EDITED BY Rasih Mert KOZAKÇI Cemal DARICI. ABOUT WTO Location: Geneva, Switzerland Established: 1 January 1995 Created by: Uruguay Round negotiations.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
RISWTO Public Symposium1 World Trading System and Development: Issues and Challenges Nagesh Kumar RIS
Advertisements

RIS South Centre Panel at WTO Public Symposium 1 WTO, Development and Developing Countries: Ten Years After Nagesh Kumar RIS
Introduction to the World Trade Organization
The Multilateral Trading System: Opportunities and Challenges for the East African Community (EAC) Countries Anne Kamau Ministry of Trade Department of.
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION (WTO) Shumeet K. Grewal.
Overview ___________________________ Russian Dual Pricing Practices Russian Dual Pricing Practices Russia and the WTO Russia and the WTO Dual Pricing.
What is the WTO?  The World Trade Organization (WTO) is the only global international organization dealing with the rules of trade between nations. 
World Trade Organization Impacts on China and Hong Kong.
The World Trade Organization
WTO and TBT What Are They and Why do I Care? Dan Bart, Senior Vice President, Standards and Special Projects, TIA.
WTO World Trade Organization / Organisation mondiale du Commerce Set up in 1995, follower to the GATT (General Agreement on tariffs and trade, initiated.
International Business 9e
The Role of the GATT Goal: to promote a free and competitive international trading environment benefiting efficient producers Accomplished by sponsoring.
chapter 10 International Cooperation Among Nations
AUSTRALIA’S DOHA ROUND AGENDA. TODAY’S DISCUSSION  briefly, the WTO and Australia  what was decided at Doha  what has happened since Doha  Australia’s.
1 Two multilateral organisations dealing with trade: More differences than similarities Two multilateral organisations dealing with trade: UNCTAD and WTO.
ﺑﺴﻡﺍﷲﺍﻠﺮﺤﻤﻦﺍﻠﺮﺤﻴﻢ In The Name Of Allah most Beneficent The most Merciful PRESENTED BY: MUHAMMAD ADNAN HYE.
Copyright ©2004, South-Western College Publishing International Economics By Robert J. Carbaugh 9th Edition Chapter 7: Trade Regulations and Industrial.
General orientation of international economic integration
rd National Agricultural Policy Workshop 3
(c) 2004 Charles G. Gray1 Global Telecommunications Regulation TCOM 5173 The World Trade Organization (WTO) 7 April 2004 Charles G. Gray.
Influence of Institutions on Firms, Managers and Firm Behavior
WTO head quarter based in Geneva. WTO (Definition) The World Trade Organization (WTO) is an organization that intends to supervise and liberalize international.
Y376 International Political Economy January 25, 2012.
 The WTO’s predecessor,the general agreement on tariffs and trade (GATT).It establishedafter World War 2 in the wake of other multilateral institutions.
WTO and FISHERIES The Dispute Settlement Mechanism DR. AUDUN LEM FISHERY INDUSTRIES DIVISION, FAO NACA AQUAMARKETS June 2003 Manila.
WTO short introduction TURIN 16 July 2007 ITUC. WTO The WTO: Founded in 1995 after 50 years of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade – GATT Headquarters.
 Began in 1986 in Uruguay, so it is sometimes called the Uruguay round  Concluded with an agreement 8 years later in  Agreement signed in Marrakech,
UNCTAD 1 OVERVIEW OF THE DOHA WORK PROGRAMME ISSUES TO BE CONSIDERED BY DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Commercial Diplomacy Programme UNCTAD
The Political Economy of Trade Policy. Government Policies.
1 Overview of the Doha Work Programme Implications for the Developing Countries Commercial Diplomacy Programme UNCTADWWW.UNCTAD.ORG/COMMDIP December 2001.
WTO Today: A New Negotiating Round Thomas Cottier Professor of Law of Counsel, Baker&McKenzie Santiago de Chile
INTERNATIONAL MARKETING ENVIRONMENT. ROADMAP Introduction Components Trade barriers Objectives Of Trade barriers Tariff barriers Non-tariff barriers General.
The WTO SPS Agreement and its relevance to international standards
Section 4: International Economics
PRESENTED BY : Sultonboy.  The World trade organisation is an organisation that intends to supervise and liberalise international trade.  WTO was officially.
World Trading System: Rules and Commitments. The Effect of Protectionism on World Trade: January February March April May June July August September.
WTO-WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION. FOUNDATION WTO is an international organization which was founded on The WTO was born out of the GATT(General Agreement.
WTO and the TRIPS Agreement Wolf R. MEIER-EWERT WTO Secretariat A Business-oriented overview of Intellectual Property for Law Students WIPO, Geneva 20.
1 WTO - Its Origin, Organization & Operational Mechanism -PART-1 Aftermath of world war-II & emergence of GATT in Aftermath of world war-II & emergence.
Cambodia in WTO Miss. MOEUNG Sovannden Mr. MAO Veasna Mr. NHEM Sovanna
The WTO, International Trade. Plan INTRODUCTION, What is the WTO? 1. History, The multilateral trading system—past, present and future 2. The organization.
NS3040 Fall Term 2015 World Trade Organization (WTO)
WTO What is WTO ?Goal&Functions,BenefitsStructureAgreements& Principles Principles Details of trade agreements.
World Trade Organization. Formation WTO replaced GATT in one nation, one vote (like GATT) GATT-General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade –Formed in.
Chapter 6 THE ORGANIZATION §1 Whose WTO is it anyway? For now, the WTO is a member-driven, consensus-based organization. Levels downward: 1.Highest authority:
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION. Current members of the WTO (in green) Formation 1 January 1995 HeadquartersGeneva, Switzerland Membership 153 member states.
The WTO - The World Trade Organization. What is the WTO? Definition Organization to supervise and liberalize international trade -> forum for governments.
Economic Environment of Business International Trade. GATT and the WTO.
CHAPTER 7 THE POLOTICAL ECONOMY OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE.
Establishment of international trade rules  reasons: 1)elimination of trade-restrictive measures in national legal orders; 2) need for security and predictability.
1 © WTO - OMC The WTO and the DDA The World Trade Organization and the Doha Development Agenda Serafino Marchese Head, Training and Capacity Building Section.
Chapter 10: International Cooperation Among Nations International Business, 4 th Edition Griffin & Pustay.
Introduction To WTO & GATT Lecture :2 Salman Alam Khan.
Trade Agreements. Free Trade Vs. Protectionism Free Trade: when government put in place policies that allow producers from overseas nations to freely.
Members 152 countries were members on the 16th May 2008 Viet Nam was the last member of WOT on the 11 th of January 2007.
INTERNATIONAL TRADE & INVESTMENT (UNIT-2) A. Mohamed Riyazh Khan Assistant Professor (SE.G), Dept. of Management Studies,
10-1 Chapter 10: International Cooperation Among Nations International Business, 4 th Edition Griffin & Pustay.
Introduction to GATT and WTO The World Trade Organization (WTO) was established to govern international trade. It was found on 1 st January, 1995 and headquartered.
MGT601 SME MANAGEMENT. Lesson 39 Word Trade Organization (WTO.
THE POLOTICAL ECONOMY OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
Package of agreements annexed to the WTO Agreement
Food and Culture Global Food Culture – International Trade Regulations
ECON 331 INTERNATIONAL TRADE and ECONOMICS
The WTO The Uruguay Round Trade Liberalization
NS3040 Fall Term 2018 World Trade Organization (WTO)
By Karwan dana Ishik university
World Trade Organization (WTO)
Trade - WTO.
Free Trade and Protectionism
Presentation transcript:

EDITED BY Rasih Mert KOZAKÇI Cemal DARICI

ABOUT WTO Location: Geneva, Switzerland Established: 1 January 1995 Created by: Uruguay Round negotiations (1986–94) Membership: 159 countries Budget: 196 million Swiss francs Secretariat staff: 640 Head: Pascal Lamy (Director-General)

FUNCTIONS Administering WTO trade agreements Forum for trade negotiations Handling trade disputes Monitoring national trade policies Technical assistance and training for developing countries Cooperation with other international organizations

The WTO’s work comes from the 1986–94 negotiations called the Uruguay Round and earlier negotiations under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). The WTO holds new negotiations, under the “Doha Development Agenda” launched in The rules must be “transparent” and “ predictable ”.

THE GOALS  to help exporters and importers, while allowing governments to meet social and environmental objectives.  to promote free trade while minimizing undesirable side-effects.  The rules must be “transparent” and “ predictable’’

THE AGREEMENTS  explain the principles of liberalization and exceptions.  include commitments to lower trade barriers  set procedures for settling disputes.  prescribe special treatment for LDCs.  require transparency in trade policies.

AGREEMENTS’ SUBJECTS  Tariffs (more bindings and closer to zero)  Agriculture (fairer markets for farmers)  Standards and Safety  General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS)  Agreements on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS)  Anti-Dumping,Subsidies,Safeguards  Trade Policy Reviews

SETTLING DISPUTES  Disputes in the WTO are about broken promises.  The rules must be enforced.  Rulings are made by a panel and endorsed by the WTO’s full membership.  Appeals are possible.  The priority is to settle disputes through consultations.  By January 2008, only about 136 of the 369 cases had reached the full panel process.  Most of the rest have either been notified as settled “out of court” or remain in a prolonged consultation phase

MISSUNDERSTANDING ABOUT WTO  The WTO does NOT tell governments what to do  The WTO is NOT for free trade at any cost  The WTO is NOT only concerned about commercial interests.This does NOT take priority over development  In the WTO commercial interests do NOT take priority over environmental protection  The WTO does NOT dictate to governments on issues such as food safety and human health and safety

 The WTO does NOT destroy jobs or widen the gap between rich and poor  Small countries are NOT powerless in the WTO  The WTO is NOT the tool of powerful lobbies  Weaker countries do have a choice they are NOT forced to join the WTO  The WTO is NOT undemocratic

ORGANIZATION STRUCTURE

DEMOCRACY IN WTO 1. Most LDCs dependent on DCs in terms of imports, exports, aid, security, etc. 2. LDCs have fewer human and technical resources. 3. The dispute settlement system is costly and requires a level of legal expertise that LDCs may not have. 4. The dispute settlement process is lacking of transparency. 5. The binding rules of the WTO may effectively remove democracy even when all the rules of the WTO are democratically and unanimously agreed by all the members

INDUSTRIAL POLICY Industrial policy is a contentious issue. Opponents have argued that it is unnecessary, due to  the inherent efficiency of markets  difficult to implement effectively  unviable, due to LDCs ‟ low capabilities  prohibited by the international institutions such as the WTO

HOW DOES THE WTO IMPACTS UPON INDUSTRIAL POLICY ?  Non – tariffs barriers  Tariffs barriers  Trade Related Investment Measures (TRIMs)  The Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures  General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS)  Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPs)

THE REMAINING POLICY SPACE  Non – tariffs barriers  Tariffs barriers  Trade Related Investment Measures (TRIMs)  The Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures  General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS)  Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPs)  Special and Differential Treatment  State-owned enterprises  Currency manipulation  Non-tradables

WHY DOES THE WTO UNDERMINE INDUSTRIAL POLICIES?  The real problem with the WTO policies is their irreversible nature.  LDCs still have some space to implement industrial policies but as WTO negotiations progress this space will narrow down.  The WTO agreements often favor rich countries and their MNCs.  While the TRIMs and GATS still allow room for LDCs to control over FDI and MNCs, Multilateral Agreement on Investment (MAI) which was proposed in 1997 and subsequently rejected due to worldwide mass protests around the globe made the intention of the rich WTO members clear.

 While there is room for states to implement industrial policies, we need to consider if these rules allow for strategic sequencing of trade protection.  The Special and Differential Treatment hardly constitute ‘preferential’ treatment when one considers that DCs were already operating relatively liberal trade policies before the negotiations.  The non-notification of actionable subsidies may not be used as a permanent strategy, since the enforcement measures will be strengthened.  The TRIPS agreement hardly benefits the LDCs and in fact may significantly harm their development

THANKS FOR LISTENING