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This article explores the role and significance of standards in international trade, discussing whether they are trade-restricting or trade-facilitating. It also examines the convergence of standards and trade at various levels.
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Standards & Standardization: From a Trade Perspective Alice Pham Vientiane, 17 December 2013
Few Questions • What are standards, technical regulations (TRs), etc? • What is the role of standards? • What is the significance of standards when we talk about trade? • Are standards trade-restricting or trade-facilitating? • Various levels where standards and trade converge?
What are standards? • Standards = document, established by consensus and approved by a recognized body, that provides, for common and repeated use, rules, guidelines or characteristics for activities or their results, aimed at the achievement of the optimum degree of order in a given context (ISO) • Compliance with standards is not mandatory • There are: International standards, harmonised standards, national standards, regional standards, private standards, de facto standards, etc • There are also Product standards, process standards, labeling requirements, etc • Example: • A government guideline saying that all eggs weighing 62 grams or more are entitled to be labelled “Grade A” is a standard (provided that eggs weighing less may still be sold). • A guideline defining what products can display a “recyclable symbol” is a standard (provided that products that do not bear the symbol may still be sold).
And technical regulations? • Technical regulations = Document which lays down product characteristics or their related processes and production methods, including the applicable administrative provisions, with which compliance is mandatory. It may also include or deal exclusively with terminology, symbols, packaging, marking or labelling requirements as they apply to a product, process or production method. (WTO TBT Agreements) Example: • A law stating that only refrigerators that are one meter high can be sold in State X is a technical regulation. • A law stating that all product packaging must be recyclable is an example of a technical regulation.
The Role of Standards • Standardization involves considerable costs, but all in all benefits consumers, businesses, governments and society at large • Pros: • Standards provide a common language for producers and exporters from different countries/along the global value chain to interact with and understand each other • Cons: • When there are no internationally agreed standards, producers and exporters can face costs imposed by foreign standards that may require them to pay for technical experts and adjust their production processes
Why talking about standards vis-à-vis trade? Trade liberalization Opening of markets traditionally equal to tariffs elimination and curtailment of traditional non-tariff barriers such as quotas But Disputes over domestic regulations affecting process and production methods through which goods are manufactured are becoming more frequent. The WTO, for example, is increasingly considering disputes that reference either its SPS or TBT Agreement Standards are increasingly included in Regional and Bilateral trade pacts Standards and technical regulations are moving on to the centre of the trade policy discourse
Some WTO disputes • India, Malaysia, Pakistan & Thailand vs. the US (separate request by the Philippines): a May 1996 US ban on imports of shrimp and shrimp products harvested in a manner harmful to several endangered species of sea turtles • The US vs. Japan: 1997 requirements imposed by Japan to test & confirm the efficacy of quarantine treatment for each variety of eight agricultural products (apples, cherries, peaches, walnuts, apricots, pears, plums and quince) – a regulation that prohibits the importation of these products from the US • Canada vs. the European Committee: a decree issued by the French government in 1996 which banned imports of asbestos and of products containing asbestos – accused of violating both the SPS & the TBT Agreement
Many other such cases – A common thread: meeting technical regulations & standards and verifying such regulations/standards are met – conformity assessment
There are Protectionist Standards and Standards that Facilitate and Promote Trade
Multilateralism - Main principles of the WTO TBT Agreement • Non-discrimination • The prevention of unnecessary obstacles to international trade • Legitimate objectives • Necessity • Reasonableness • Changed circumstances • Harmonization • Use of international standards • Equivalence and Mutual recognition • Transparency • Derogations from Transparency in the event of urgent measures
BTAs & RTAs: MRAs & Harmonization • APEC: moving toward MRAs in regulated product sectors and related alignment (harmonization) of mandatory and voluntary standards with international ones. APEC Subcommittee on Standards & Conformance • ASEAN: Economic Community Goal by 2015 – Economic Integrationthrough Establishment of single market & production base comprising 5 core elements (free flow of goods, services, investments, capital and skilled labour) • Free flow of goods looks at: Elimination of Tariffs, Elimination of Non-Tariff Barriers , Rules of Origin (ROO), Trade Facilitation, Customs Integration, ASEAN Single Window & Standards & Technical Barriers to Trade • ASEAN Policy Guidelines on Standards and Conformance (2005) & ASEAN Consultative Committee on Standards & Conformance (ACCSQ)
MRAs vs. Harmonization APEC ASEAN
Companies’ Active Participation in the Standardization Process at All Levels
Thank you for your attention!Questions, Comments & Enquiries: ap@cuts.org