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WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION
MIN(01)/W/10
14 November 2001
(01-5768)
MINISTERIAL CONFERENCE
Fourth Session
Doha, 9 - 14 November 2001
IMPLEMENTATION-RELATED ISSUES AND CONCERNS
Decision
The Ministerial Conference, Having regard to Articles IV.1, IV.5 and IX
of the Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization (WTO);
Mindful of the importance that Members attach to the increased participation
of developing countries in the multilateral trading system, and of the
need to ensure that the system responds fully to the needs and interests
of all participants;
Determined to take concrete action to address issues and concerns that
have been raised by many developing-country Members regarding the implementation
of some WTO Agreements and Decisions, including the difficulties and resource
constraints that have been encountered in the implementation of obligations
in various areas;
Recalling the 3 May 2000 Decision of the General Council to meet in special
sessions to address outstanding implementation issues, and to assess the
existing difficulties, identify ways needed to resolve them, and take
decisions for appropriate action not later than the Fourth Session of
the Ministerial Conference;
Noting the actions taken by the General Council in pursuance of this mandate
at its Special Sessions in October and December 2000 (WT/L/384), as well
as the review and further discussion undertaken at the Special Sessions
held in April, July and October 2001, including the referral of additional
issues to relevant WTO bodies or their chairpersons for further work;
Noting also the reports on the issues referred to the General Council
from subsidiary bodies and their chairpersons and from the Director-General,
and the discussions as well as the clarifications provided and understandings
reached on implementation issues in the intensive informal and formal
meetings held under this process since May 2000;
Decides as follows:
1. General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994 (GATT 1994)
1.1 Reaffirms that Article XVIII of the GATT 1994 is a special and differential
treatment provision for developing countries and that recourse to it should
be less onerous than to Article XII of the GATT 1994.
1.2 Noting the issues raised in the report of the Chairperson of the Committee
on Market Access (WT/GC/50) concerning the meaning to be given to the
phrase "substantial interest" in paragraph 2(d) of Article XIII
of the GATT 1994, the Market Access Committee is directed to give further
consideration to the issue and make recommendations to the General Council
as expeditiously as possible but in any event not later than the end of
2002.
2. Agreement on Agriculture
2.1 Urges Members to exercise restraint in challenging measures notified
under the green box by developing countries to promote rural development
and adequately address food security concerns.
2.2 Takes note of the report of the Committee on Agriculture (G/AG/11)
regarding the implementation of the Decision on Measures Concerning the
Possible Negative Effects of the Reform Programme on Least-Developed and
Net Food-Importing Developing Countries, and approves the recommendations
contained therein regarding (i) food aid; (ii) technical and financial
assistance in the context of aid programmes to improve agricultural productivity
and infrastructure; (iii) financing normal levels of commercial imports
of basic foodstuffs; and (iv) review of follow-up.
2.3 Takes note of the report of the Committee on Agriculture (G/AG/11)
regarding the implementation of Article 10.2 of the Agreement on Agriculture,
and approves the recommendations and reporting requirements contained
therein.
2.4 Takes note of the report of the Committee on Agriculture (G/AG/11)
regarding the administration of tariff rate quotas and the submission
by Members of addenda to their notifications, and endorses the decision
by the Committee to keep this matter under review.
3. Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures
3.1 Where the appropriate level of sanitary and phytosanitary protection
allows scope for the phased introduction of new sanitary and phytosanitary
measures, the phrase "longer time-frame for compliance" referred
to in Article 10.2 of the Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and
Phytosanitary Measures, shall be understood to mean normally a period
of not less than 6 months. Where the appropriate level of sanitary and
phytosanitary protection does not allow scope for the phased introduction
of a new measure, but specific problems are identified by a Member, the
Member applying the measure shall upon request enter into consultations
with the country with a view to finding a mutually satisfactory solution
to the problem while continuing to achieve the importing Member's appropriate
level of protection.
3.2 Subject to the conditions specified in paragraph 2 of Annex B to the
Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures, the
phrase "reasonable interval" shall be understood to mean normally
a period of not less than 6 months. It is understood that timeframes for
specific measures have to be considered in the context of the particular
circumstances of the measure and actions necessary to implement it. The
entry into force of measures which contribute to the liberalization of
trade should not be unnecessarily delayed.
3.3 Takes note of the Decision of the Committee on Sanitary and Phytosanitary
Measures (G/SPS/19) regarding equivalence, and instructs the Committee
to develop expeditiously the specific programme to further the implementation
of Article 4 of the Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary
Measures.
3.4 Pursuant to the provisions of Article 12.7 of the Agreement on the
Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures, the Committee on Sanitary
and Phytosanitary Measures is instructed to review the operation and implementation
of the Agreement on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures at least once
every four years. 3.5 (i) Takes note of the actions taken to date by the
Director-General to facilitate the increased participation of Members
at different levels of development in the work of the relevant international
standard setting organizations as well as his efforts to coordinate with
these organizations and financial institutions in identifying SPS-related
technical assistance needs and how best to address them; and
(ii) urges the Director-General to continue his cooperative efforts with
these organizations and institutions in this regard, including with a
view to according priority to the effective participation of least-developed
countries and facilitating the provision of technical and financial assistance
for this purpose.
3.6 (i) Urges Members to provide, to the extent possible, the financial
and technical assistance necessary to enable least-developed countries
to respond adequately to the introduction of any new SPS measures which
may have significant negative effects on their trade; and
(ii) urges Members to ensure that technical assistance is provided to
least-developed countries with a view to responding to the special problems
faced by them in implementing the Agreement on the Application of Sanitary
and Phytosanitary Measures.
4. Agreement on Textiles and Clothing
Reaffirms the commitment to full and faithful implementation of the Agreement
on Textiles and Clothing, and agrees:
4.1 that the provisions of the Agreement relating to the early integration
of products and the elimination of quota restrictions should be effectively
utilised.
4.2 that Members will exercise particular consideration before initiating
investigations in the context of antidumping remedies on textile and clothing
exports from developing countries previously subject to quantitative restrictions
under the Agreement for a period of two years following full integration
of this Agreement into the WTO.
4.3 that without prejudice to their rights and obligations, Members shall
notify any changes in their rules of origin concerning products falling
under the coverage of the Agreement to the Committee on Rules of Origin
which may decide to examine them.
Requests the Council for Trade in Goods to examine the following proposals:
4.4 that when calculating the quota levels for small suppliers for the
remaining years of the Agreement, Members will apply the most favourable
methodology available in respect of those Members under the growth-on-growth
provisions from the beginning of the implementation period; extend the
same treatment to least-developed countries; and, where possible, eliminate
quota restrictions on imports of such Members;
4.5 that Members will calculate the quota levels for the remaining years
of the Agreement with respect to other restrained Members as if implementation
of the growth-on-growth provision for stage 3 had been advanced to 1 January
2000;
and make recommendations to the General Council by 31 July 2002 for appropriate
action.
5. Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade
5.1 Confirms the approach to technical assistance being developed by the
Committee on Technical Barriers to Trade, reflecting the results of the
triennial review work in this area, and mandates this work to continue.
5.2 Subject to the conditions specified in paragraph 12 of Article 2 of
the Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade, the phrase "reasonable
interval" shall be understood to mean normally a period of not less
than 6 months, except when this would be ineffective in fulfilling the
legitimate objectives pursued.
5.3
(i) Takes note of the actions taken to date by the Director-General to
facilitate the increased participation of Members at different levels
of development in the work of the relevant international standard setting
organizations as well as his efforts to coordinate with these organizations
and financial institutions in identifying TBT-related technical assistance
needs and how best to address them; and
(ii) urges the Director-General to continue his cooperative efforts with
these organizations and institutions, including with a view to according
priority to the effective participation of least-developed countries and
facilitating the provision of technical and financial assistance for this
purpose.
5.4
(i) Urges Members to provide, to the extent possible, the financial and
technical assistance necessary to enable least-developed countries to
respond adequately to the introduction of any new TBT measures which may
have significant negative effects on their trade; and
(ii) urges Members to ensure that technical assistance is provided to
least-developed countries with a view to responding to the special problems
faced by them in implementing the Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade.
6. Agreement on Trade-Related Investment Measures
6.1 Takes note of the actions taken by the Council for Trade in Goods
in regard to requests from some developing-country Members for the extension
of the five-year transitional period provided for in Article 5.2 of Agreement
on Trade-Related Investment Measures.
6.2 Urges the Council for Trade in Goods to consider positively requests
that may be made by least-developed countries under Article 5.3 of the
TRIMs Agreement or Article IX.3 of the WTO Agreement, as well as to take
into consideration the particular circumstances of least-developed countries
when setting the terms and conditions including time-frames.
7. Agreement on the Implementation of Article VI of the General Agreement
on Tariffs and Trade 1994
7.1 Agrees that investigating authorities shall examine with special care
any application for the initiation of an anti-dumping investigation where
an investigation of the same product from the same Member resulted in
a negative finding within the 365 days prior to the filing of the application
and that, unless this pre-initiation examination indicates that circumstances
have changed, the investigation shall not proceed.
7.2 Recognizes that, while Article 15 of the Agreement on the Implementation
of Article VI of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994 is a
mandatory provision, the modalities for its application would benefit
from clarification. Accordingly, the Committee on Anti-Dumping Practices
is instructed, through its working group on Implementation, to examine
this issue and to draw up appropriate recommendations within twelve months
on how to operationalize this provision.
7.3 Takes note that Article 5.8 of the Agreement on the Implementation
of Article VI of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994 does
not specify the time-frame to be used in determining the volume of dumped
imports, and that this lack of specificity creates uncertainties in the
implementation of the provision. The Committee on Anti-Dumping Practices
is instructed, through its working group on Implementation, to study this
issue and draw up recommendations within 12 months, with a view to ensuring
the maximum possible predictability and objectivity in the application
of time frames.
7.4 Takes note that Article 18.6 of the Agreement on the Implementation
of Article VI of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994 requires
the Committee on Anti-Dumping Practices to review annually the implementation
and operation of the Agreement taking into account the objectives thereof.
The Committee on Anti-dumping Practices is instructed to draw up guidelines
for the improvement of annual reviews and to report its views and recommendations
to the General Council for subsequent decision within 12 months.
8. Agreement on the Implementation of Article VII of the General Agreement
on Tariffs and Trade 1994
8.1 Takes note of the actions taken by the Committee on Customs Valuation
in regard to the requests from a number of developing-country Members
for the extension of the five-year transitional period provided for in
Article 20.1 of Agreement on the Implementation of Article VII of the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994.
8.2 Urges the Council for Trade in Goods to give positive consideration
to requests that may be made by least-developed country Members under
paragraphs 1 and 2 of Annex III of the Customs Valuation Agreement or
under Article IX.3 of the WTO Agreement, as well as to take into consideration
the particular circumstances of least-developed countries when setting
the terms and conditions including time-frames.
8.3 Underlines the importance of strengthening cooperation between the
customs administrations of Members in the prevention of customs fraud.
In this regard, it is agreed that, further to the 1994 Ministerial Decision
Regarding Cases Where Customs Administrations Have Reasons to Doubt the
Truth or Accuracy of the Declared Value, when the customs administration
of an importing Member has reasonable grounds to doubt the truth or accuracy
of the declared value, it may seek assistance from the customs administration
of an exporting Member on the value of the good concerned. In such cases,
the exporting Member shall offer cooperation and assistance, consistent
with its domestic laws and procedures, including furnishing information
on the export value of the good concerned. Any information provided in
this context shall be treated in accordance with Article 10 of the Customs
Valuation Agreement. Furthermore, recognizing the legitimate concerns
expressed by the customs administrations of several importing Members
on the accuracy of the declared value, the Committee on Customs Valuation
is directed to identify and assess practical means to address such concerns,
including the exchange of information on export values and to report to
the General Council by the end of 2002 at the latest.
9. Agreement on Rules of Origin
9.1 Takes note of the report of the Committee on Rules of Origin (G/RO/48)
regarding progress on the harmonization work programme, and urges the
Committee to complete its work by the end of 2001.
9.2 Agrees that any interim arrangements on rules of origin implemented
by Members in the transitional period before the entry into force of the
results of the harmonisation work programme shall be consistent with the
Agreement on Rules of
Origin, particularly Articles 2 and 5 thereof. Without prejudice to arrangements
may be examined by the Committee on Rules of Origin.
10. Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures
10.1 Agrees that Annex VII(b) to the Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing
Measures includes the Members that are listed therein until their GNP
per capita reaches US $1,000 in constant 1990 dollars for three consecutive
years. This decision will enter into effect upon the adoption by the Committee
on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures of an appropriate methodology
for calculating constant 1990 dollars.
If, however, the Committee on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures does
not reach a consensus agreement on an appropriate methodology by 1 January
2003, the methodology proposed by the Chairman of the Committee set forth
in G/SCM/38, Appendix 2 shall be applied. A Member shall not leave Annex
VII(b) so long as its GNP per capita in current dollars has not reached
US $1000 based upon the most recent data from the World Bank.
10.2 Takes note of the proposal to treat measures implemented by developing
countries with a view to achieving legitimate development goals, such
as regional growth, technology research and development funding, production
diversification and development and implementation of environmentally
sound methods of production as non-actionable subsidies, and agrees that
this issue be addressed in accordance with paragraph 13 below. During
the course of the negotiations, Members are urged to exercise due restraint
with respect to challenging such measures.
10.3 Agrees that the Committee on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures
shall continue its review of the provisions of the Agreement on Subsidies
and Countervailing Measures regarding countervailing duty investigations
and report to the General Council by 31 July 2002.
10.4 Agrees that if a Member has been excluded from the list in paragraph
(b) of Annex VII to the Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures,
it shall be re-included in it when its GNP per capita falls back below
US$ 1,000.
10.5 Subject to the provisions of Articles 27.5 and 27.6, it
is reaffirmed that least-developed country Members are exempt from the
prohibition on export subsidies set forth in Article 3.1(a) of the Agreement
on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures, and thus have flexibility to
finance their exporters, consistent with their development needs. It is
understood that the eight-year period in Article 27.5 within which a least-developed
country Member must phase out its export subsidies in respect of a product
in which it is export-competitive begins from the date export competitiveness
exists within the meaning of Article 27.6.
10.6 Having regard to the particular situation of certain developing-country
Members, directs the Committee on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures
to extend the transition period, under the rubric of Article 27.4 of the
Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures, for certain export
subsidies provided by such Members, pursuant to the procedures set forth
in document G/SCM/W/471/Rev.1. Furthermore, when considering a request
for an extension of the transition period under the rubric of Article
27.4 of the Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures, and in
order to avoid that Members at similar stages of development and having
a similar order of magnitude of share in world trade are treated differently
in terms of receiving such extensions for the same eligible programmes
and the length of such extensions, directs the Committee to extend the
transition period for those developing countries, after taking into account
the relative competitiveness in relation to other developing-country Members
who have requested extension of the transition period following the procedures
set forth in document
G/SCM/W/471/Rev.1.
11. Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights
(TRIPS)
11.1 The TRIPS Council is directed to continue its examination of the
scope and modalities for complaints of the types provided for under subparagraphs
1(b) and 1(c) of Article XXIII of GATT 1994 and make recommendations to
the Fifth Session of the Ministerial Conference. It is agreed that, in
the meantime, Members will not initiate such complaints under the TRIPS
Agreement.
11.2 Reaffirming that the provisions of Article 66.2 of the TRIPS Agreement
are mandatory, it is agreed that the TRIPS Council shall put in place
a mechanism for ensuring the monitoring and full implementation of the
obligations in question. To this end, developed-country Members shall
submit prior to the end of 2002 detailed reports on the functioning in
practice of the incentives provided to their enterprises for the transfer
of technology in pursuance of their commitments under Article 66.2. These
submissions shall be subject to a review in the TRIPS Council and information
shall be updated by Members annually.
12. Cross-cutting Issues
12.1 The Committee on Trade and Development is instructed:
(i) to identify those special and differential treatment provisions that
are already mandatory in nature and those that are non-binding in character,
to consider the legal and practical implications for developed and developing
Members of converting special and differential treatment measures into
mandatory provisions, to identify those that Members consider should be
made mandatory, and to report to the General Council with clear recommendations
for a decision by July 2002;
(ii) to examine additional ways in which special and differential treatment
provisions can be made more effective, to consider ways, including improved
information flows, in which developing countries, in particular the least-developed
countries, may be assisted to make best use of special and differential
treatment provisions, and to report to the General Council with clear
recommendations for a decision by July 2002; and
(iii) to consider, in the context of the work programme adopted at the
Fourth Session of the Ministerial Conference, how special and differential
treatment may be incorporated into the architecture of WTO rules.
The work of the Committee on Trade and Development in this regard shall
take fully into consideration previous work undertaken as noted in WT/COMTD/W/77/Rev.1.
It will also be without prejudice to work in respect of implementation
of WTO Agreements in the General Council and in other Councils and Committees.
12.2 Reaffirms that preferences granted to developing countries pursuant
to the Decision of the Contracting Parties of 28 November 1979 ("Enabling
Clause") should be generalised, non-reciprocal and non-discriminatory.
13. Outstanding Implementation Issues
Agrees that outstanding implementation issues be addressed in accordance
with paragraph 12 of the Ministerial Declaration (WT/MIN(01)/DEC/-).
14. Final Provisions
Requests the Director-General, consistent with paragraphs 38 to 43 of
the Ministerial Declaration (WT/MIN(01)/DEC/-), to ensure that WTO technical
assistance focuses, on a priority basis, on assisting developing countries
to implement existing WTO obligations as well as on increasing their capacity
to participate more effectively in future multilateral trade negotiations.
In carrying out this mandate, the WTO Secretariat should cooperate more
closely with international and regional intergovernmental organisations
so as to increase efficiency and synergies and avoid duplication of programmes.
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