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WTO Accession: Lessons from Experience. Carlos A. Primo Braga Senior Adviser, International Trade Department The World Bank. The WTO and the DDA Washington, D.C. April 25, 2005. Benefits of WTO membership.
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WTO Accession: Lessons from Experience Carlos A. Primo Braga Senior Adviser, International Trade Department The World Bank The WTO and the DDA Washington, D.C. April 25, 2005
Benefits of WTO membership • Support for strengthening policies and institutions associated with international trade; • Greater stability in commercial policy; • Better and more secure market access to major export markets; • Access to WTO’s dispute settlement mechanism.
Additional claims made about impact of WTO accession • “Seal of approval.” • More inward FDI • Development of a rules-based market economy. • Better governance and government credibility. • Implementation costs of accession—talent and government budgets.
The WTO accession process • As of April 2005, 29 accession applications were under consideration; • Since the WTO Agreement entered into force (1/1/1995), 20 new members acceded to the WTO; • The shortest total time of the accession process was 2 years and 10 months (Kyrgyz Republic) and the longest 15 years and 5 months (China); • Steps include: formal request/establishment of working party/submission of a memorandum on the foreign trade regime/ Q&A/ negotiations/approval (WP/GC)/ signature of protocol of accession/ratification at national level/full membership.
Claims about the WTO accession process • Concerns raised about negotiating accession: • “Price is too high” including being asked to sign WTO+ commitments and WTO- rights. • “Price is growing” • “Negotiations are taking longer to complete” • In sum: “Cost and complexity of negotiations is high and growing” • Some recent economic research points to increased manufactured trade post-WTO accession.
“Price” of accession • Market access related commitments: • Agricultural products. • Non-agricultural products. • Services. • “Special commitments” • Transition periods • Exemptions
Types of “specific” commitments • Obligations to abide by existing WTO rules. • Obligations not to have recourse to specific WTO provisions (“WTO minus” rights) • Specific transition periods. • Authorizations to temporarily depart from WTO rules. • Obligations to abide by commitments not contained in WTO Multilateral Agreements (“WTO plus”)
Commentary on specific commitments • Significance of these commitments for a rules-based trading system • Potential for creating “second class citizens.” • Difficult to classify • Room for interpretation—especially concerning controversial WTO+ commitments. • Kennettt et al (2005) identified specific examples of potential WTO+ commitments in Bulgaria, Ecuador, and Jordan’s accession.
Treatment of Least Developed Countries • Two LDCs have acceded; 9 are in the process of accession; • General Council decision on 10 December 2002, and its antecedents: • Guidelines on “restraint,” S&D, and transitional periods. • Statements by Cambodia and Nepal.
What to expect • Issues that tend to receive special attention: degree of privatization in the economy; transparency of regulatory environment; and governance (capacity of institutions to implement commitments). • Expectations/trends: • Tariffs: comprehensive binding at levels that do not deviate dramatically from applied rates. • Agriculture: substantive commitments in terms of AMS and export subsidies. • Services: comprehensive coverage. • Rules and disciplines: limited flexibility for phasing in commitments with respect to TRIPS, customs valuation, standards, and SPS regulations.
Potential reforms: areas for discussion • Sharpen legal definition of WTO accession process to: • Focus on trade-related matters. • Reduce likelihood of differentiation between peers—establish presumptions on treatment. • Reduce uncertainty. • Clarify the categorisation of existing and future specific commitments—and, if not, adopt a presumption of parity across peers.
“All periods … are transition periods. We only know one thing with regard to the future: it will not look like the present” Jorge Luis Borges
More information www.worldbank.org/trade cbraga@worldbank.org References: Kennett, M., S.J. Evenett and J. Gage, 2005, Evaluating WTO Accessions: Legal and Economic Perspectives, manuscript Evenett, S.J. and C.A. Primo Braga, 2005, “WTO Accession: Lessons from Experience,” Trade Note (Washington, D.C.: The World Bank), forthcoming.