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SWPGRM39.doc
World Trade
Organization RESTRICTED S/WPGR/M/39
12 November 2002 (02-6205) Working Party on GATS Rules
REPORT OF THE MEETING OF 23 OCTOBER 2002
Note by the Secretariat
The Working Party on GATS Rules held its thirty-ninth meeting under the chairmanship of Mr. It consisted of five items: negotiations on emergency safeguard measures under GATS Article X; negotiations on subsidies under GATS Article XV; negotiations on government procurement under GATS Article XIII; date of the next meeting; and other business. Negotiations on Emergency Safeguard Measures (article x of the gats)
The Chairperson recalled that, under the Work Programme on emergency safeguard measures adopted by the Working Party in July, Members were encouraged to put forward submissions as early as possible before 31 December 2002. Item (e) included the situation, raised by some Members at previous meetings, where even in the absence of an established ESM, a Member decided to inscribe an ESM it its schedule of specific commitments. He recalled that Members were encouraged to put forward submissions as early as possible before 31 March 2003, and that it had been agreed to continue discussion on the basis of submissions and materials available. In the course of the ongoing market access negotiations, her delegation had asked Members having sent requests to Chile to provide information on the subsidies they maintained in sectors they wanted Chile to open. She drew attention to a submission that Saudi Arabia had circulated in the Committee on Trade and Environment and in the Committee on Trade and Environment Special Session on Energy Taxation, Subsidies and Incentives in OECD Countries and Their Economic and Trade Implications on Developing Countries, in Particular Developing Oil Producing and Exporting Countries and suggested that it be circulated in this Working Party because it contained interesting information on subsidies in the energy sector. The representative of Cuba enquired why the simplified questionnaire put forward by the delegations of Argentina, Chile and Hong Kong, China (JOB(02)/84, 12 July 2002) had not included the question on the policy purpose of the subsidy which was contained in the original questionnaire (see S/WPGR/W/16). Other questions included whether consumer tax exemptions on oil used for airplanes and ships, or support provided to education and training of certain professionals should be regarded as subsidies. However, as a first step, it was important to obtain as much information as possible on subsidy programmes. Those types included incentives and concessions relating to investment programmes, in particular in the tourism sector; subsidies through the procurement of goods and services from public entities; exemptions from indirect taxes, in particular VAT, usually not conformity with the SCM Agreement; most subsidies in W/25/Add. Taking as a starting-point statistics on international trade in services, it should be possible to identify countries granting subsidies impacting on international services trade, and the sectors which were targeted. The Secretariat had prepared a note on the Arrangement on Guidelines for Officially Supported Export Credits,, including on the so-called Yellow Book, but no data had been available on subsidies per se because, in his understanding, the OECD had not been in a position to provide such information.
The representative of Guyana said that the GATS, and in particular Articles IV, V and XV, aimed at promoting economic development, but also ensuring the participation of developing countries. replying to the question by the delegation of Chile, said that, in drafting TPR reports, the Secretariat relied primarily on information provided by the Member under review, but also on any pertinent source (Internet, for instance). Regarding the proposal by the delegation of Ecuador to circulate, in the Working Party on GATS Rules, a document of Saudi Arabia, which had been initially distributed in the Committee on Trade and Environment, she said that she was not aware of specific procedures in this respect. He recalled that Members were encouraged to put forward submissions as early as possible before 31 March 2003, and had agreed to continue discussion on the basis of submissions from Members and materials available. he said that GATS Article XIII contained a general mandate for government procurement in services, while WGTGP's mandate was limited to transparency, in both goods and services. He asked the European Communities to elaborate on paragraph 7 of W/39, which stated that "MFN and national treatment requirements are not sufficient to ensure equal treatment and non-discrimination in the area of government procurement" and that "domestic procedural principles" should be developed. His delegation was of the view that the brainstorming exercise would be useful for those who had been working for some time in the field, and also for newcomers with whom Thailand would work closely in the future, to facilitate progress in the Working Party. the review of all special and differential treatment provisions with a view to strengthening them and making them more precise, effective and operational provided for in paragraph 44 of the Ministerial Declaration shall be carried out by the Committee on Trade and Development in Special Sessions. Therefore, he intended to write a letter to the Chair of the Special Session of the CTD, recalling the mandate of this Working Party and informing him, in a factual manner, on S&D-related issues that had arisen in the Working Party, if any, under the three agenda items.
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