LDCs Encourage WTO Members to Design More Effective Preferential Rules of
Origin
The Least Developed Countries
(LDCs) Group at the WTO presented a report to the multilateral organisation’s
Committee on Rules of Origin (CRO) on 30 October, calling for a more effective
design of preferential rules of origin. The discussions are part of the work
mandated by trade ministers at their last WTO ministerial conference in Bali,
Indonesia in this area.
In the report, the LDC Group encourages
WTO members to allow for changes in their rules of origin, or RoO, by taking into account the needs of low-income
countries to source foreign inputs in today’s global value chains and the trade
challenges faced by landlocked and island LDCs.
RoO confer an economic
nationality on products traded across borders, defining how much processing
must take place locally before goods are considered to be the product of the
exporting country and benefit from preferential treatment.
LDCs have repeatedly voiced
concerns that these preferential RoO are often too
restrictive and impose onerous compliance burdens, making it difficult for LDCs
to take full advantage of existing preferential margins. Furthermore, they say,
such rules are currently designed on a unilateral basis, without any harmonised
standard.
However, some experts say that
even though well-designed rules of origin are a potentially powerful tool for
LDC industrial development, there is a risk that the immediate benefits arising
from more flexible rules are offset by longer term costs, specifically those
associated with keeping LDCs in low value-added segments of production enjoying
preferential market access.
In the report, the LDC Group
underscores that existing preferential RoO are old
and have not followed evolutions in world trade.
“The present rules were
initially drawn up in the 1970s and they have not materially changed much
since, whereas the commercial world has,” the paper says, while referring to
the emergence of global value chains.
The report also explains that
preferential margins have been eroded as a result of the proliferation of trade
agreements, whereas the costs of compliance with RoO
have increased significantly. These two factors combined render “preferences
unattractive.” EU, Canada as role models
In their paper, the LDCs use
the examples of RoO reforms in Canada and the EU to
illustrate how a shift towards more lenient and flexible RoO
is conducive to development in preference-receiving countries.
“The results achieved by these
two preference giving countries… show that a change in RoO
reflecting global value chains generates a market response in terms of
investment and trade flows,” the document states.
Consequentially, the paper
calls upon WTO members, particularly the United States and Japan as major LDC
trading partners, to review the substance and form of their RoO
systems which “have not materially changed” since the 1970s.
In this context, the document
states that “simple and transparent rules of origin for LDCs are those rules of
origin permitting a full utilisation of trade preferences.”
In subsequent paragraphs, the
report discusses how the EU and Canadian RoO reform
efforts impacted trade with LDCs.
In the case of the EU, which
upgraded its allowance for non-originating material to 70 percent
in many sectors – from the previous 40 percent – and
retained a single instead of a double processing stage for clothing in 2011,
the paper finds that reform efforts helped increase the utilisation rates of
preferential margins by LDCs from 89 percent in 2010
to 99 percent in 2013, excluding fuel and
agricultural products.
With respect to Canada, where
the government implemented more lenient RoO including
greater opportunities for cumulation in 2003, the
report argues that the LDC garment industry has reaped substantial benefits.
After the reform, utilisation
rates are documented to have reached immediately 100 percent
and, in the example case of knitted and crocheted garments, export volumes
skyrocketed from US$17.8 million in 2002 to US$966 million in 2013, equalling a
more than 50-fold increase.
Concerning US preferential RoO, the report highlights that “the US rules of origin
seem to have been so far unable to trigger a diversification of exports and the
value of trade covered by the US [Generalised System of Preferences] is
abysmally low.”
Moving forward with the LDC
agenda at the WTO
The continuation of work on
preferential RoO in the context of the CRO was well
received in the Geneva-based trade community, sources say, particularly given
the persistent stalemate at the WTO on the implementation of two other Bali
decisions relating to the Trade Facilitation Agreement and public food
stockholding, respectively.
The identification of specific
challenges facing LDCs in complying with existing RoO
is part of a broader agenda launched under the WTO Ministerial Decision on
preferential RoO during last December’s Bali
ministerial conference.
This Decision mandated the CRO
to “annually review developments in preferential rules of origin applicable to
imports from LDCs… [and] report to the General
Council.”
In this context, WTO members
also took note of the LDCs’ case for rules on a more generous sourcing of
foreign inputs “in order for a good to [still] qualify for benefits under LDC
preferential trade arrangements.”
The LDC Group also argues that
preferential RoO should take into account the costs
of freight and insurance when it comes to determining the value of materials,
particularly from landlocked and island LDCs, which have to ship goods through
transit countries and overcome significant hurdles to integrate into global
value chains.