of ownership. But the approval of the FIPB is needed
for investments beyond 26% and up to the cap of 49%.
4.48. On 23 April 2015, the Reserve Bank of India issued a notification (RBI/2014-15/573)
requiring foreign banks that have more than 20 branches to achieve the 40%
total priority sector lending target (to agriculture, SMEs and housing) by
March 2019. Foreign banks with fewer than 20 branches, who were previously
subject to a 32% total priority sector lending target, will now need to move to
a 40% target, on a par with Indian banks, by 2020.
4.49. In September 2014, Indonesia
enacted the revised Insurance Law. The New Law, which replaces Law No. 2 of
1002 on Insurance Business, provides a more comprehensive regulatory framework
for Indonesia's insurance industry under the supervision of the Financial
Services Authority (Otoritas Jasa Keuangan or OJK). The Government has yet to
issue the regulation dealing with foreign ownership of insurance companies and
the legal forms of foreign insurance.
4.50. As part
of its initiatives aiming at developing its capital market, the Republic of Moldova enacted Law No. 117 "On taking provisional
measures on the capital market", which entered into force on 28 May 2015.
This amendment provides for the establishment of a Central Depository for
public interest entities, which will have the exclusive right to carry out the
following activities: financial instruments depositing, registry of securities
holders of public interest entities, and clearing and settlement of financial
instruments admitted to trading on regulated markets.
4.51. In October 2014, the Central Bank of Myanmar
granted provisional approval for nine foreign banks to commence limited
operations, marking a resumption of such services for the first time since
1962. All nine were chosen from a pool of more than 40 lenders with
representative offices in the country, more than half of which opened within
the past three years. The banks, all from the Asia-Pacific region, have been
given 12 months to launch operations. Under the terms set out in October, the
new entrants into the market will only be able to offer wholesale banking
products and services to foreign firms and local banks. They will therefore not
be allowed to engage in normal retail banking. They will be allowed to provide
kyat-denominated loans to domestic companies only through a partnership
arrangement with a registered domestic lender, with interest rates set by the
Central Bank.
4.52. In November 2014, the Monetary Board (MB) of the Philippines released the implementing rules and regulations
(IRR) of Republic Act (R.A.) No. 10641.[139] The new law provides for
the further entry of foreign banks into the Philippines and thus amends R.A.
No. 7721, from 1994. With the approval of the IRR, additional foreign banks can
now apply to operate in the Philippines either as a branch or as a wholly-owned
subsidiary. In addition, the new law allows foreign banks to acquire up to 100%
of the voting stock of an existing domestic bank. This is an increase from the
60% under the previous law (R.A. No. 7721). The R.A. No. 10641 allows foreign
banks to control up to a combined 40% of the total assets of the banking system
(up 10 percentage points from the previous 30% limit). The minimum capital
requirements applicable to foreign bank branches have been aligned with that of
domestic banks of the same category.
4.53. In July 2015, the Russian Federation enacted Federal Law No. 222-FZ on the Operation
of Credit Rating Agencies in the Russian Federation, which establishes a legal
framework for the operation of credit rating agencies in the Russian
Federation. According to the Law, rating activities on the territory of the
Russian Federation can be performed by legal entities established in the form
of a business entity and included in the register of credit rating agencies by
the Bank of Russia. The minimum net worth (capital) of a rating agency is set
at Rub 50 million. In addition, representative offices of foreign rating
agencies are entitled to represent and protect their interests in the Russian
Federation as of the date of their inclusion in the register of representative
offices of foreign credit rating agencies, while branches of foreign rating
agencies are allowed to perform certain aspects of rating activities in the
Russian Federation as of the date of their inclusion in the register of
branches of foreign credit rating agencies.[140]
4.54. On 22 April 2015, Chinese Taipei's
Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC) agreed to allow branches of foreign
financial institutions to raise and issue international corporate bonds on the
professional board in its jurisdiction provided the following conditions are
met: (i) a holding company of a foreign financial institution is listed on an
approved overseas securities market; and (ii) the holding company's holds,
directly or indirectly, a total of more than half the foreign financial
institution's stock rights or voting rights and includes the institution in its
consolidated financial statements. In the past, if a branch of a foreign
financial institution wanted to raise and issue international corporate bonds,
its stock had to be already listed and traded on an approved stock market,
however, today international financial institutions have widely changed to
listing on various international stock markets using a holding group method
rather than have the institution itself listed.
4.55. In addition, Chinese Taipei's FSC amended "The Regulations
Governing Foreign Bank Branches and Representative Offices", effective as
of 30 June 2015. Under the amendment, when a
foreign bank branch with financial soundness extends credit for client’s
M&A activities, the bridge‑loan part of the credit may not be subject to
the NTD single lending limit to a same person, same related party or same
affiliated entity.
4.56. As part of the modernization of its securities legislation, in May
2015 Viet Nam issued Decree 42-2015-ND-CP,
which came into force on 1 July 2015, and which establishes a new derivatives
market. Both Vietnamese entities and foreign entities (including branches of
foreign banks and branches of foreign insurance companies) are allowed to
invest on the derivatives market. In order to invest in derivatives, any
investor must have opened a derivatives trading account with the relevant
trading member. Any transaction in derivatives on the stock exchange shall be
conducted by trading members. Only Vietnamese entities can be trading members.
Decree 42-2015-ND-CP distinguishes between a "derivatives securities
trading member", which is a Vietnamese securities company permitted to
conduct activities of derivatives self-trading, brokerage and consultancy, and
a "special trading member", which is a Vietnamese commercial bank permitted
to invest in derivatives whose underlying assets are bonds.[141]
Health Services
4.57. On 25 July 2014, China's National
Health and Family Planning Commission issued the Notice on Establishing Wholly
Foreign-Owned Hospitals, which allows foreign investors in wholly‑owned hospitals
in Beijing, Tianjin and Shanghai and the provinces of Jiangsu, Fujian,
Guangdong and Hainan as part of a pilot test.[142] Foreign suppliers should
have experience in medical and health investment and management, and meet one
of the following requirements: (i) being capable of offering advanced
hospital management ideas, and management and service models; (ii) being capable
of offering advanced medical technology and equipment; and (iii) being capable
of improving local medical service, technology, fund and facilities. The wholly‑foreign‑owned
hospitals should meet basic national medical institute standards.
Transport services
4.58. Australia has recently
relaxed foreign ownership restrictions in the Qantas airline. On 8 August
2014, the Qantas Sale Amendment Act 2014 received Royal assent. According to
the Act, ownership by a single foreign investor may now exceed 25% and
aggregate ownership by foreign airlines may now exceed 35%. However,
foreigners may, cumulatively, still not own more than 49% in Qantas.
4.59. Effective 17 April 2014[143], India
permitted 100% foreign direct investment, without prior authorization, in several
activities of the railway transportation sector, such as high speed train
projects, railway electrification, signalling systems and freight and passenger
terminals. However, FDI beyond 49% of the company in sensitive areas from a
national security point of view will be authorized by the Cabinet Committee on
Security on a case-by-case basis.
4.60. In April 2015, Indonesia
introduced new regulations for the freight forwarding business.[144] The regulations are
effective immediately, with a three-year transition period. The new regulations
raised minimum capital requirements for foreign
or joint venture companies to US$10 million (of which US$2 million of paid-up
capital).
4.61. Mexico recently
amended its Navigation and Maritime Commerce Law. Effective on
4 April 2015, the new Regulation provides a clearer process to allow
foreign entities to secure temporary permits to operate foreign-flagged vessels
and naval artefacts, such as rigs and production platforms, in Mexican coastal
waters. The new Regulation also adds specific provisions and standards for ship
building, including the granting of authorizations for shipyards to operate in
Mexico. In addition, the Regulation contains new regulations in the area of
pollution prevention, which may impact maritime transport and port services.
4.62. Law No. 150 of 17 July 2014 (Road Transport Code) of the Republic of
Moldova requires mandatory licensing
for the transport of goods in international and national traffic. Licences for
international traffic are issued for a period of eight years (effective 1
January 2015), while licences for national traffic are valid for a period of five
years (effective 1 January 2016).
Services supplied through the
movement of natural persons
4.63. On 1 March 2015, Chile
introduced a new "Temporary Residence for Work Purposes" work visa
category. The multiple-entry visa, which has an initial duration of one year,
allows foreigners to enter the country with an employment contract and
subsequently change employers, and perform unlimited work activities. It also
exempts employers from paying repatriation costs once their employee leaves
Chile.[145]
4.64. Egypt's Ministry of
Manpower has announced that, starting from February 2015, new work permit
applications are subject to labour market testing requirements.
4.65. India further expanded
its e-Tourist Visa (eTV) facility, which enables business visitors and those
travelling to the country to sightsee, visit friends or relatives or seek short
medical treatment to apply on-line for a 30-day visa. As of mid-August 2015, the eTV covered
applicants entering the country from a total of 113 countries at a total of 16
designated ports of arrival.[146]
4.66. Indonesia issued
Regulation 16/2015 on Procedures for the Utilization of Foreign Employees on 29
June 2015. The Regulation sets out, inter alia, a
requirement that companies employing expatriates maintain a new
local-to-foreign workers ratio of 10 Indonesian nationals for each expatriate.
The ratio will not apply to foreign employees entering the country as directors
or administrators, for emergency or urgent work, for entertainment services or
for temporary work. Several measures aimed at streamlining visa or work permit
application processes were also introduced over the reporting period.
4.67. Ireland's new Trusted
Partner Initiative allows entitled employers to benefit, inter alia,
from a faster turnaround time for applications and from having to submit fewer documents
and details.[147]
4.68. Kenya introduced on
1 July 2015 an online platform for visa applicants (eVisa), to
replace visas on arrival and thus streamline the application process.[148]
4.69. On 15 July 2015, Malaysia
introduced a new Employment Pass category (EPIII). This Category III caters to
workers with basic salaries between RM 2,500 and RM 4,999, whose employment
period do not exceed 12 months and who are employed in specific industries
(including, for instance, business, education, financial, healthcare, tourism
and retail services). EPIII can be renewed, subject to review, up to a maximum
of two times.[149]
4.70. On 1 July 2015, New Zealand
implemented an online student, work and visitor visa application system called "Immigration
ONLINE" that should enable faster processing times compared to paper
applications.[150] The new platform allows
foreign nationals and, in some instances, their agents to apply and pay for a
visa online, as well as to upload supporting documentation.[151]
4.71. In May 2015, South Africa
launched a premium processing service for eligible employers who register with
the relevant Department of Home Affairs unit; the service should lead to a
shorter processing time of four weeks for most visas and immigration
applications.[152]
4.72. The Swiss Government has set the 2015
quotas for short-term work permits (L-permits) and for long-term work permits
(B-permits) at 2,500 and 4,000, respectively, for non-EU/EFTA applicants, and
at 250 and 2,000 for EU/EFTA applicants.[153]
4.73. Foreign business visitors to Thailand are
allowed to perform a longer list of activities, including attending business
meetings, seminars or conferences, as of 13 March 2015, without
needing to obtain a work authorisation.
4.74. Since 22 December 2014, intra-corporate transferees
working in several services industries in Viet Nam
may apply for an exemption from work permit requirements. The exemption is
available to intra-corporate transferees that are managers, specialists or
technicians who have been in the employment of the company for at least one
year prior to their transfer to Viet Nam.
Box 2 Policy and regulatory trends in the telecommunications sector
Market opportunities
for telecommunications and ICT services continue to grow as governments award
new licenses and expand the scope of existing ones, particularly for mobile
services. This, in turn, is spurring intense activity in the realm of
spectrum allocation and assignment. Spectrum is increasingly being managed so
as to hasten the transition to broadband mobile technologies (e.g. 4G, LTE,
5G) with higher quality capability for internet and other mobile
applications. Examples of governments recently moving to expand the
availability of these technologies include Albania;
Cabo Verde; Chile; Macao, China; Mexico; the Republic of Moldova; Kenya;
Paraguay; Poland; Romania; Chinese Taipei; Thailand; Ukraine and some EU member
States, namely Austria; Bulgaria; France and Germany. The number of governments releasing new and refarmed
spectrum, typically via auctions, is such that it could be described as
universal. In some cases, additional
spectrum is being assigned to existing operators, but often it is awarded to
new licensees benefitting from open markets. Many foreign service suppliers
that have established or wish to establish a commercial presence (GATS mode
3) are benefitting from this trend.
The
growth of the mobile sector has also
lead to a shift in regulatory approaches aimed at fostering a pro‑competitive
environment for all players, foreign and domestic, and for the ultimate
benefit of consumers. For many years, governments steered clear of price
regulation in the mobile sector as it evolved from a luxury service to a mass
market phenomenon that, in most markets, now outstrips fixed telephony by
significant margins. More recently,
governments have begun moving to remedy high mobile termination rates
perceived as resulting from the market power of large mobile players. Recent
examples include Australia, Belgium, Finland, Italy, the Kingdom of Saudi
Arabia and Thailand. Others, including Canada and the EU, have started to
address high mobile roaming rates that seemed to bear little or no relation
to costs of termination. Similarly,
number portability for mobile telephony remains a key technique of better
insuring competitive conditions among mobile operators and governments continue to adopt it, where
they had not done so before, or to improve its application where it did
exist. Recent examples of governments introducing number portability include El Salvador, Senegal, Tunisia and Ukraine. Others, including Switzerland, are
adopting improvements to the process.
Another emerging trend
involves the coming of age of mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs), i.e. resellers of
mobile services that employ the networks of other
mobile operators, thereby offering lower-cost options to consumers. Although often permitted previously in
industrialized countries, MVNOs are now more commonly being introduced around
the world. Recent examples of governments issuing MVNO licenses include China and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. This trend has also lead governments to look more closely at
regulating the wholesale pricing of mobile networks so as to ensure a level
playing field for the MVNOs. In addition, as the market matures, MVNOs are also
becoming subject of termination rate regulation, for example in Italy.
Other
ongoing developments touch on a
variety of issues that have arisen, in part, due to ICT convergence and
technological change. Governments
are increasingly including broadband
access within the ambit their universal service strategies or setting up separate
mechanisms for raising broadband penetration. Telecommunications regulators
are frequently being transformed into ICT regulators with broader mandates.
To facilitate operators' shifts toward new technologies, technology neutral
licensing is also becoming increasingly common. In addition, high demand for
access to and use of networks by a wider gamut of players have led more
regulators to consider introducing "net neutrality" measures, i.e.
measures requiring non-discriminatory access terms and conditions. Greater
demand for facilities and the resources they may require is also ushering in
a trend, encouraged and sometimes even mandated by governments, in
infrastructure sharing arrangements among operators. Finally, merger and
acquisition activity levels remain high, with sector regulators and/or
competition authorities often assuming a role in approving or denying such
moves based on their analysis of the potential market implications.
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
5.1. This section aims to provide an overview of the compliance and
timeliness of Members' notifications to the WTO. Notifications are the primary
instrument for ensuring transparency in the multilateral trading system; they
are submitted by each Member and reviewed by the relevant bodies of the WTO.
The importance attached by governments to this issue explains the very
elaborate system of notifications and cross-notifications put in place under
the terms of most Agreements. The section covers the compliance record of
notification requirements in the different WTO Bodies.[154]
5.2. The Committee on Agriculture
continued its review of the implementation of Members'
commitments under the Agreement. Members' notifications remain the primary
basis for the Committee to conduct the review process and the Committee
provides detailed guidance for the notifying Members, including the common
notification formats in various areas as well as the timelines to be respected in
furnishing those notifications. There are 12 distinct notification requirements
covering the following five areas: (i) market access; (ii) domestic support;
(iii) export subsidies; (iv) export prohibitions or restrictions; and (v)
follow-up to the Marrakesh Net Food-Importing Developing Countries Decision.
5.3. Timely
and complete notifications are fundamental for effective monitoring of the
implementation of commitments. Chart 5.1 presents an overview of Members'
compliance with notification obligations for the period 2009-14 in respect of five "regular" or
"annual" notification requirements, i.e. Table MA:2 (imports under tariff quotas),
Table MA:5 (special safeguard),
Table DS:1 (domestic
support), and Tables ES:1 and ES:2 (export
subsidies). Annual notifications are required to be submitted soon after the
end of the year in question.[155]
The distribution of outstanding notifications by group of countries is
presented in Chart 5.2. The information concerning the
2014 implementation year is provided for information only and does not
necessarily indicate that the notifications are now due.
5.4. Notifications remain outstanding for the
reporting period with respect to all five notification requirements. The lack
of compliance with notification obligations is especially visible for
notification requirements related to agricultural subsidization (i.e. DS:1 and
ES:1).[156]
For example, for nearly all the years reported, compliance with notification
obligations in the areas of domestic support and export subsidies were the lowest
among the five notification requirements. For the most recent reporting year,
2014, the percentage of outstanding DS:1 and ES:1 notifications is 88% and 82%,
respectively, thus implying compliance rates for these categories of
notifications of 12% and 18%, respectively. At the time of this report, the
percentage of outstanding notifications of imports under tariff quotas was 85%.
However in previous years, this notification requirement has been among those
with the highest rates of compliance compared to the other notification
obligations. (Chart 5.2 also indicates that the number of outstanding
notifications is typically higher for recent years because of the time lag
between the end of the reporting period and the submission of notifications for
many Members).
5.5. The different deadlines for
notifications in agriculture as well as the varying reporting years used by
Members can make it difficult to compare the timeliness aspect of the
notifications across the WTO membership. However, one indicator of timeliness
of notifications is the "average reporting years per notification".
For example, a notification which covers more than one reporting year implies
that a Member has missed the prescribed timelines at least in respect of years
other than the latest year covered in the notification. Table 5.1 presents
information on the average reporting years per notification with respect to
notifications circulated during 2010-15. This average remains slightly greater
than two for all years in that period. In other words, on average, Members did
not respect the prescribed timelines in respect of at least half of the
reporting years.
Chart 5.1 Current outstanding
notifications in agriculture (%)
Source: WTO Secretariat.
Chart
5.2 Outstanding
notifications by country group (%)
Source: WTO Secretariat.
Table
5.1 Number of
agriculture notifications
Total
(MA:2,
MA:5, DS:1, ES:1, ES:2)
|
2010
|
2011
|
2012
|
2013
|
2014
|
2015a
|
Number of notifications
(excluding Add., Corr. and Rev.)
|
128
|
134
|
156
|
109
|
178
|
111
|
Total number
of years reported
|
321
|
324
|
365
|
242
|
441
|
307
|
Average of years reported per notification
|
2.51
|
2.42
|
2.34
|
2.22
|
2.48
|
2.77
|
a Until
15 October.
Source: WTO Secretariat.
5.6. The 162 notifications issued in the
period from mid-October 2014 to mid-October 2015, together reported information
on 385 years, with some notifications reporting as high as 18 years in the same
notification (Table 5.2). Nevertheless, the increase in the number of
notifications issued per year and in the number of years reported demonstrate
the increased effort by Members in recent years to bring their notifications
up-to-date.
Table 5.2 Notifications
reporting more than one year (mid-October 2014 to mid‑October 2015)
Member
|
Notification
|
Format
|
Issue date
|
Number of years reported
|
Chad
|
G/AG/N/TCD/1
|
ES:1
|
20-May-2015
|
18
|
Chad
|
G/AG/N/TCD/2
|
DS:1
|
21-Sep-2015
|
18
|
Sri Lanka
|
G/AG/N/LKA/5
|
ES:1
|
26-Aug-2015
|
17
|
Malaysia
|
G/AG/N/MYS/34
|
MA:2
|
27-Mar-2015
|
16
|
Zimbabwe
|
G/AG/N/ZWE/6
|
ES:1
|
08-Sep-2015
|
15
|
Malaysia
|
G/AG/N/MYS/34/CORR.1
|
MA:2
|
28-Sep-2015
|
14
|
Moldova, Republic
of
|
G/AG/N/MDA/4
|
ES:1
|
01-Jun-2015
|
13
|
United Arab Emirates
|
G/AG/N/ARE/6
|
ES:1
|
23-Jan-2015
|
12
|
United Arab Emirates
|
G/AG/N/ARE/7
|
DS:1
|
26-Mar-2015
|
12
|
Moldova, Republic of
|
G/AG/N/MDA/3
|
DS:1
|
15-Jan-2015
|
9
|
Barbados
|
G/AG/N/BRB/21
|
MA:5
|
03-Mar-2015
|
7
|
Zimbabwe
|
G/AG/N/ZWE/7
|
ES:2
|
09-Sep-2015
|
7
|
Trinidad and Tobago
|
G/AG/N/TTO/13
|
ES:1
|
12-Aug-2015
|
6
|
Trinidad and Tobago
|
G/AG/N/TTO/14
|
DS:1
|
13-Aug-2015
|
6
|
Guatemala
|
G/AG/N/GTM/50
|
MA:2
|
25-Sep-2015
|
6
|
Mexico
|
G/AG/N/MEX/27/CORR.1
|
ES:1, ES:2
|
05-Nov-2014
|
5
|
Pakistan
|
G/AG/N/PAK/16
|
DS:1
|
16-Mar-2015
|
5
|
Mexico
|
G/AG/N/MEX/28
|
DS:1
|
15-Sep-2015
|
5
|
Moldova, Republic of
|
G/AG/N/MOL/4/REV.1
|
DS:1
|
14-Jan-2015
|
4
|
Cambodia
|
G/AG/N/KHM/3
|
ES:1
|
02-Apr-2015
|
4
|
Cambodia
|
G/AG/N/KHM/4
|
DS:1
|
07-Apr-2015
|
4
|
Tunisia
|
G/AG/N/TUN/45
|
DS:1
|
24-Aug-2015
|
4
|
South Africa
|
G/AG/N/ZAF/84
|
MA:5
|
07-Sep-2015
|
4
|
Japan
|
G/AG/N/JPN/198
|
ES:3
|
16-Oct-2014
|
3
|
Korea, Republic of
|
G/AG/N/KOR/53
|
DS:1
|
20-Jan-2015
|
3
|
Brazil
|
G/AG/N/BRA/35
|
MA:2
|
26-Jan-2015
|
3
|
South Africa
|
G/AG/N/ZAF/83
|
DS:1
|
26-Feb-2015
|
3
|
South Africa
|
G/AG/N/ZAF/85
|
ES:2, ES:3
|
25-Sep-2015
|
3
|
European Union
|
G/AG/N/EU/21
|
NF:1
|
30-Oct-2014
|
2
|
United States
|
G/AG/N/USA/99
|
ES:1, ES:2
|
05-Nov-2014
|
2
|
Canada
|
G/AG/N/CAN/103
|
MA:2
|
18-Nov-2014
|
2
|
United States
|
G/AG/N/USA/99/CORR.1
|
ES:1, ES:2
|
20-Nov-2014
|
2
|
Samoa
|
G/AG/N/WSM/2
|
ES:1
|
24-Nov-2014
|
2
|
Samoa
|
G/AG/N/WSM/1
|
DS:1
|
25-Nov-2014
|
2
|
Korea, Republic of
|
G/AG/N/KOR/50
|
MA:2
|
09-Jan-2015
|
2
|
Switzerland
|
G/AG/N/CHE/59/CORR.1
|
ES:1, ES:2, ES:3
|
16-Jan-2015
|
2
|
Switzerland
|
G/AG/N/CHE/71
|
ES:1, ES:2, ES:3
|
21-Jan-2015
|
2
|
Australia
|
G/AG/N/AUS/95
|
MA:5
|
10-Feb-2015
|
2
|
Paraguay
|
G/AG/N/PRY/22
|
ES:1
|
10-Feb-2015
|
2
|
Paraguay
|
G/AG/N/PRY/22/CORR.1
|
ES:1
|
11-Feb-2015
|
2
|
Dominican Republic
|
G/AG/N/DOM/24
|
ES:1
|
03-Mar-2015
|
2
|
Paraguay
|
G/AG/N/PRY/23
|
DS:1
|
04-Mar-2015
|
2
|
Jordan
|
G/AG/N/JOR/17
|
DS:1
|
10-Mar-2015
|
2
|
Argentina
|
G/AG/N/ARG/33
|
ES:1, ES:2
|
11-Mar-2015
|
2
|
Oman
|
G/AG/N/OMN/14
|
ES:1
|
31-Mar-2015
|
2
|
Armenia
|
G/AG/N/ARM/23
|
DS:1
|
13-Apr-2015
|
2
|
Armenia
|
G/AG/N/ARM/25
|
ES:1
|
13-Apr-2015
|
2
|
Australia
|
G/AG/N/AUS/97
|
DS:1
|
20-Apr-2015
|
2
|
Canada
|
G/AG/N/CAN/106
|
MA:5
|
28-Apr-2015
|
2
|
Canada
|
G/AG/N/CAN/107
|
MA:2
|
28-Apr-2015
|
2
|
China
|
G/AG/N/CHN/28
|
DS:1
|
06-May-2015
|
2
|
European Union
|
G/AG/N/EU/24
|
MA:2
|
28-May-2015
|
2
|
Canada
|
G/AG/N/CAN/108
|
ES:1, ES:2, ES:3
|
01-Jul-2015
|
2
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
5.7. The lack of timeliness in Member's
notification is particularly evident in the area of agricultural subsidization.
Chart 5.3 provides information on the average reporting years per notification
in domestic support notifications circulated during the years 2009-14. In many
of the years, this average remains close to three; in 2014 the average of years
reported per notification was as high as 3.3, implying that less than one-third
of total domestic notifications were submitted according to the prescribed
submission deadlines.
Chart
5.3 Number of
agriculture notifications - domestic support
* Until 15 October 2015
Source: WTO Secretariat.
5.8. The notification of quantitative restrictions to the Market Access
Committee is an obligation established by the 2012 Decision on Notification
Procedures for Quantitative Restrictions (G/L/59/Rev.1). The Decision requires
Members to notify every two years the QRs they have in force, as well as any
changes in the interim. The Decision also gives Members the possibility of
making reverse notification of QRs maintained by another Member. Since the last
report, eight Members have submitted complete notifications to the Secretariat,
and two notifications related to changes to existing QRs.
5.9. The Decision on Reverse Notification of Non-Tariff Measures (G/L/60)
gives Members the possibility of making reverse notifications of non-tariff
measures imposed by another Member subject to certain conditions. Only one
notification has been made since the adoption of the decision in 1995.
Table 5.3 Notification procedures for QRs
No.
|
Notification
requirement
|
Number of
notifications received since the last report
(15 October 2014 – 12 October 2015)
|
1
|
Quantitative restrictions in force (regular
notification)
|
Biennial period 2012-2014: one Member submitted
complete notification.
Biennial period 2014-2016: seven Members submitted
complete notifications.
|
2
|
Changes to the
quantitative restrictions maintained
(ad hoc)
or introduction of new restrictions
|
Two Members notified
modifications in relation to their 2014-2016 notification.
|
3
|
Restrictions maintained
by other Members
(reverse notification)
|
No Member has notified.
|
4
|
Non-tariff measures,
maintained by other Members
(reverse notification)
|
No Member has notified.
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
5.10. Notification requirements in the
area of import licensing procedures result from the WTO Agreement on Import
Licensing Procedures and are complemented by the "Procedures for
Notification and Review under the Agreement on Import Licensing Procedures"
adopted by the Committee on Import Licensing in 1995 (G/LIC/3) and the
"Understanding on Procedures for the Review of Notifications submitted
under the Agreement on Import Licensing Procedures" adopted on 23 October
1996 (G/LIC/4). The notification requirements are described in Table 5.4.
Table 5.4 Notification
procedures for import licensing
No.
|
Notification requirement
|
Established in:
|
Type
|
Notification
Category
|
1
|
Submission of
full texts of relevant laws and regulations and any changes thereto
|
Article
8.2(b) of the Agreement; G/LIC/3
|
One-off and
ad hoc
|
N/1
|
2
|
Sources
in which information concerning import licensing procedures are published
|
Article
1.4(a) of the Agreement; G/LIC/3
|
One-off and
ad hoc
|
N/1
|
3
|
New
import licensing procedures and changes to existing procedures
|
Article
5 of the Agreement
|
Ad hoc
|
N/2
|
4
|
Reply
to the Questionnaire on Import Licensing Procedures
|
Article 7.3 of the Agreement; G/LIC/2
|
Annual, by 30 September
each year
|
N/3
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
5.11. The N/1 notification requires a WTO
Member to notify all relevant laws and regulations with regard to import licensing procedures as well as identify the
source/publications containing such information. It contains both a one-off
element (notification of existing laws and regulations and source/publications)
and an ad hoc element (changes to laws and
regulations thereafter). In theory, a WTO Member should have at least one N/1
submission, providing its laws and regulations on import licensing and
indicating that its Government does not maintain any import licensing regime.
5.12. The N/2 notification is an obligation for Members to notify new
licensing procedures or changes being made to existing procedures. It is ad hoc in nature and only due when specific circumstances
occur. The N/3 notification obliges each Member to reply to a Questionnaire
describing all import licensing procedures in place by 30 September every year.
5.13. As of 9 October 2015, 68 new
notifications under the Agreement on Import Licensing have been received and
circulated by the Secretariat. Of these, 16 were N/1 notifications from the
following members: Australia; Brazil; Cameroon; EU; Hong Kong, China; Mexico;
Montenegro; Russian Federation; Macao, China; Paraguay; Peru; Philippines and
Chinese Taipei. The Committee also reviewed 16 N/2 notifications,
relating to the institution of new import licensing procedures or changes in
these procedures, from the following members: Australia;
Brazil; EU; Hong Kong, China; Indonesia; Malawi; Mexico; Paraguay; Sri Lanka
and Viet Nam. Finally, 36 N/3 notifications have been
received and reviewed from the following members: Australia; Brazil; Cameroon;
Canada; Chile; China; Cuba; EU; Haiti; Hong Kong, China; Japan; Jordan;
Liechtenstein; Macao, China; Malawi; Malaysia; Mauritius; the Republic of
Moldova; Montenegro; Nepal; Nicaragua; Panama; Paraguay; Peru; Philippines;
Qatar; Russian Federation; Saint Vincent and the Grenadines; Singapore; Chinese
Taipei; Trinidad and Tobago; Turkey; Ukraine; the United States and Zimbabwe.
5.14. The Agreement on Rules of Origin contains two notification
obligations, described in Table 5.5. Recent notifications have improved
the overall compliance with notification obligations; about 70% of Members have
already submitted information about their preferential or non‑preferential
rules of origin (or the absence thereof).
Table
5.5 Notification
procedures for rules of origin
No.
|
Legal source
|
Notification requirement
|
Type
|
1
|
Article 5 of the Agreement
|
Non-Preferential
Rules of Origin: All Members
must submit a notification indicating:
-
if
they apply non-preferential rules of origin (informing what the rules are);
-
or
if they do not apply any non-preferential rules of origin
Changes
to the legislation must also be notified.
|
One-off
|
2
|
Paragraph 4 of Annex II of the Agreement
|
Preferential Rules of Origin: Members only notify if they adopt new
preferential rules of origin or if they make changes to existing preferential
rules (e.g. new Free Trade Agreements or other new trade preferences)
|
Ad hoc
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
5.15. To date, 44 Members have notified the Committee that they do
implement some type of non‑preferential rules of origin; 51 Members have
notified that they do not implement rules of origin for non-preferential
purposes; whereas 38 Members have never submitted notifications to the
Committee.
5.16. A new development in the area of rules of origin in the WTO is the recent
Ministerial Decision on Preferential Rules of Origin for LDCs (WT/L/917). The
Decision provides a number of best practices and guidelines regarding
preferential rules of origin with a view to facilitating market access for LDCs
provided under non-reciprocal preferential trade arrangements. It requires the Committee
on Rules of Origin to monitor new developments in this area and to report back
to the General Council and to inform the Sub-Committee on LDCs.
5.17. Notifications in the area of customs valuation stem not only from
the Agreement on Customs Valuation itself, but also from a number of Decisions
that have been adopted by the Committee on Customs Valuation. There are five
main notification requirements (Table 5.6).
Table
5.6 Notification procedures
for customs valuation
No.
|
Notification requirement
|
Established in:
|
Type
|
1
|
Submission of complete texts of national legislation (laws,
regulations, etc.)
|
Decision on the Notification and circulation of national
legislation in accordance with Article 22
of the Agreement
(G/VAL/5, B.2, paragraph (i))
|
One-off
|
2
|
Changes in laws and regulations on customs valuation
|
Article 22.2 of the Agreement on Customs Valuation
|
Ad hoc
|
3
|
Responses to the checklist of issues
|
Decision on the Checklist of Issues
(G/VAL/5, B.3)
|
One-off
|
4
|
Decision on interest charges - Date of implementation
|
Decision on the treatment of interest charges in the customs value of
imported goods (G/VAL/5, A.3, last paragraph)
|
One-off
|
5
|
Decision on Carrier Media (software) -
Application of paragraph 2
|
Decision on the valuation of carrier media
bearing software for data processing equipment (G/VAL/5, A.4, paragraph 2)
|
Ad hoc
|
Source: WTO
Secretariat.
5.18. The notification requirements in the area of customs valuation are
either one-off or ad hoc, which means that
different approaches are required to estimate their level of compliance. In
addition, any estimate must take into account that the EU notifies on behalf a
group of Members, and that this number has changed several times since the WTO
entered into force.
5.19. Taking all these elements into account, the maximum number of
one-off notifications as of 10 October 2015 cover 132 members (counting the EU
as one). This denominator has been used to estimate the degree of compliance
for the following notifications (i) submission of the complete texts of
national legislation; (ii) responses to the checklist of issues; and (iii) date
of implementation of the Decision on the treatment of interest charges in the
customs value of imported goods (Table 5.7).
5.20. Because ad hoc
notifications are, by definition, only due when specific circumstances occur,
there is no maximum number of notifications that can be used to estimate the
overall degree of compliance. This is the case of the: (i) changes in laws and
regulations on customs valuation; and (ii) application of paragraph 2 of the
Decision on Carrier Media (software).
Table 5.7 Compliance in
customs valuation notifications
No
|
Notification requirement
|
Compliance
as of 30 September 2015
|
1
|
Submission of complete texts of national
legislation (laws, regulations, etc.)
|
The large bulk of these notifications were
received before 2003 and not many notifications have been received since
then. The current compliance rate is
approximately 73%, as 36 Members still need to fulfil this notification
requirement.
|
2
|
Changes in laws and regulations on customs
valuation
|
Since
this is an ad hoc type of notification
(i.e. a Member is only required to notify if there is a change in its national
legislation), it is not possible to assess the level of compliance. Only 37 notifications of changes to their
national legislation on customs valuation have been notified by 28 Members
since 1995.
|
3
|
Responses to the checklist of issues
|
The large bulk of these notifications were
received before 2003 and progress has been very slow since then. The current compliance level stands at
approximately 52%, as 64 Members still need to fulfil this requirement.
|
4
|
Decision on interest charges - Date of
implementation
|
The level of compliance of this
notification is very low as 44 of the Members have submitted it. This means that 87 Members still need to
notify the date in which they implemented the Decision on interest charges.
|
5
|
Decision on Carrier Media (software) -
Application of paragraph 2
|
Since
this is an ad hoc notification (i.e. a
Member is only required to notify if it imports of carrier media bearing data
and software are valued as provided for in paragraph 2 of the Decision), it
is not possible to assess the level of compliance. To date, 43 Members have made this
notification, but it is not possible to know whether there are Members
applying the paragraph without having submitted the notification.
|
Source: WTO
Secretariat.
5.21. Article 5 of the Agreement on
Preshipment Inspection provides that Members shall submit to the Secretariat
copies of the laws and regulations by which they put the Agreement into force,
as well as copies of any other laws and regulations relating to preshipment
inspection. Changes in such laws and regulations shall also be notified
immediately after their publication. Since the last report, two Members have
submitted notifications relating to PSI to the Committee on Customs Valuation,
which is the body responsible for administering the implementation of the PSI
agreement (see Table 5.8).
Table 5.8 Compliance with PSI
notifications
No
|
Notification
requirement
|
Notifications
received in 2015 (up to 13 October)
|
1
|
Submission of copies of laws
and regulations putting the Agreement into force
|
No Member
|
2
|
Other laws and regulations relating to PSI
|
One Member - Congo
|
3
|
Changes
in laws and regulations relating to PSI
|
No Member
|
4
|
Absence
of laws and regulations on PSI
|
One Member - Malawi
|
Source: WTO
Secretariat.
5.22. The submission of tariff and trade information to the Integrated
Database (IDB) is a notification requirement provided for in the General Council Decision of 16 July 1997
(WT/L/225).[157]
To overcome gaps in Members' notifications and delays
in providing the information to users the Committee on Market Access adopted in
July 2009 a framework to enhance the IDB notifications compliance and gave the
WTO Secretariat flexibility to collect missing data from other official sources
subject to Member's approval (G/MA/239). The information included in the IDB is
therefore either directly notified to the Secretariat by Members or collected
by the Secretariat and then subsequently approved by the Members concerned.
5.23. The IDB is the only database where proactive data collection by the
Secretariat has been established by Members to assist them in complying with
their WTO notification requirements. Since the adoption of the IDB framework
decision in 2009, completeness and timeliness have significantly improved. The
IDB approach can serve as a "good-practice" example for other
databases based on notifications with respect to the data collection policy and
the establishment of a network of data providers and of reliable data sources.
Much of the information, including the information that Members have to notify
to the WTO, can now be found through the Internet for free.
5.24. The IDB notifications currently cover, on average, 79% of the
expected data series with tariff notifications being generally more complete
than the import notifications. Overall, 77% of the available IDB data were
notified by Members and the rest were collected by the Secretariat mainly
through government websites, regional secretariats and international
organizations. The timeliness of submissions has also improved in the recent
years wherein around half of notifications are collected for integration to the
database within the prescribed deadlines.
5.25. Chart 5.4 and Chart 5.5 present the number of tariff and import
notifications received by the IDB, the number of notifications directly
submitted by Members and the number of notifications collected by the
Secretariat. The completeness of notifications is calculated based on the
number of Members' schedules and not on the number of WTO Members (i.e. EU member
States all fall under the EU schedule and Lichtenstein reports with
Switzerland).
5.26. The IDB coverage has improved significantly in recent years as, in
addition to the regular submissions by Members, a good number of data gaps have
been filled in with relevant information collected by the Secretariat. As of
end September 2015, the yearly average coverage of IDB notifications was 82%
for tariffs and 76% for imports. The
most complete year in terms of data availability for tariff was in 2011 with
98% and 2006 for imports at 94%. As of the last IDB status of submission
(G/MA/IDB/2/Rev.42 dated 22 September 2015), about 27 Members (of which 19 are
developing) have complete tariff data up to the year 2014 and 23 Members (of
which 15 are developing) have complete imports data up to 2013. In fact, the same
23 Members have complete data for both tariff and imports.
Chart 5.4 Completeness of IDB tariff
notifications
(%)
Source: WTO Secretariat.
5.27. As shown in Chart 5.5, the IDB tariff coverage has been at more than
90% since 2006 until 2013. Additional submissions and data collection are
anticipated for the two most recent years and the coverage is expected to
increase. It should be noted that
national submissions have priority over data collected from an alternative
source and Members' notifications that are submitted at a later stage replace
existing IDB data collected from an alternative or framework source. The
completeness of import data is slightly lower compared to that for tariff (Chart 5.6)
mainly because the data requirement is more demanding and the IDB tends to rely
more on Member notification than from alternative sources. In fact, very few
countries publish their import statistics at the tariff line level and by
partner on their own governmental websites and it is a big challenge for the
Secretariat to find reliable sources to collect the missing import information.
Nonetheless, for 2009 to 2012 almost one-third of available import IDB data
were collected by the Secretariat.
5.28. Table 5.9 shows the number of submissions received by the
Secretariat within the years of the deadlines for tariff information and for
imports. The timeliness of notifications is calculated, as in the previous
section, based on the number of expected schedules. Timeliness has improved
across the years especially for tariff. In 2013, 73% of tariff data were
submitted and/or collected on time. Hopefully this trend can be sustained by
proactive data collection by the Secretariat and positive responses from
Members to reminders about their outstanding submissions.
Chart
5.5 Completeness of IDB import notifications
(%)
Source: WTO Secretariat.
Table 5.9 IDB notifications received within the year of the deadlinea
|
1996
|
1997
|
1998
|
1999
|
2000
|
2001
|
2002
|
2003
|
2004
|
2005
|
2006
|
2007
|
2008
|
2009
|
2010
|
2011
|
2012
|
2013
|
2014
|
2015
|
Tariff
|
1
|
3
|
16
|
24
|
26
|
28
|
34
|
25
|
26
|
26
|
24
|
22
|
28
|
41
|
53
|
66
|
70
|
73
|
52
|
43
|
Imports
|
11
|
30
|
26
|
26
|
30
|
32
|
26
|
28
|
24
|
24
|
29
|
28
|
37
|
30
|
54
|
48
|
47
|
44
|
18
|
n.a.
|
a The numbers slightly
differ from those reported in the past as the review of some submissions indicated
that data were not suitable for inclusion in the IDB because of technical problems.
n.a. Not applicable.
Source: IDB, 30 September 2015.
5.29. Another point worth mentioning is the increased notification of
non-MFN regimes to the IDB, mostly the preferential tariffs resulting from FTAs
and RTAs. In 2014, 59 Members out of the 106 notifiers included
preferential tariff regimes in their notifications. This information is of
great value and the next revision of the status of submissions document would
reflect this additional information.
5.30. Pursuant to Article 16.4 of
the Agreement on the Implementation of Article VI of GATT 1994 ("the
Anti-Dumping Agreement"), all Members are required to submit to the Committee
on Anti‑Dumping Practices, on a semi-annual basis, reports of any anti-dumping
actions taken within the preceding six months, using an agreed standard
form. Members that have not established an authority competent to conduct
anti-dumping investigations have the option to make a one-time "nil"
notification, valid unless and until they establish an investigating authority,
in lieu of submitting nil notifications each six months.
5.31. Approximately 45 Members (counting
the EU as a single Member) regularly submit semi‑annual reports, either of
anti-dumping actions taken, or of no actions having been taken, during the
preceding six months. Thirty‑seven Members have submitted one-time nil
notifications. The remaining (approximately 50) Members generally fail to
submit semi-annual reports in respect of anti-dumping actions.
5.32. The trends in the status of
compliance with the obligation to notify subsidies to the Committee on
Subsidies and Countervailing Measures under Article 25.1 during the period 1995‑2015
are shown in Table 5.10. Subsidy notifications are required every two years and
the most recent notifications were due on 30 June 2015. Further notifications
for this period are expected to be received. The share of Members that have
notified subsidies has remained between 39% and 50% between 1995 and 2013. The
share of Members that made a "nil" notification fell significantly,
from 23% to 14%, over the same period. Excluding 1995 and 2015, the share of
Members making the required notifications has not exceeded 70%, and generally
has hovered around 57%. Conversely, the share of Members not making any
notification registered a substantial increase since 1995, from 27% to 44%,
albeit with some intervening fluctuations.
Table 5.10 Status of subsidy
notifications
New and full subsidy notification
|
% share of total
|
1995
|
1998
|
2001
|
2003
|
2005
|
2007
|
2009
|
2011
|
2013
|
2015
|
Members that notified subsidies
|
50
|
39
|
44
|
44
|
46
|
47
|
46
|
44
|
43
|
14
|
Members that made a "nil"
notification
|
23
|
15
|
15
|
12
|
11
|
10
|
15
|
17
|
14
|
3
|
Sub‑total notifying Members
|
73
|
54
|
59
|
56
|
57
|
57
|
61
|
61
|
57
|
17
|
Members that did not make any notification
|
27
|
46
|
41
|
44
|
43
|
43
|
39
|
39
|
43
|
83
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
5.33. Pursuant to Article 25.11 of the
Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures, all Members are required to
submit to the Committee on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures, on a
semi-annual basis, reports of any countervailing duty actions taken within the
preceding six months using an agreed standard form. Members that have not
established an authority competent to conduct countervailing duty investigations
have the option to make a one-time "nil" notification, valid unless
and until they establish an investigating authority, in lieu of submitting nil
notifications each six months.
5.34. Approximately 45 Members (counting
the EU as a single Member) regularly submit semi‑annual reports, either of
countervailing duty actions taken, or of no actions having been taken, during
the preceding six months. Thirty-six Members have submitted one-time nil
notifications. The remaining (approximately 55) Members generally fail to
submit semi-annual reports in respect of countervailing duty actions.
5.35. Notifications related to state
trading enterprises are reviewed by the Working Party on State Trading
Enterprises on behalf of the Council for Trade in Goods. In July 2012, the
Council for Trade in Goods agreed to extend indefinitely the new biannual
frequency of new and full notifications. Thus, all WTO Members must notify
their state trading enterprises every two years, with no updating notifications
in the intervening years.
5.36. Table 5.11 presents notifications
received for the years in which a new and full notification was due. A
"nil" notification means that the Member reported that it did not
have any state trading enterprises, while an "STE" notification means
that the Member reported information on one or more state trading enterprises.
The table shows a declining trend in total notifications over the period
examined. Indeed, notifications fell by a little less than half – from 63% in
1995 to 34% in 2012. However, a slight improvement has been seen in the current
period as the number of Members who provided a notification has increased to
41%.
Table 5.11 Status of STE
notifications
New and full STE
notification
|
% share of total
|
1995
|
1998
|
2001
|
2003
|
2006
|
2008
|
2010
|
2012
|
2014
|
Members that notified STEs
|
40
|
27
|
21
|
14
|
15
|
19
|
18
|
15
|
18
|
Members that made a "nil"
Notification
|
23
|
23
|
29
|
24
|
24
|
25
|
24
|
19
|
22
|
Subtotal notifying Members
|
63
|
50
|
50
|
38
|
39
|
44
|
42
|
34
|
41
|
Members that did not make any notification
|
37
|
50
|
50
|
62
|
61
|
56
|
58
|
66
|
59
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
5.37. Notification obligations in relation to restrictions to safeguard a
country's balance of payments stem from Articles XII and XVIII of the GATT 1994
and the Understanding on Balance‑of-Payments (BOP) Provisions (described in
Table 5.12).
Table
5.12 Notification procedures for balance of payments restrictions
Legal source
|
Notification requirement
|
Type
|
GATT Article XII:4(a)
|
Any Member applying new restrictions or raising
the general level of restrictions by a substantial intensification of the
measures applied under this Article shall immediately after instituting or
intensifying such restrictions (or, in circumstances in which prior
consultation is practicable, before doing so) consult with Members as to the
nature of its balance of payments difficulties, alternative corrective
measures which may be available, and the possible effect of the restrictions
on the economies of other Members.
|
Ad
hoc, followed by annual consultations
|
GATT Article
XVIII:12(a)
|
Ad hoc, followed by biennial
consultations
|
Understanding on BOP Provisions,
para. 9
|
A Member shall notify to the General Council the introduction of or
any changes in the application of restrictive import measures taken for
balance-of-payments purposes, as well as any modifications in time-schedules
for the removal of such measures as announced under paragraph 1. Significant
changes shall be notified to the General Council prior to or not later than
30 days after their announcement.
|
Ad hoc, followed by a yearly consolidated notification
|
Source: WTO Secretariat.
5.38. In 2015, the BOP Committee received notifications from two Members,
Ukraine (WT/REG/N/78, WT/REG/N/78/Add.1) under GATT Article XII, and Ecuador (WT/REG/N/79,
WT/REG/N/79/Add.1, WT/REG/N/79/Add.2) under GATT Article XVIII.
5.39. The improvements made in the
notifications of RTAs noted in last year's overview
continued through 2015. The improvements are due largely to a simplification of
the various notification formats and active efforts by the Chairman of the CRTA
and the WTO Secretariat in monitoring RTAs and reminding Members of their
notification obligations. Following an announcement by the Chairman at the CRTA
meeting of 28 and 29 June 2011, the Secretariat has continued to circulate a
list of agreements that have been verified by their parties as being in force
but not notified to the WTO as a working document in advance of all CRTA
meetings. The most recent of these circulated on 17 September 2015 contained 75
such agreements (of which 34 are agreements under the Latin American
Integration Association, LAIA).[158]
The response by Members has been positive with some 47 new RTAs being notified
as a result. The Secretariat continues to make efforts to remind Members of
their notification obligations by keeping track of dates of signature and entry
into force of agreements and verifying these with Members. The notification
tables included in each factual presentation prepared by the Secretariat and
requests by Members to notify at each CRTA meeting have also been helpful in
improving notifications. The Secretariat is aware of (but has not yet verified)
some 40 other agreements that continue to be in force and are not yet notified
to the WTO.
5.40. Under the Transparency Mechanism for Preferential Trade Arrangements
(PTAs), which was established in December 2010[159], newly notified PTAs are to be considered in dedicated sessions of
the Committee on Trade and Development (CTD), on the basis of
Secretariat-prepared factual presentations. Since the establishment of the
Transparency Mechanism, seven PTAs have been notified to the WTO. Two of these
have been considered by the CTD meeting in dedicated session. With regard to
the others, the Secretariat has not received the full set of data required for
the preparation of the factual presentations. The CTD Chairman provides an
update at each CTD meeting on the PTAs that are to be considered in dedicated
sessions, and urges the notifying Members to provide the data as soon as
possible.
5.41. The Transparency Mechanism for PTAs also stipulates that an
electronic database on individual PTAs is to be maintained by the Secretariat.
The Database on PTAs (http://ptadb.wto.org)
currently contains information on 28 PTAs. Table 5.13 provides an overview of
the PTAs included in the database, which is updated based on the information
provided by the Members implementing PTAs. The CTD Chairman has urged Members
to ensure that they are up to date with their notification and information
requirements, and has invited them to remain in touch with the Secretariat on
this matter.
Table
5.13 Preferential Trade
Arrangements being implemented by WTO Members
WTO Member
|
Number of PTAs
|
Name or description of PTA
|
Australia
|
2
|
Generalized System of Preferences
|
|
|
South Pacific Regional Trade and Economic Cooperation
Agreementa
|
Canada
|
2
|
Generalized System of Preferences
|
|
|
Commonwealth Caribbean Countries Tariff
|
Chile
|
1
|
Duty-free treatment for LDCs
|
China
|
1
|
Duty-free treatment for LDCs
|
European Union
|
4
|
Generalized System of Preferences
|
|
|
Trade preferences for countries of the Western
Balkans
|
|
|
Trade preferences for Pakistanb
|
|
|
Trade preferences for the Republic of Moldova
|
Iceland
|
1
|
Generalized System of Preferences
|
India
|
1
|
Duty-Free Tariff Preference Scheme for LDCs
|
Japan
|
1
|
Generalized System of Preferences
|
Republic of Korea
|
1
|
Preferential Tariff for LDCs
|
Kyrgyz Republic
|
1
|
Duty-free treatment for LDCs
|
Morocco
|
1
|
Duty-free treatment for African LDCs
|
New Zealand
|
2
|
Generalized System of Preferences
|
|
|
South Pacific Regional Trade and Economic Cooperation
Agreementa
|
Norway
|
1
|
Generalized System of Preferences
|
Russian Federation
|
1
|
Generalized System of Preferencesc
|
Switzerland
|
1
|
Generalized System of Preferences
|
Chinese Taipei
|
1
|
Duty-free treatment for LDCs
|
Thailand
|
1
|
Duty-free treatment for LDCs
|
Turkey
|
1
|
Generalized System of Preferences
|
United States
|
5
|
African Growth and Opportunity Act
|
|
|
Andean Trade Preference Act
|
|
|
Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act
|
|
|
Former Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands
|
|
|
Generalized System of Preferences
|
a Australia and New
Zealand both provide preferences under this PTA.
b The preferences granted under this PTA
expired on 31 December 2013.
c This PTA is being implemented in the
context of a customs union.
Source: Database on Preferential Trade Arrangements (http://ptadb.wto.org).
5.42. To ensure the transparency and
predictability of its Parties' procurement regimes, the Government Procurement
Agreement sets out notification obligations for its Parties in five areas:
·
national implementing legislation on government procurement;
·
procurement thresholds in national currencies;
·
statistics on procurement activities;
·
modifications to schedules of commitments; and
·
media for the publication of procurement-related information.
5.43. Numerous notifications are made during the year pursuant to each of
these requirements. Some
of the foregoing obligations have been simplified in the revised version of the
GPA, which came into effect in April 2014, to facilitate the use of electronic
tools in providing relevant information. This is expected to facilitate more
timely compliance with reporting responsibilities over time.
5.44. The TRIPS Agreement requires WTO Members to notify to the Council
for TRIPS their IP laws and regulations, establish and notify contact points in
their administrations for the purposes of cooperation with each other aimed at
the elimination of trade in infringing goods, and notify the Council in the
event that they wish to avail themselves of certain possibilities provided for
in the TRIPS Agreement that relate to the substantive obligations.
Additionally, Members have undertaken to provide information on how they meet
TRIPS obligations by responding to a Checklist of Issues on Enforcement.
Developed country Members also agreed to provide certain information and make
notifications which are not specifically provided for in the Agreement,
including on technical cooperation and transfer of technology.
5.45. The bulk of notifications are laws and regulations notified pursuant
to Article 63.2 (distributed in the IP/N/1/- series of documents). Chart 5.6 below
provides information on laws and regulations notified from 1995 to 2014.
Notifications peaked in 1996 when developed country Members notified existing
laws or amendments that implemented the TRIPS Agreement. Notifications of laws
and regulations from 2000 onwards have been predominately from developing
countries. As the chart shows, the cumulative total of laws and regulations
notified as of 2014 was approximately 3,000 legal texts.
Chart 5.6 Number of
notifications received by the Council for TRIPS from 1995 to 2014
Source: WTO Secretariat.
5.46. The Secretariat continues with its development of an information
management system to enable streamlined and more efficient processing of
notifications, among other types of TRIPS information.
5.47. While there are 14 GATS provisions containing notification
requirements in various areas, they are all of ad hoc
nature, i.e. notifications are only due when specific circumstances occur. Since
the entry into force of the GATS in 1995, a number of notification provisions
have never been invoked by Members, and most notifications that have been made
in services concern transparency on regulatory changes (Article III:3),
economic integration (Article V:7), and mutual recognition (Article VII:4).
5.48. GATS Article III:3 requires each Member to notify to the Council for
Trade in Services at least annually any regulatory changes that significantly
affect trade in services covered by its specific commitments. However, compliance
with this obligation has been de facto left
to Members' discretion. The 20 years since the entry into force of the GATS has
seen no substantive improvement in this regard. As at 15 October 2015, in total
only 606 notifications have been submitted by 77 Members (counting the EU
member states individually) pursuant to Article III:3. Of these notifications, 33
were submitted by seven Members from 1 January 2015 to 15 October 2015.
Some Members continue to submit notifications under the caveat that "there
is no common understanding among WTO Members on when a measure 'significantly
affects trade in services' within the meaning of GATS Article III:3" and
that "the notified measures may be relevant to trade in services without
prejudice to the interpretation of the phrase 'significantly affect trade in
services' in Article III:3". While GATS Article III:5 allows any Member to
notify to the Council for Trade in Services any measure taken by any other
Member, which it considers affects the operation of the Agreement, WTO Members
rarely makes use of this provision. So far it has been invoked only once.
5.49. Six notifications were made under GATS Article V:7 regarding
economic integration from 1 January 2015 to 15 October 2015. They were
subject to examination in the Committee on Regional Trade Agreements.
5.50. With respect to the notification requirement under GATS Article
VII:4 regarding mutual recognition, since the entry into force of the GATS in
1995 until 15 October 2015, there are in total 56 notifications submitted to
the Council for Trade in Services by 39 Members (counting the EU member states
individually), of which two were made in 2015 by one Member. While all the notifications follow the
prescribed format, their level of detail varies greatly concerning the main
elements of the recognition measures or agreements notified.