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Regulatory and Institutional Issues arising from Services Trade

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Title: Regulatory and Institutional Issues arising from Services Trade


1
  • Regulatory and Institutional Issues arising from
    Services Trade
  • Mina Mashayekhi
  • Officer in Charge, Division on International
    Trade in Goods and Services, and Commodities
    (DITC), UNCTAD

2
Outline of Presentation
  • Why regulate?
  • Regulating infrastructure services sectors
  • Key regulatory and institutional lessons
  • Regulatory Capacity-building in Developing
    countries
  • Trade agreements and Domestic Regulation
    Negotiations
  • Conclusions

3
Why regulate? (1)
  • Regulation aims at
  • correcting market failures
  • creating stable and competitive market
    environments
  • promoting benefits from services trade
    liberalization while minimizing attendant costs
  • achieving other key domestic policy objectives
    (e.g. protecting consumers, developing domestic
    supply capacity, protecting the environment,
    maintaining cultural diversity and ensuring
    universal access to essential services)
  • Regulatory systems include
  • regulatory measures (regulatory substance)
  • -Economic regulation
  • -Technical regulation
  • regulatory institutions (regulatory governance)

4
Why regulate? (2)
  • While the case for regulating services is widely
    acknowledged there is less agreement on what is
    good regulation
  • Broadly, good regulation should achieve the
    following i) promote economic growth, ii)
    promote social welfare and environmental
    sustainability, iii) result in outcomes that meet
    expectations of key stakeholders (e.g.,
    consumers, operators, investors)
  • Regulation should be effective (i.e. achieving
    planned goals) and efficient (i.e. achieving
    goals at minimum costs)
  • For many DCs, regulatory frameworks are still at
    an emerging stage

5
Why regulate? (3) - Sectoral Regulation and
Competition regulation
  • Differences
  • - correcting market failures vs. enhance
    consumer welfare
  • - General and ex ante vs. case by case and
    ex post
  • Common feature Anti-competitive practices, e.g.
    abuse of market power
  • Countries allocate variously regulatory
    jurisdiction between the institutions
  • Clarity of role and coherence avoid duplication
    and conflicts, and enhance implementation
  • Sufficient coordination required for coherence to
    pre-empt forum-shopping and double jeopardy.

6
Regulating Infrastructure Services
  • Accra Accord mandate
  • UNCTADs Multi-year Expert meeting on Services,
    Development and Trade the Regulatory and
    Institutional Dimension (2009-2011) with
    attention to infrastructure services -
    telecommunications, financial services, energy,
    transport and water supply
  • Efficient and accessible infrastructure services
    contribute to economic/social development,
    economic diversification, domestic supply
    capacity, export competitiveness, MDGs, and
    countries' integration into world economy
  • Several empirical studies have confirmed the
    positive correlation between efficient
    infrastructure services and competitiveness, and
    higher income levels.

7
A few figures on the importance of
Infrastructure Services and Trade
  • Important in output, trade employment
  • Global ISS annual revenue at 14 trillion (2009)
    24 of world GDP. DCs account for 30
  • Trade in ISS significant and dynamic. DCs share
    increased from 21.4 (2002) to 25.4 (2008).
    Exports in ISS important for smaller DCs as a
    share of GDP
  • Represent 13 of world employment (2008) can be
    a major source of job creation. 5 of ISS trade
    through Mode 4 support 2 million jobs worldwide
  • But investment needs in ISS are huge
  • over 1 trillion will still be needed during the
    next decade to support continuous growth and
    poverty reduction goals

8
Trends in Infrastructure Service Reforms
  • RIFs are essential in these sectors to ensure
    development benefits
  • Historically, IS provided by Governments
  • 30 yrs ago, trend towards commercialization and
    privatization with increased competition and
    trade in IS
  • -unbundled and opened sectors to private
    participation (privatization, PPPs, concessions,
    BOT, FDI and trade)
  • IFI market reforms and SAPS have impacted IS in
    some DCs
  • Regulatory systems an important components of
    reforms
  • Mixed outcomes and cases of regulatory failure
  • Technology and innovation lead to more
    complex/new services
  • Need for a rethink and proper design of RIFs

9
Key Lessons (1)-Integrated Coherent Strategy
  • Development of ISS and RIFs need to be anchored
    in a comprehensive, integrated and coherent
    strategy of growth, development and trade with
    accompanying sectoral development planning,
    macro-economic, social, trade, investment,
    competition, environmental policies
  • -Brazil's "accelerated growth program" created
    effective links between infrastructure service
    development with public procurement and domesitc
    productive and innovative capacity
  • -G-20 endorsed Muti-Year Action Plan on
    Development to reduce infrastructure deficits

10
Key Lessons (2) Regulatory Institutional
Issues
  • Quality of regulation and institutional capacties
    matter more than ownership (State/SOEs, PPPs,
    private)
  • 1) Major national efforts in assuring quality
    RIFs
  • -EU Smart Regulation seeks to ensure the
    quality of regulation throughout the policy cycle
    (simplification evaluation of benefits/costs,
    including through impact assessment guidelines)
  • - Australia's Office of Best Practice
    Regulation using regulatory impact assessment to
    ensure regulation meets policy objectives with
    minimal cost for business and communities
  • 2) private participation should not be
    considered a priori a better regulatory option
    simply because of the relative wealth of
    knowledge on the regulation of private firms, as
    compared to that of SOEs

11
Key Lessons (3)- Regulatory and Institutional
Issues
  • 3) SOEs can play a useful role in particular
    in transport and energy supply
  • Regulatory governance determines quality of
    regulations
  • - Legal, financial administrative
    independence for autonomous and accountable
    decision making is mportant for credibility of
    institutions
  • Best fit for a sector depends on
  • - economic attributes
  • - technological considerations,
  • - countries economic, social, institutional and
    political endowment
  • - human and administrative resources
  • Meaningful stakeholder involvement important to
    balancing different interests

12
Regulation by Independent Regulatory Agency (IRA)
  • IRAs are typically established to facilitate
    private participation
  • Governments signal commitment to eliminating
    political influence and dominant firms in markets
  • Between 1990 and 2003, countries with IRAs
    increased from
  • - 5 to 67 (telecommunications)
  • - 4 to 54 (electricity) and
  • - 1 to 23 (water)
  • Establishing IRAs is not sufficient quality
    (credibility and stability) matters
  • Many positive results in telecom and electricity
    (less so in water and transport)

13
Universal Access
  • Aims at enhancing access to services for the
    poor, remote and other marginalized groups
  • USOs are sometimes imposed on service providers
    to expand service delivery or to deliver at
    affordable prices
  • Challenge is to achieve balance between
    connecting the unconnected and making services
    more affordable for those already connected
  • USOs should be realistic and clearly defined
    leave sufficient incentives for implementation
    be adaptable and take account of technological
    changes
  • UNCTAD survey the majority of respondents did
    have a specific UA policy, universal access
    obligations for some or all suppliers was the
    main approach used (72 of responses) followed
    by universal service fund (32.2 ) and subsidies
    to consumers (22 ).

14
Regulatory Capacity-building in Developing
countries
  • Challenge in designing RIFs appropriate to the
    country's situation
  • Many challenges faced by DCs related to scarcity
    of qualified staff
  • - lack of targeted training
  • - lack of attractive employment conditions
  • - qualified staff attracted to private sector
  • Remedies include i) outsourcing regulatory
    functions, ii) pooling regional resources, and
    iii) twinning between developed and developing
    country regulatory institutions
  • Tools to address DCs capacity constraints
    include
  • - contracting out certain utility functions
    to external agents
  • - limiting regulatory discretion and
    minimizing regulatory complexity
  • - building up core qualified, skilled and
    experienced staff
  • - relying on external advice for specialized
    tasks
  • - establishing multi-sectoral agencies
    central-level (instead of local) regulators etc.
  • Regulatory cooperation is important

15
Trade Agreements and Regulation
  • Many SouthSouth and NorthSouth Agreements
    include provisions relating to RIFs, (cooperative
    mechanisms, training, regional centers of
    excellence, etc.)
  • EUCARIFORUM EPA (telecom and financial chapters)
    contains regulatory provisions
  • Andean Free Trade Agreement and MERCOSUR contain
    sector-specific regulatory frameworks (e.g.
    telecom) to complement liberalization
  • EU integration CB and TA offered to assist
    new/future Members implement the "acquis
    communautaire", covering regulations and
    institutions
  • Inclusion of services in the MTS and RTAs raised
    concerns over potential conflict between services
    liberalization and regulation and the impact of
    trade rules on national regulatory autonomy

16
Regulatory Provisions in Trade Agreements
  • Various RTAs have incorporated WTO-additional
    rules and disciplines on domestic regulation,
    particularly on telecom and FS
  • Close collaboration is needed between regulatory
    authorities and trade ministries policy advice
    and assistance for RIFs in relation to trade
    liberalization negotiations are crucial
  • The emphasis of trade agreements should be on the
    management of regulatory diversity reflecting
    each countrys legal traditions on the content
    and form of its regulations rather than a
    reduction of regulations per se

17
GATS
  • GATS recognizes governments right to regulate
    subject to their liberalization commitments
  • -GATS-Positive list approach allows Members to
    attach conditions and limitations to MA and NT
    commitments
  • GATS Coverage includes key regulatory tools,
    institutions and specific sectoral provisions
    (e.g. Telecom Reference Paper requiring IRAs,
    Annex on Financial Services)
  • GATS obligations can in some way guide towards
    good regulatory practices (e.g. transparency, due
    process)
  • Disciplines on Domestic Regulation being
    negotiated concerns that necessity tests could
    unduly constrain domestic prerogatives

18
Disciplines on Domestic Regulation (1)
  • Negotiated text should recognize the asymmetries
    between countries regulatory frameworks
  • Extent of obligations
  • - regulatory experiences/studies/survey confirm
    asymmetry between developed and developing
    country RIFs
  • - extent of obligations undertaken by Members
    could be determined in function of the sectors
    where they have taken commitments
  • - extent of obligation undertaken by DC could be
    selected on the basis of regulatory preparedness
  • Negotiations should preserve the right to
    regulate and DCs policy space to adapt
    regulations to changing circumstances
  • Impact of trade rules on national regulatory
    autonomy needs careful country-specific and
    sector specific analysis and audit

19
Disciplines on Dom Reg (2)
  • Transparency requirements
  • - transparency/due process requirements are
    common in RIF and are considered part of best
    practices and key principle for evaluating RIFs
  • - a priori transparency requirements may be
    incompatible with certain countries judicial
    systems
  • - comprehensive advice on compliance with
    regulation for DC services providers would
    underpin effective market access for these
    providers

20
Disciplines on Dom Reg (3)
  • Pro-development provisions/flexibilities for DCs
  • - undue constraints on dom reg would be
    particularly problematic for DCs
  • - in given cases most development-friendly can
    be more important criterion than least trade
    restrictive
  • - could include i) general exception for
    development, ii) temporary suspension or
    development exceptions, iii) carve-out or
    phase-in periods for DCs
  • Focus on Mode 4 impacts
  • - dom reg disciplines facilitates the
    realization of Mode 4 exports
  • - the text on qualification requirements merits
    particular attention
  • - professional experience, in addition to
    educational qualifications, should be taken into
    account

21
Conclusions
  • For reform of and trade in services to generate
    pro-development outcomes, they need to be
    accompanied by appropriate policies and RIFs and
    anhored in a coherent and comprehensive strategy
  • No one-size-fits-all model for RIFs but
    best-fit-approaches should take into account
    local context of economic and social development
  • Role of StateThe States ability to provide
    effective RIFs for services is central for
    overall economic performance
  • RIFs should be flexible enough to adapt to
    rapidly changing market conditions, technological
    developments, pressing global challenges
  • Trade agreements, including ongoing WTO
    negotiations on disciplines for domestic,
    regulation is relevant for policy space to adapt
    to changing circumstances given Developing
    countries' underdeveloped domestic RIFs
  • Multi-stakeholder consultations involving civil
    society, consumer groups and the private sector
    are thus important
  • DCs resource constraints can make it difficult
    to implement RIFs without financial and technical
    and capacity building assistance
  • Enhanced regulatory cooperation is important,
    particularly South-South

22
Thank you for your attentionmina.mashayekhi_at_unc
tad.org
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