WTO Promotes MFN as FTA Rule the World
·
Theme: The WTO released Part II of its
series "The Value of the WTO: An Economic Viewpoint in Six Instalments",
focusing on the Most-Favoured-Nation (MFN) principle.
·
MFN principle: Requires a WTO member to extend any
tariff concession granted to one trading partner to all WTO members (subject
to WTO exceptions).
·
Core significance: MFN is more than a non-discrimination
rule—it is a key institutional feature that enables effective multilateral tariff
negotiations.
·
Two key economic functions of MFN:
o
Simplifies tariff bargaining by reducing
the complexity and transaction costs of negotiations.
o
Preserves the value of negotiated concessions by preventing
later discriminatory agreements from undermining earlier commitments.
·
Supports reciprocity: Combined with
the principle of reciprocity, MFN promotes balanced exchanges of market access
commitments and long-term cooperation.
·
Simplifies negotiations:
o
Without MFN, governments would have to negotiate separate
tariffs with every trading partner for each product.
o
MFN creates a single bargaining framework for each
product, making negotiations more efficient.
·
Principal Supplier Rule: Under GATT,
negotiations focused on the principal supplier of a product, with concessions
automatically extended to all members through MFN.
·
Historical evidence: Early GATT
negotiating rounds showed that MFN encouraged more transparent, predictable
and cooperative bargaining, reducing strategic behaviour
such as "lowball" tariff offers.
·
Role in market access: MFN ensures
that market access concessions are multilateralized,
protecting them from erosion through later preferential agreements.
·
Exceptions: While GATT permits limited exceptions
(e.g., customs unions and free trade areas under Article XXIV), these remain
exceptions to the general MFN rule.
·
Warning: Weakening MFN could:
o
Increase the complexity of trade negotiations.
o
Reduce stability and predictability.
o
Encourage fragmented and discriminatory trade arrangements.
·
Overall conclusion: MFN has been a cornerstone of the GATT/WTO
system, making multilateral trade negotiations feasible, stable and durable,
and remains a key pillar of the global trading system.
[ABS News Service/17.07.2026]
The most-favoured-nation
(MFN) principle is one of the cornerstones of the multilateral trading system founded
by the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) and embodied by the WTO. It
is often described simply as a non-discrimination rule, requiring that any tariff
granted to one trading partner be extended to all WTO members. But its economic
significance runs much deeper.
This is not
to say that the principle is beyond reproach. There are problems with the application
of this principle that are well known to economists and that I will feature in my
next post. Also, some members have questioned whether MFN is still fit for purpose
in today's environment. In an earlier post, I described my impressions from the
reform discussions at the 14th Ministerial Conference earlier this year in Yaounde, Cameroon, on MFN and other issues. As background for
these reform discussions, it is useful to revisit the role that MFN has played in
the world trading system that we have today.
In my previous post, I argued
that the central purpose of the GATT/WTO is to provide a forum where governments
can "negotiate away" the cross-border spillovers created by their unilateral
tariff policies. Viewed through this lens, MFN is far more than a fairness principle.
It is a key institutional feature that has made multilateral tariff negotiations
possible.
MFN performs
two fundamental economic functions. First, it dramatically simplifies the tariff
bargaining problem that governments face by reducing both the complexity and the
transaction costs of negotiating market access. Second, it helps preserve the value
of negotiated concessions by preventing them from being undermined through subsequent
discriminatory agreements. Together, and especially when combined with the principle
of reciprocity (i.e. a balanced exchange of market access commitments), these functions
transform what could otherwise be a fragmented and highly strategic bargaining process
into a stable framework for international cooperation.
The historical
record illustrates just how important these institutional features have been. Evidence
from the early GATT negotiating rounds suggests that they fundamentally changed
the way governments bargained, replacing many of the strategic tactics that had
characterized earlier tariff negotiations with a more transparent and cooperative
process. The result was the extensive network of tariff commitments and market access
concessions that continues to underpin the multilateral trading system today.
In this post,
I develop three main ideas. First, MFN simplifies tariff bargaining by reducing
the complexity of the negotiating problem for members, a result that follows from
the fact that the international spillovers created by tariffs are transmitted through
markets and prices. Second, MFN helps preserve the value of negotiated market access
commitments, whereas weakening it risks reintroducing instability and complexity
into the trading system. Finally, historical evidence from the early GATT rounds
shows how these institutional features shaped bargaining behaviour in practice.
The first role of MFN: Simplifying tariff bargaining
The first
critical function of MFN is that it simplifies tariff negotiations.
As pointed
out in the previous post, a fundamental
feature of tariff bargaining in the GATT/WTO has been to address the cross-border
effects, or "pecuniary" externalities, that governments impose on one
another when they set tariffs unilaterally. Without MFN, this bargaining problem
would quickly become extraordinarily complex.
If for any
individual product, governments were free to apply different tariffs to different
trading partners on that product, each tariff change would affect every exporter
differently. Every bilateral trading relationship regarding that product would generate
its own cross-border spillover. Governments would therefore need to negotiate separately
with each trading partner over every product, creating an enormous number of individual
bargaining problems. The complexity of such negotiations would rapidly become unmanageable.
MFN largely
eliminates this problem. When the same tariff must be applied to every trading partner,
a tariff change affects all exporters of a given product in the same way on a per-unit
basis. Instead of confronting a separate bargaining problem with every trading partner,
governments face a single bargaining problem for each product.
The negotiating
process was simplified even further through the GATT's "principal supplier"
rule. Rather than negotiating simultaneously with every exporter, governments can
focus their discussions on the main ("principal") suppliers of each product,
while the resulting concession is automatically extended to all other members through
MFN. This greatly reduces the number of negotiations needed to achieve a multilateral
outcome. This insight is especially relevant, as renegotiating discriminatory trade
arrangements risks reintroducing the complexity problem that MFN helped to solve.1
What makes
MFN particularly remarkable is that its ability to simplify tariff bargaining stems
directly from the nature of the cross-border effect that governments are trying
to address. The international spillovers created by tariffs operate through prices
and markets. When a government raises a tariff, it can affect not only domestic
prices and the quantity of imports but also the prices received by foreign exporters.
Because these are "pecuniary" spillovers, a rule requiring non-discrimination
can fundamentally change their features, and hence change the structure of the bargaining
problem itself. By contrast, no comparable institutional rule exists in areas such
as climate policy. Carbon emissions generate a global environmental spillover that
does not operate through market prices, and that cannot be reshaped through bargaining
rules in the way MFN reshapes tariff bargaining.2
Seen in this
light, MFN occupies a unique place within the multilateral trading system. This
is not to say that the principle admits no exceptions. From the very beginning,
the GATT allowed carefully defined departures from MFN, most notably through Article
XXIV, which permits the formation of customs unions and free-trade areas. But these
departures have always been understood precisely as exceptions, and the economic
logic outlined above helps explain why. Weakening or abandoning MFN inevitably comes
at a cost, reintroducing complexity into the bargaining process and undermining
one of the institutional innovations that has made multilateral tariff negotiations
workable.
The second role of MFN: Preserving the value of trade
bargains
If MFN makes
agreements easier to reach, it also plays an equally important role after negotiations
have concluded. The second critical function of MFN is that it helps ensure that
negotiated market access commitments are secure and durable.
A central
objective of the GATT/WTO system is to provide a forum in which governments can
exchange market access concessions, reducing tariffs on imports in return for improved
market access abroad, while being confident that the value of those concessions
will not be eroded over time.
MFN helps
preserve the value of market access concessions by requiring that any tariff concession
granted to one member be extended to all. In doing so, it ensures that negotiated
market access is multilateralized and therefore protected
from erosion through later discriminatory deals. This matters because trade negotiations
do not occur in isolation. Governments continue to negotiate with other partners.
Without MFN, the value of concessions secured in one negotiation could later be
eroded by agreements reached elsewhere. When combined with the principle of reciprocity,
which anchors negotiations in the exchange of balanced concessions, this mechanism
helps stabilize the value of negotiated agreements over time, without the need for
continual renegotiation in response to the tariff bargaining of others.
By contrast,
if economies were free to negotiate unrestricted discriminatory tariff changes on
a product-by-product basis, even when aimed at market opening, the stability of
earlier bargains would be put at risk. A concession secured in one negotiation could
be partially or fully neutralized by subsequent agreements between other parties.
How have MFN and other GATT rules shaped tariff bargaining?
The importance
of MFN becomes clearer when one considers how tariff bargaining has actually taken
place under GATT rules.
The MFN tariff
commitments that exist today are the outcome of eight multilateral negotiating rounds
conducted under the GATT, culminating in the Uruguay Round and the creation of the
WTO in 1995. As Table 1 shows, a key feature of many of these rounds was the use
of simultaneous bilateral negotiations, in which governments exchanged market access
requests and offers to reduce tariffs across multiple bargaining partners at the
same time. The results of these bilateral bargains were then multilateralized and extended to all members through MFN.
Table 1: Negotiation methods used in successive GATT
negotiating rounds
|
Year |
Conference / Round |
Methodology |
Members |
|
1947 |
Geneva Tariff Conference |
Reciprocal "request-and-offer" bilateral
talks. Product-by-product negotiations based on principal supplier rule. |
23 |
|
1949 |
Annecy Tariff Conference |
13 |
|
|
1950-51 |
Torquay Tariff Conference |
38 |
|
|
1956 |
Geneva Tariff Conference |
26 |
|
|
1960-61 |
Geneva Dillon Round |
Primarily "request-and-offer" negotiations,
with limited use of linear tariff-cut proposals. |
26 |
|
1964-67 |
Geneva Kennedy Round |
Linear Formula* |
62 |
|
1973-79 |
Tokyo Round |
Swiss Formula* with exceptions |
102 |
|
1986-94 |
Uruguay Round |
Mixed approach: Formula(s) and "request-and-offer" |
123 |
*Note: The Kennedy
Round linear formula applied a uniform proportional tariff cut to all tariffs. The
Tokyo Round Swiss formula applied deeper proportional cuts to higher tariffs than
to lower tariffs, thereby compressing tariff dispersion.
This institutional
structure allowed tariff negotiations to become more transparent and less strategic.
Rather than engaging in complex bargaining over each bilateral relationship, governments
could focus on offering and requesting market access in a way that was effectively
anchored by the reciprocity norm. In this environment, the "price" of
market access became more predictable, and negotiations resembled a structured exchange
rather than open-ended bargaining.
Economists
have described this outcome as transforming tariff negotiations into something that
could be characterized as a "retail store for market access," where governments
arrived at the negotiating table with clearly defined tariff concessions that they
were ready to offer, and sought counterparties willing to exchange equivalent concessions.
In this setting, the scope for strategic delay or manipulation is reduced, and the
focus shifts toward identifying mutually beneficial exchanges.
Contemporary
accounts of early GATT rounds suggest that this characterization is not purely theoretical.
Curzon (1965) explains why "lowball" opening offers, where minimal initial
tariff reductions are offered to begin negotiations, made little sense in this setting.
Because governments expected non-strategic behaviour from their negotiating partners,
an initial offer was generally taken at face value rather than treated as a starting
point for haggling. He notes that, in the Torquay Round, this non-strategic behaviour
was most pronounced among governments that had already bargained under GATT rules
at the earlier Geneva (1947) and Annecy (1949) rounds and had by then learned the
new bargaining technique encouraged by GATT rules.
Supporting
this view are the findings of Bagwell, Staiger and Yurukoglu
(2020), summarized in Table 2, who examine the GATT bargaining records for the Torquay
Round (1950-51).
Table 2: "Old-timers" and newcomers in the
Torquay Round
|
Country group |
Initial tariff offer as a
% of existing tariff |
Final agreed concession as a % of existing tariff |
|
(Total number of tariff offers) |
(Total number of tariff concessions) |
|
|
GATT old-timers |
80.8% (11,964) |
80.6% (7,997) |
|
GATT newcomers |
85.5% (5,243) |
81.9% (2,939) |
Source: The table is drawn from Table A3 and Table A2 of the
Online Appendix of Bagwell, Staiger and Yurukoglu (2020)
and is based on the GATT bargaining records posted on the WTO website.
"Old-timer"
governments, those that had participated in earlier GATT rounds, arrived in Torquay
with offers that already reflected a substantial degree of market opening, and that
would have reduced average tariffs to 80.8% of existing levels. These initial offers
were very close to the final agreed outcomes (80.6%): there was relatively little
strategic adjustment during the tariff bargaining process itself. The negotiations
were not characterized by large revisions or tactical "lowballing," but
rather by the search for counterparties willing to reciprocate pre-existing offers.
By contrast,
"newcomer" governments behaved quite differently. They entered the negotiations
with relatively cautious offers, proposing to reduce tariffs only to 85.5% of existing
levels, and expecting that bargaining would involve gradual convergence toward mutually
acceptable outcomes. As Curzon (1965, p.74) observes, that expectation proved misplaced:
"Several
newcomers to GATT unaware of this new technique and starting with low offers found
that in the course of negotiations they were unable to reach the level of requests
they aimed for. Their initially low offers were taken as proof of their intentions
and they either had to go home with a tariff higher than expected or had to increase
their offers in the course of the negotiations."
By the close
of the round, newcomers had agreed to bindings cutting average tariffs to 81.9%
of existing levels, a much larger move from their opening position. Having started
with lowball offers, these governments ended up revealing to their bargaining partners
that they were willing to accept deeper cuts than they had first suggested.
As Ronald
Coase argued, this is precisely the kind of strategic behaviour that can lead to
costly delay or even bargaining failure. The old-timers, more experienced in the
GATT's bargaining technique, had largely given up this kind of behaviour.
This contrast
is also reflected in the success rates of initial offers. Old-timer governments
succeeded in concluding agreements on 67% (7,997 of 11,964) of the products for
which they made initial offers, while newcomers succeeded on only 56% (2,939 of
5,243). This difference is consistent with the idea that experienced participants
had internalized the institutional logic of GATT bargaining, while newcomers were
still adapting to it.
Main takeaway
MFN is often
described as a simple non-discrimination rule, but its economic role within the
multilateral trading system is much more fundamental.
By simplifying
the tariff bargaining problem and stabilizing the value of negotiated concessions,
MFN has helped make multilateral tariff negotiations feasible and durable. The historical
evidence from the early GATT rounds further suggests that these institutional features
were not merely formal constraints, but actively shaped how governments behaved
in practice.
Seen from
this perspective, MFN is one of the institutional innovations that has made the
multilateral trading system a durable framework for reciprocal cooperation.
1.
This is separate from the complexity
that discriminatory tariffs introduce for the governments that must administer them
and the firms that must navigate them. This complexity can create additional costs
in terms of lost income and diminished consumer choice.
2.
Carbon border adjustments are aimed
at the pecuniary international price effects of the policies that economies adopt
to address climate change (e.g., carbon taxes), but carbon border adjustments do
not change the features of the global non-pecuniary spillover created by carbon
emissions.
References
Bagwell, Kyle,
Robert W. Staiger, and Ali Yurukoglu (2020). "Multilateral
Trade Bargaining: A First Look at the GATT Bargaining Records." American
Economic Journal: Applied 12(3): 72-105.
Curzon, Gerard
(1965). "Multilateral Commercial Diplomacy: The General Agreement on Tariffs
and Trade and Its Impact on National Commercial Policies and Techniques". London:
Michael Joseph.