WTO
Goods Council Discusses High Number of Trade Concerns, MC12 Implementation, LDC
Graduation
At a meeting of
the Council for Trade in Goods on 24-25 November, WTO members addressed a record
number of trade concerns touching on a wide range of trade measures and economic
sectors. Members also discussed how the Council should move forward in implementing
some of the outcomes of the 12th Ministerial Conference (MC12) and continued discussions
on the Least-Developed Countries (LDC) Group’s proposal concerning countries graduating
from LDC status.
The Council heard 45 trade concerns on maintained or newly
introduced measures by 24 WTO members, which included nine new issues. A wide range
of measures was raised, including tariffs and tariff rate quotas (TRQs), import/export
bans and restrictions, technical barriers to trade, sanitary and phytosanitary measures,
subsidies, local content requirements, alleged discriminatory domestic taxation,
domestic certification and administrative procedures, and countervailing and anti-dumping
duties.
These concerns encompass a wide range of sectors (agricultural,
information technology, fisheries, forestry and food products), as well as specific
products, such as air conditioners, apples and pears, onions and potatoes, cheese,
pulses, cosmetics, sugar, stainless steel, mobile phones, plain copier paper and
tyres.
The Chair, Ambassador Etienne Oudot de Dainville, informed
members of his meetings and consultations on how the Council should move forward
with three implementation issues arising from the 12th Ministerial Conference (MC12),
namely the work programme on electronic commerce, the WTO's response to the COVID-19
pandemic, and WTO reform.
On 19 October, Ambassador Oudot de Dainville met with
the chairs of the 14 subsidiary bodies that report to the Council for Trade in Goods
to request them to prepare two factual reports on activities undertaken in the context
of the response to the pandemic and the current functioning of their committees.
The Chair has also worked with the WTO Secretariat to prepare equivalent reports
for the Council. Once these reports have been circulated, he will convene a meeting
early next year so that they can be presented by the various chairs and members
can begin discussing the way forward on these issues.
Finally, the Council will hold briefings on 9 and 12 December
to share information about the WTO's digital tools that are used by some committees
(for example, e-Agenda, Trade Concerns Database, the Notifications Portal, and ePing)
and how they can assist delegations in their work.
Members stressed the importance of the planning and sequencing
of meetings and the need to avoid subsequent changes, which was disruptive, particularly
for small delegations.
Members once again discussed document G/C/W/752, submitted in April 2018 by the LDC Group. The main purpose of this
proposal is to enable graduated LDCs with a gross national product (GNP) below USD
1,000 to benefit from treatment similar to that accorded to certain developing countries
listed in Annex VII(b) of the Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures,
i.e. exemption from the provision on export subsidies.
On behalf of the LDC Group, Bangladesh asked the Council
for Trade in Goods to approve this submission and recommend it to the General Council
for appropriate action. Such a decision was required for clarity and predictability,
stressed Bangladesh.
Following a request made in July 2021, the Secretariat
updated the GNP of all members, and the updated GNPs were circulated in November
2021 in document G/SCM/W/585. The LDC Group noted that, in light of the
updated information, it was evident that many LDCs may graduate from the LDC category
with a GNPI per capita below the threshold of USD 1,000 in constant USD 1990 terms.
The LDC Group thanked those members that had been supporting
this proposal since its submission in 2018 and committed itself to remaining engaged
to work on feasible solutions to this issue. Some developed country members noted
that the Secretariat's calculations confirmed that gaps remained in the information
needed for this proposal to be workable from a technical perspective.
Mindful of the challenges that graduated LDCs faced, these
members reiterated their willingness to consider further ideas and proposals as
to how to approach workable solutions for all.
Members addressed three items referred by the Committee
on Market Access. The first concerned a draft decision (G/C/W/822)
on the derestriction of Uruguay
Round negotiating
materials, including the requests and offers that were used in such negotiations.
This document contains the complete list of documents that members agreed to derestrict,
which will be forwarded to the General Council for adoption.
The bilateral negotiating materials of seven rounds of
negotiations under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) have already
been derestricted and, at present, only the bilateral negotiating materials of the
Uruguay Round remain restricted. No document will be derestricted before the General
Council adopts this decision.
The Council also agreed to forward to the General Council
four draft collective requests for waiver extensions concerning the introduction
of changes to the Harmonized System (HS) into WTO schedules of concessions, which
were circulated as documents G/C/W/815, G/C/W/816, G/C/W/817 and G/C/W/818. These documents propose one-year extensions of the draft collective
waiver decisions for HS2002, HS2007, HS2012 and HS2017, all of which expire on 31
December 2022.
Similarly, the Council agreed to forward a new draft waiver
decision (G/C/W/820) entitled "Introduction of HS2022
Changes to WTO Schedules of Tariff Concessions". This draft decision follows
the same approach as that for previous transposition exercises granting a collective
derogation.