WTO:
The re-hashed Annex C
17/12/2005
- Opinión
A comma, a punctuation point and the re-hashed Annex C
The services section of the Ministerial Declaration released at 2pm Hong
Kong time maintains virtually all the controversial aspects of the earlier
discredited Annex C. There are a few minor changes that ignore fundamental
concerns raised by several countries over the last 2 days in Hong Kong and
before in Geneva.
Paragraph 1 preserves the modal objectives present in earlier Annex C.
There is a cosmetic change from ‘strive to ensure’ in the earlier annex to
‘to be guided to the maximum extent possible’. Paragraphs 1 and 2 of Annex
C are the entry points for sectoral negotiations. Paragraph 2 states that
“in order to provide guidance for the request-offer negotiations, the
sectoral and modal objectives as identified by members may be considered”.
There is a footnote at the end of that sentence making reference to a
controversial report by the Chairman of the Council for Trade in Services
(TN/S/23). This report contains a list of liberalisation objectives by
exporting countries (mainly developed countries) across a whole range of
sectors – legal services, telecoms, financial services, distribution,
transport, environmental services etc. The new insertion that mentions that
the document ‘has no legal status’ doesn’t really mean much as the ability
to resist requests will depend on their political will and not on the
legality of the document.
The extremely controversial paragraph 4(b) is retained and is strengthened
by a specific reference to Article 13 of the GATS. This article mentions
that there ‘shall be multilateral negotiations on government procurement in
services under this Agreement within two years from the date of entry into
force of the WTO Agreement’. Since this timeline has not been met
demandeurs of a government procurement agreement on services can use this
language to force developing countries to enter into negotiations.
Paragraph 5 calls for members to develop disciplines on domestic regulation
before the end of the current round of negotiations. It refers to an
extremely problematic text that was submitted by the Chairman of the
Working Party on Domestic Regulation to the GATS Council on 15 November
2005 as the reference document. The underlying principle of the
negotiations on domestic regulation is to develop disciplines that ensure
that domestic regulatory frameworks are not ‘unnecessary barriers’ to
trade. Several developing countries are wary of this and have called for
more time to understand the implications of multilateral rules on domestic
regulation
Para 7(b) another flashpoint in the negotiations has been critiqued by
trade analysts as changing the basic structure of the GATS. The present
version mentions that countries shall consider requests to enter into
plurilateral negotiations
In Paragraph 10, on technical assistance for developing countries to engage
in the negotiations, another cosmetic change. While the earlier language
mentioned that this assistance would be given to them to engage in the
‘final phase of’ negotiations, the new draft deletes this section.
Source: Focus on the Global South. www.focusweb.org
https://www.alainet.org/en/articulo/113876
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