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General Agreement on Trade in Services

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Title: General Agreement on Trade in Services


1
General Agreement on Trade in Services
  • GATS
  • Presentation to Artists
  • 2005

2
  • WTO member nations can challenge as an illegal
    trade barrier any national or local policy of
    another WTO country, bringing charges before a
    WTO tribunal comprised of three trade officials
    who meet behind closed doors.

3
WTO has managed to intervene in domestic policies
all over the planet
  • India Like many countries, once had a ban on
    patenting of seeds and medicines to make them
    broadly accessible. A WTO challenge claiming that
    India had failed to implement the required
    20-year patenting system resulted in India
    reversing the ban- threatening to deprive
    millions of people of life-giving resources
  • Guatemala Implementation of the UNICEF-WHO Code
    on the labeling of infant formula was gutted
    after a WTO threat.

4
WTO has managed to intervene in domestic policies
all over the planet
  • Europe Consumers and producers in Europe face
    116.8 million per year trade sanctions because
    the EU has not implemented a WTO order to import
    beef containing artificial hormones WTO ruled
    that Europes standards provide too much consumer
    protection.
  • Europe US WTO case forced the EU to eliminate a
    program that had set aside a small market share
    for bananas from former Caribbean colonies,
    leading to the ruin of thousands of small family
    farms in several island nations.

5
WTO has managed to intervene in domestic policies
all over the planet
  • Canada Policies aimed at ensuring the continued
    existence of some Canadian news magazines in the
    face of massive US magazine imports were
    abolished after a successful US WTO case.
  • USA USA saw its gasoline cleanliness standards
    weakened after a WTO assault on Clean Air Act
    regulations by several countries.

6
WTO has managed to intervene in domestic policies
all over the planet
  • USA Even though the USA signed the global
    environmental treaty called the Convention on
    International Trade in Endangered Species,
    American rules requiring shrimp fishers not to
    kill sea turtles were diluted after a WTO
    challenge.
  • Maryland US State Department, lobbying about how
    a state law might violate WTO, pressured Maryland
    legislators to drop a procurement policy aimed at
    promoting human rights in Nigeria.

7
WTO has managed to intervene in domestic policies
all over the planet
  • Canda The Canadian 'Auto Pact' is designed to
    encourage companies selling vehicles locally to
    invest in, purchase parts from, and create
    employment in Canada. In 1999, European and
    Japanese vehicle manufacturers challenged the
    Auto Pact. The World Trade Organisation (WTO)
    dispute panel ruled that it fell foul of a number
    of WTO agreements including GATS.

8
WTO has managed to intervene in domestic policies
all over the planet
  • Thailand Whilst bringing cheaper products and
    more variety to consumers, multinational
    supermarket chains such as Tesco, Carrefour, and
    Royal Ahold brought disaster to the thousands of
    small and medium-sized local retail shops who
    went out of business, and made many people
    unemployed. This led the Government to draft new
    regulations (e.g. "Retail Business Act) aiming
    to protect the livelihoods of the small-scale
    retailers. If the retail sector is placed under
    GATS this will not be possible. EU wants Thailand
    and other countries to place its retail sector
    under GATS rules.

9
In WTO forum, global commerce takes precedence
over everything democracy, public health,
equity, access to essential services, the
environment, food safety and more
10
We will be able to change presidents but not
policiesGATS further shrinks domestic
policy space
11
GATS The 1st Page of Introduction
  • Multilateral trade agreement for goods was
    extended to cover services with the introduction
    of GATS
  • Countries come under GATS when they become
    members of WTO and when they offer sectors

12
GATS The 1st Page of Introduction
  • Active only when foreign trade is within the
    country
  • Foreign investment could challenge any domestic
    policy or a law claiming it to violate GATS rules
    for FREE TRADE

13
GATS The 1st Page of Introduction
  • The guideline for rules is the protection of FREE
    TRADE
  • It is the WTO Tribunal that take the final
    decision

14
GATS The 1st Page of Introduction
  • WTO member countries are bound to accept the
    verdict of the Tribunal and make necessary
    changes to domestic policy and law, accordingly
    or have to face trade sanctions

15
GATS The 1st Page of Introduction
  • WTOs expansive new rules encroach into areas
    traditionally considered the realm of domestic
    policy and effectively shift many decisions from
    democratically elected domestic bodies (e.g.
    parliaments, provincial councils, etc) to WTO
    tribunals.

16
GATS The 1st Page of Introduction
  • WTO and GATS promote a world where free trade
    stays as the only guideline and value overriding
    diverse worldviews and development models of
    different civilizations, cultures, countries and
    communities.

17
GATS Framework
  • Coverage
  • 4 Modes of Trade in Services
  • Rules (Horizontal and non-horizontal)
  • Tribunal
  • Threats outside GATS framework

18
Coverage
  • a. No human activity remains outside the
    purview of GATS
  • b. Human activity from birth (health care) to
    death (funeral services)
  • The fluidity of the definition of services
    extends the scope even further
  • (e.g. Banana was considered service in US-EU
    WTO banana case)

19
Coverage
  • d. Policies and actions of all levels, federal,
    state and local (GATS Article I-3-a-i)
  • e. Actions of non-governmental bodies in the
    exercise of powers delegated by any level of the
    government (GATS Article I-3-a-ii)
  • f. Government policies directly regulating
    services as well as measures affecting trade in
    services including those not specific to services
    (GATS Article I-1)

20
4 Modes of Trade in Services
  • Cross-border trade in services
  • Use of services abroad
  • Establishment of a service business in another
    country
  • Movement of natural persons

21
Commitments
  • Most Favored Nation Commitment (MFN)
  • National Treatment Commitment
  • Commitments ensuring irreversibility
  • Commitments prohibiting domestic controls
  • Commitments promoting more liberalization of
    service sector (Nullification and Impairment)
  • Commitments on Domestic Regulation

22
MFN Commitment
  • Selected countries are not allowed to be given
    special treatment over others

23
National Treatment Commitment
  • i.  A member country should treat domestic and
    foreign services and providers the same
    (GATS Article XVII)
  • ii.  When setting taxes and regulatory
    requirements, governments cannot promote
    domestic or local providers (GATS Article XVII)
  • iii. A policy that may unintentionally could
    have such effects (as of i. and ii) can
    considered to be GATS-illegal even if it does
    not actually affect service trade flows (GATS
    Article XVII-3)

24
Commitments Ensuring Irreversibility
  • i. If a sector is offered any further attempt to
    expand the role of state or return from partial
    privatization to an exclusively public system run
    against GATS and involved with paying
    compensation to all member countries whose
    service providers are affected to make up for the
    withdrawn opportunities (GATS Article XXI-2-a).
  • ii. New monopolies cannot be established without
    compensation and these monopolies include
    government as well as domestic private and also
    monopolies not only at the national level but
    also at the local level (GATS Article VIII-4,
    GATS Article XXI-2-b).

25
Commitments prohibiting domestic controls
  • GATS Article XVI ban countries from certain
    limits on market access for any sector offering
    for GATS coverage (unless a country listed them
    in 1993 schedules)
  • i.        limits on the number of service
    suppliers
  • ii.       limits on total value of service
    transactions and assets
  • iii.     limits on the total number of service
    operations
  • iv.     limits on the total number of natural
    persons employed in a particular service
    sector
  • v.     policies which restrict or require
    specific type of legal entry
  • vi.     limits on foreign ownership as

26
Commitments promoting more liberalization of
service sector
  • Under nullification and impairment commitment
    a member country can challenge another member
    country and take to WTO tribunal even when no
    specific rule is actually violated but for
    failing to guarantee anticipated benefits of
    service liberalization as a result of any measure
    taken by the accused country (GATS Article
    XXIII-3)

27
Commitments on Domestic Regulation
  • In GATS article VI-4 on domestic regulation
    contain a commitment to undertake negotiations to
    develop necessary disciplines to ensure that
    measures relating to qualification requirements
    and procedures, technical standards and licensing
    procedures do not constitute unnecessary barriers
    to trade in services. This means NOT ONLY
    qualifications required and procedures, technical
    standards and licensing procedures, but also
    measures relating to them are included.

28
Sports Illustrated Vs Canadian Content
  • Half of Canadian English-language magazines are
    from abroad.
  • Splitrun magazines Foreign editorial content
    space for domestic advertising.
  • From 1965 there is a special tariff on split-run
    magazines This was to protect smaller
    Canadian-owned publications from loosing
    advertising revenue to larger US magazines.
  • Time Warners Sport Illustrated started beaming
    its magazine into Canada via satellite to avoid
    tariff.
  • To counter this Canada amended 1965 law to impose
    an 80 excise tax on split-run magazines in 1995.

29
Sports Illustrated Vs Canadian Content
  • In 1996 US launched a WTO challenge against
  • i.        80 excise tax
  • ii.       1965 tariff on split-run magazine
  • iii.     policy of subsidizing postal rates for
    domestic magazines (to address the challenge of
    information distribution to a population that is
    widely dispersed geographically and is called as
    Canadian Heritage)

30
Debate(Canada Vs USA)
  • US The crux of the US challenge was National
    Treatment Commitments under GATT, that prohibited
    treating domestic and foreign like products
    differently for regulatory and tax purposes.
  • Canada Canadian magazines are not like
    products so the differential tax treatment did
    not constitute a National Treatment issue.

31
Debate(Canada Vs USA)
  • US Canadian content does not differentiate the
    product and stay contrary to WTO (WTO Canada
    certain measures concerning periodicals
    WT/DS31/AB/R)
  • The issue from the US side was the protection of
    international fair trade under GATT but not
    other interests such as protecting culture and
    heritage of Canada.

32
Debate(Canada Vs USA)
  • Canada Advertising revenue from US edition more
    than covered the publication cost of the Canadian
    Edition. Hence Sports Illustrated was selling
    advertising in Canadian edition in very low rates
    so that advertising in smaller Canadian
    publications are threatened. This under pricing
    amounted to dumping offense. (selling goods
    below the cost of their production in order to
    dominate the market).
  • From the Canadian perspective the issue was the
    disappearance of Canadian content and writing.

33
Sports Illustrated Vs Canadian Content
  • WTO ruling (in March 1997)
  • 80 excise tax is contradiction with National
    Treatment Commitment in GATT
  • provisions of 1965 tariff code is a violation of
    WTO rules
  • - grants to Canada Post for Canadian
  • magazines is an illegal subsidy

34
Sports Illustrated Vs Canadian Content
  • Canada took new steps to introduce new
    legislation to regulate sales of advertising
    services rather than regulating magazines as
    products.

35
Sports Illustrated Vs Canadian Content
  • US reacted
  • threatened 4 billion worth of imports sanctions
  • suspension of favorable tariffs accorded to
    Canada under NAFTA
  • formally challenged Canadas new policy before
    the WTO Appellate Body.

36
Sports Illustrated Vs Canadian Content
  • Canadas response Because Canada has made no
    commitments in the advertising sector under GATS,
    the policy should be allowed.

37
Sports Illustrated Vs Canadian Content
  • WTO ruling WTO ruled against all of the Canadian
    measures.
  • In this instance advertising is both a good and a
    service. Therefore the absence of GATS
    advertising commitment is irrevalent (Because ads
    appear in magazines, they are also parts of the
    contents of a good)
  • - Financial subsidy from Canada Heritage was
  • not a direct subsidy of cultural
    producers
  • permitted

38
Sports Illustrated Vs Canadian Content
  • In May 1999 Canada abandoned the new
    legislation

39
WTO Tribunal
  • WTOs Dispute Resolution Understanding (DSU) was
    established during the Uruguay Round.
  • Once a WTO tribunal has declared a countrys law
    WTO-illegal, the country must change its law or
    face trade sanctions.

40
WTO Tribunal
  • When the record of WTO is scrutinized by topic,
    rather than by country, nearly every health, food
    safety or environmental law challenged at the WTO
    has been declared a barrier to trade (Wallach
    Woodall, 2004)
  • WTOs expansive new rules encroach into areas
    traditionally considered the realm of domestic
    policy and effectively shift many decisions from
    democratically elected domestic bodies (e.g.
    parliaments, regional councils, etc) to secretive
    WTO tribunals.

41
WTO Tribunal
  • while the FSC tax subsidy may be bad tax
    policy, it is our tax policy a policy arrived
    at through the elected representatives of the
    people of this Nation. The ability of some
    international bureaucracy to effectively impose
    punitive taxes or tariffs on American goods
    should offend us all
  • - In a senate floor debate on a WTO ruling
    against Foreign Sales Corporation (FSC) tax
    break, Senator Russ Feingold

42
WTO Tribunal
  • WTO disputes are heard by tribunals composed of
    three panelists.
  • WTO tribunals are comprised of trade experts with
    the WTO Secretariat nominating panel members for
    each dispute from a roster.
  • (These qualifications promote the selection of
    panelists with a stake in the existing system and
    rules, eliminating potential panelists who do not
    share an institutionally derived philosophy about
    international commerce and the primacy of the WTO
    system)

43
WTO Tribunal
  • A panel are allowed, but not required to, to seek
    information and technical advice form outside
    individuals and expert bodies
  • The only recourse after a WTO panel ruling is to
    appeal to the WTO Appellate Body which is a
    standing committee of seven trade experts with
    three selected to hear each appeal.

44
WTO Tribunal
  • WTO dispute panels operate in secret. Documents
    are restricted to the countries in the dispute.
  • Press and the public are excluded.
  • The WTO lower panels and Appellate Body meet in
    closed sessions and the proceedings are
    confidential.

45
WTO Tribunal
  • All documents are also kept confidential unless a
    government voluntarily releases its own
    submissions to the public
  • No outside appeal to a WTO ruling is available.
  • (WTO, Understanding on Rules and Procedures
    Governing the Settlement of Disputes at Article
    14 and Appendix 3, paras. 2 and 3).

46
WTO Tribunal
  • Under the rules of conduct, discovery of
    panelists background is based on
    self-disclosure, leaving it up to the individual
    panelist to decide which aspects of his or her
    past should be known.

47
WTO Tribunal
  • GATT contained the typical sovereignty safeguards
    found in almost every international agreement
    consensus was required to bind any country to an
    obligation. Unlike GATT, WTO panel rulings are
    automatically binding and only the unanimous
    consent of all WTO nations can halt their
    adaptation.

48
WTO Tribunal
  • Contrary to the majority of court hearings,
    opinions expressed in the final WTO panel reports
    by individual panelists remain anonymous.

49
Threats outside GATS framework
  • The implications of GATS cannot be understood by
    just going through the officially declared
    procedures. How GATS negotiations happen in real
    world should also be taken in to account to
    understand the real impacts.

50
Threats outside GATS framework
  • When considered with the complicated nature of
    pressure tactics used by powerful developed
    countries to arrive consensus, the GATS
    statement Governments can choose the services in
    which they make market access and national
    treatment commitments and they can limit the
    degree of market access and national treatment
    they offer has little meaning.

51
Threats outside GATS framework
  • Pressure tactics / arm twisting within WTO
    negotiations
  • a. Public and private attacks on the developing
    country groupings
  • b. Divide and Rule policy by the USA and EU
  • IFIs also exert pressure on developing countries
    to commit on GATS and other WTO trade agreements
  • Corporate lobby groups enjoy immense influence
    over the trade policies of WTO members such as
    the USA, EU and Japan.
  • .

52
Public and Private Attacks
  • At the end of the Cancun Ministerial Grassley
    (Chair of the US Senates Finance Committee)
    issued a statement saying, Let me be clear. Ill
    use my position .. to carefully scrutinize the
    positions taken by many WTO members during this
    Ministerial. The US evaluates potential partners
    for free trade agreements on an ongoing basis.
    Ill take note of those nations that played a
    constructive role in Cancun, and those nations
    that didnt

53
Public and Private Attacks
  • Tanzania and Kenya were among countries
    threatened in the run-up to Cancun (e.g. loss of
    trade preferences, the cancellation of market
    access preferences, etc.).
  • There were personal attacks to dismiss
    troublesome ambassadors from their positions,
    as was the case with Dominican Republics
    ambassador at the WTO, Dr Frederico Cuello.

54
Public and Private Attacks
  • EUs chief negotiator Pascal Lamy acknowledged to
    European NGOs prior to the Cancun Ministerial
    that arm-twisting and blackmailing practices
    take place at the WTO.
  • How do you get some kind of agreement that 146
    countries can sign on to, given they all have
    different views? In that process, people will get
    their arms twisted. If you want more textiles in
    my market, I may twist your arm to get more
    investment. There are trade-offs, arm-twisting,
    bulling and all the rest of it going on
  • - Richard Eglin, Director of the Trade and
    Finance Division

55
Public and Private Attacks
  • In September 2003 in an attempt to intimidate
    Brazil, Senator Chuck Grassley asked the US
    Department Agriculture to launch an investigation
    into Brazilian farmers alleged planting of
    genetically modified soybeans without paying
    licensing fees to US companies allegations
    disputed by the Brazilian government.
  • Immediately before the General Council meeting in
    Geneva, US trade representative, Robert Zoellick,
    especially warned the G90 group of developing
    countries to be flexible.

56
Public and Private Attacks
  • In Cancun, developing countries were put in a
    position where they had to agree to the text or
    risk the collapse of negotiations.

57
Divide and Rule policy
  • After being threatened Guatemala, Peru, Ecuador,
    Colombia and Costs Rica all left the G20 in the
    weeks following Cancun
  • According to Latin American delegates, the threat
    to their countries was direct and explicit. In
    words of one Ambassador The US said You still
    want to negotiate with us? Then get out of the
    G20.

58
Divide and Rule policy
  • El Salvador and Guatemala had been offered
    expanded export quotas by the USA if they would
    agree to abandon the G20.
  • US held series of bilateral meetings with Arab
    countries early in the Cancun Ministerial in an
    effort to prevent them from joining G20.
  • EU engaged in persuading Caribbean and Pacific
    (ACP) states not to join the G20
  • Philippines came under intense pressure to
    distance itself from both the G20 and G33.

59
Divide and Rule policy
  • EU reportedly pressing individual African states
    to keep away from G20 and G33.
  • The EU was accused of trying to undermine
    developing country unity during the Ministerial
    by spreading rumors that West African countries
    might be open to WTO negotiations on the
    Singapore issues in return for a deal on cotton
    at Cancun.

60
Divide and Rule policy
  • US president George Bush had personally
    telephoned the heads of state of Brazil, India,
    Pakistan, South Africa and Thailand on the eve of
    the Ministerial , putting pressure on them to
    abandon the G20s strong stance on agriculture.
  • The inclusion of Brazil and India by US, EU and
    Australia to form the Five Interested Parties
    (G5) after Cancun

61
IFIs pressure on developing countries
  • There are several ways IFIs exert pressure.
  • i.  Pressure coming as loan conditionality
  • ii. Providing loans to developing countries to
  • compensate impacts of trade liberalization
  • iii. Providing technical assistance to develop
    country
  • schedule of commitments
  • iv. Working closely with WTO on a common agenda
  • by compelling poor countries to liberalize
    services.

62
IFIs pressure on developing countries
  • We strongly believe that a successful conclusion
    of the Doha round is essential for the world
    economy and will benefit all countries. We are
    therefore working to package our support,
    building on what we are already doing in order to
    help countries to implement commitments they make
    as the Doha Development Agenda proceeds.. We are
    examining ways to use and tailor our lending
    authority to respond to the specific challenges
    posed by Doha Agenda. Such lending could take
    place at the project, sector and country levels.
    In the context of coherent country financing
    plans, we also aim to provide support in
    mobilizing donor resources
  • - The letter submitted by IMF and World Bank on
    20th August 2003 to the WTO Director General,
    Supachai

63
IFIs pressure on developing countries
  • Supachai also angered African negotiation after
    Cancun by circulating another letter from the IMF
    and World Bank heads to WTO missions in Geneva.
    Dated 11 November 2003, the letter promised loans
    to countries willing to show flexibility to
    re-enter the negotiations.

64
IFIs pressure on developing countries
  • The World Bank and the IMF were urging
    countries to get talks back on the table. If
    countries went back to negotiations, they would
    be given lending facilities to meet the
    adjustment costs. Obviously developing countries
    felt extremely offended by that. Why should I
    loose revenue that I now collect (e.g. by making
    commitments to reduce tariffs), and be given a
    loan? I would rather collect revenue, especially
    if my tariffs are much lower than others. There
    is no way we are going to take on deeper
    commitments in the WTO and get deeper into debt.
    It doesnt make sense. Also, what can we use to
    repay the loans if there is no revenue to
    collect? The DG sent us copies of this letter.
    This is very weird. Im telling you, this
    organization is crazy
  • - One African official

65
Corporate lobby groups influence
  • In the words of David Hartridge, former director
    of the WTOs services division Without the
    enormous pressure generated by the American
    financial services sector, particularly companies
    like American Express and Citicorp, there would
    have been no services agreement
  • At the forefront of the campaign demanding the
    expansion of negotiations to cover Singapore
    Issues were the major international business
    lobbies such as International Camber of Commerce
    (ICC).

66
Corporate lobby groups influence
  • The ICC met President Chirac in May 2003, prior
    to G8s Evian summit, and handed over a statement
    calling for the WTOs negotiating agenda to be
    expended into the new areas of investment,
    government procurement and trade facilitation.
    This was duly accommodated.
  • The agribusiness lobby enjoyed unprecedented
    access to the US delegation to Cancun, which had
    around 70 corporate advisers.

67
Corporate lobby groups influence
  • The Business Round Table announced that it would
    be launching a multi-million dollar promotional
    campaign in June 2003 to win support for the
    successful conclusion of the Doha round of WTO
    negotiations.
  • USAs rejection of the West African call for the
    elimination of cotton subsidies stemmed directly
    from its concern not to antagonize the powerful
    cotton lobby especially on the eve of an election
    year.

68
Corporate lobby groups influence
  • The close relationship between the developed
    country negotiators and the corporate lobby
    groups was exemplified in an EU briefing session
    during the Ministerial, where the representative
    of one European business federation openly asked
    EU trade negotiators what action they were taking
    to break up the G20, and what the business
    community could do to help.

69
Corporate lobby groups influence
  • NGOs have challenged the US system of trade
    advisory committees, the majority of which are
    filled exclusively by industry representatives.
    When NGOs won the right to have a -   seat on one
    of the trade advisory committees, however, the
    committee did not meet for two years thereafter.

70
Corporate lobby groups influence
  • According to Ugandan delegates at Cancun,
    President Museveni was asked by Zoellick to
    remove NGO representatives from Ugandas
    delegation in an attempt to close down
    transparency of the negotiations yet further.

71
Proposals.
  • Do not offer market access to water and
    electricity sectors (agriculture, health,
    education and other essential service sectors)
    under GATS
  • Join G20 (especially on agriculture) and G90
    (covers the whole range of issues related to WTO)
    and work within those developing country
    alliances to defend the rights of public in the
    developing world

72
Proposals.
  • Make sure the following is done within Sri Lanka
    before the consideration of offering services
    for GATS
  • a. introduce mechanisms to ensure wider
    stakeholder consultation and national consensus
    on GATS
  • b. make independent sectoral and overall
    assessment of service liberalization
    (collectively with UNCTAD, UNDP) with the
    involvement of representatives of the Sri Lankan
    public.

73
Request to all public, private, CS organisatons
operating in each service sector..
  • To study and assess the wide range of
    implications on particular service sectors if
    they are offered under GATS
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