India Ratifies Trade Facilitation
Agreement, We are 76th in the List of Accepting Countries
India has ratified the new Trade
Facilitation Agreement (TFA). India’s WTO ambassador Anjali Prasad handed over
her country’s instrument of acceptance to Director-General Roberto Azevêdo on 22 April.
The TFA will enter into force once two-thirds of the WTO
membership has formally accepted the Agreement. India is the 76th WTO member to
accept the TFA.
In addition to India, the following WTO members have also
accepted the TFA: Hong Kong China, Singapore, the United States, Mauritius,
Malaysia, Japan, Australia, Botswana, Trinidad and Tobago, the Republic of
Korea, Nicaragua, Niger, Belize, Switzerland, Chinese Taipei, China,
Liechtenstein, Lao PDR, New Zealand, Togo, Thailand, the European Union (on behalf
of its 28 member states), the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Pakistan,
Panama, Guyana, Côte d’Ivoire, Grenada, Saint Lucia, Kenya, Myanmar, Norway,
Viet Nam, Brunei, Ukraine, Zambia, Lesotho, Georgia, Seychelles, Jamaica, Mali,
Cambodia and Paraguay, Turkey, Brazil, Macao China, the United Arab Emirates
and Samoa.
The TFA broke new ground for developing and least-developed
countries in the way it will be implemented. For the first time in WTO history,
the requirement to implement the Agreement was directly linked to the capacity
of the country to do so. In addition, the Agreement states that assistance and
support should be provided to help them achieve that capacity.
A Trade Facilitation Agreement Facility (TFAF) was also
created at the request of developing and least-developed country members to
help ensure that they receive the assistance needed to reap the full benefits
of the TFA and to support the ultimate goal of full implementation of the new
agreement by all members. Further
information on TFAF is available at www.TFAFacility.org.
Implementation of the WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA)
has the potential to increase global merchandise exports by up to $1 trillion
per annum, according to the WTO’s flagship World Trade Report released on 26
October 2015. Significantly, the Report
also found that developing countries will benefit significantly from the TFA,
capturing more than half of the available gains.