Title: EU Trade Policy
1EU Trade Policy
-
- EU Commercial Policy (CCP)
- Katerina Soukupová
2Common commercial policy
- an area of exclusive Community responsibility
- the legal basis for the EU's trade policy Article
133 of the European Community (EC) Treaty - covers
- trade in goods
- trade in services
- company law, indirect taxation, standards and
other technical regulations, and commercial
aspects of intellectual property rights
3How it works now?
- The EC Treaty establishes the overall aims and
objectives of EU trade policy
Article 2 sets the general aims including to
promote the development of economic activities,
high employment and competitiveness, and
environmental protection.
4Reasons for CCP
- negative externalities
- An externality occurs when a decision causes
costs or benefits to third parties, often, though
not necessarily, from the use of a public
good(for example, production which causes
pollution may impose costs on others, making use
of the public good air). In other words, the
participants do not bear all of the costs or reap
all of the gains from the transaction. - As a result, in a competitive market too much
or too little of the good may be produced and
consumed from the point of view of society. - bargaining power and legal uniformity throughout
the Union ? lower uncertainty and transaction
costs
5Customs union
- essential element of the internal market
- includes
- the elimination of all customs duties and
restrictions among the Member States - the introduction of a common customs tariff (CET)
- the common commercial policy as an external
dimension of the customs union - three stages of four years each
- a three-year delay foreseen
- Introduction in july 1968, 18 months ahead of
proposal
6The negotiating process
7- The 133 Committee
- a permanent dialogue and sounding board between
the Commission and Member States on trade policy
(consultative role)
- Civil Society dialogue
- regular consultation with business, trades
unions and civil society
8- originally, the Commission empowered to negotiate
just in the area of trade in goods with qualified
majority voting - the Treaty of Nice extended the authority of
Commission trade in service, intellectual
property rights - principle of parallelism
- some of trade agreements in services can
require unanimity, if unanimity would by required
for the adoption of rules on the same subjects in
the context of the single market. (ex.
immigration)
9Instruments of EU trade policy
- Tariffs
- Non-tariff barriers
- Regulatory barriers
10Common External Tariff
- a customs duty a tariff or tax on the import of
or export of goods -
- involves applying uniform customs duties to
products imported from third countries,
irrespective of the member state of destination - originally, the CET was the arithmetic means of
the tariffs applied in 1957 by member states,
amended several times - for about ten thousand products
11Ad-valorem duties
- the duty is calculated as a percentage of the
value of the product - Custom value transaction value
- transaction value the price actually paid or
payable for the goods when sold for export to the
customs territory of the Community
12EU open economy?
- the average CET rate - 6,5
-
- 1/4 of the rates on all products - at 0
- the simple average tariff of the CET on
industrial goods - 4,1 - the simple average tariff for agricultural
products - 16,5 (just for MFN) - rates on some manufactured goods still high,
average rate on manufactures is alway below 5 - Agro-food tariffs can be extremely high, e.
tariff for diary up to 209 , cereals up to 101
, food items made from vegetables or fruits up
to 150 , as well as garlic. -
-
13Non-tariff barriers
- their importance has diminished considerably
since the late 1980s - Examples
- import quotas
- anti-dumping duties
- voluntary export restraints a restriction set
by a government on the quantity of goods that can
be exported out of a country during a specified
period of time. Often the word voluntary is
placed in quotes because these restraints are
typically implemented upon the insistence of the
importing nations. - Typically VERs arise when the
import-competing industries seek protection from
a surge of imports from particular exporting
countries .
14Quantitative restrictions
- generally not permitted
- Multifibre Agreements (MFAs) regulated by the WTO
Agreement on Textiles and Clothing by 2005 - quotas on banana imports removed in 2006
- quotas remain in place for imports from non-WTO
countries
15Anti-dumping measures
- dumping the selling in export markets below
the sales price in their domestic market or below
the cost of production - permitted, if dumping causes or threatens to
cause material injury to an established industry
or materially retards the establishment of a
domestic industry - Anti-dumping actions take one of two forms
- a) antidumping duties equivalent to the
dumping margin - b) undertakings by exporting countries not to
sell to the EU below an agreed price - EU - one of the worlds leading users of such
measures
16Anti-subsidy measures
- Subsidy a direct transfer of funds by the
government but also indirect transfers such as
loan guarantees and tax credits - countervailing duties for the purpose of
equilibrating the effect of the subsidy
17(No Transcript)
18Regulatory barriers
- technical regulation obligatory rules created
by the EU or the member states - product characteristics, related process and
production methods, the terminology, symbols,
packaging and labelling requirements applying to
a product or production method - ex. emission limits for machinery, health
warnings on tobacco products - standard non-mandatory rules approved by a
recognised body - WTO Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT
Agreement) - Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and
Phytosanitary Measures (SPS Agreement) - 76 and 437 new regulations annually under the TBT
Agreement (ban on the import of hormone-treated
beef, dried fruit and nuts)
19Types of EU trade policy
- The EU utilises trade policy as a tool for seven
different types of common policy - commercial diplomacy
- agricultural policy
- economic integration with non-members
- development policy
- competition policy
- industrial policy
- foreign policy
20Commercial Diplomacy
- influence foreign government policy and
regulatory decisions that affect global trade and
investment - In the past concerned over tariffs and quotas on
imports - Today, wider range of government regulations and
actions including standards in areas such as
health, safety, environment, and consumer
protection regulations in banking,
telecommunications and accounting competition
policy and laws concerning bribery and
corruption, agricultural support programs and
industrial subsidies
21The Common Agricultural Policy
- is a system of EU agricultural subsidies and
programmes - guarantees a minimum trade to producers
- guarantees direct payment of a subsidy for
planted crops - Import tariffs set at a level to raise the
World market price up to the EU target price. The
target price is chosen as the maximum desirable
price for those goods within the EU - TRQs - for some products, a certain quantity can
be imported with a low duty, but the much higher
bound tariff applies to quantities above this
amount. - technical, sanitary, phytosanitary restrictions
are now major obstacles to developing countries
exports to the EU
22Competition policy
- stop practices which remove competition from the
market such as monopoly, cartel, state aid, abuse
of dominant position - Monopoly is defined as a persistent market
situation where there is only one provider of a
product or service. Monopolies are characterized
by a lack of economic competition for the good or
service that they provide and a lack of goods - A cartel is a group of formally independent
producers whose goal is to increase their
collective profits by means of price fixing,
limiting supply, or other restrictive practices. - Abuse of dominant position occurs where a firm
holds a position of such economic strenght that
allows it to operate in a market without being
significantly affected by competition and it
engages in conduct that is likely to blockade the
development or maintenance of effective
competition. Some of the more common types of
abuse by dominant firms include f. e. predatory
pricing. It occurs whan a large firm sets its
prices very low often below the costs of
production, with the intention of forcing
competitors ouf of market so that it can
establish a monopoly and higher prices.
23Industrial policy
- any government regulation or law that encourages
the operation a particular industry - often related to investment policy for that
industry - Tax, tariff and trade rules of the GATT and
various trade pacts - anti-dumping duties, subsidies, some public
procurement (only non-discriminatory under
reciprocity)
24Foreign policy
- a set of political goals that outline/form how
that particular country will interact with other
countries of the world and, to a lesser extent,
non-state actors - The objectives of the EU foreign policy
- to safeguard the common values,
fundamental interests, independence and integrity
of the Union - to preserve peace to promote
international cooperation - to develop and consolidate democracy and
the rule of law, and respect for human rights and
fundamental freedoms - Instruments export and/or import bans (trade
sanctions which may apply to specific products
such as oil, timber or diamonds), flight bans,
prohibitions on investment, payments and capital
movements, or the withdrawal of tariff
preferences, arms embargoes
25EU as a trade power
- key player in the WTO
- first exporter
- second largest importer
- 40 of world trade
26EU exports
27EU exports
- 2/3 of EU-25 exports to other EU25 nations
- all the other European nations ¾ of EU-25 exports
- North America, Asia less than one-tenth of EU
exports each - Africa, Latin America, the Middle East less than
3 each
28EU imports
29- 3/4 of EU imports from Europe
- biggest difference
- Asia, CIR deficit
- North America surplus
30The EU top ten import and export partners
31Developed x Developing
- More than 4/5 of the Unions trade with countries
of similar income levels - developing countries rely far more on the EU
- ex. India
Trade patterns
- depends on geography or historical connection
- importance of various trade partners varies a lot
across the EU25
32Composition of EU25 imports and exports
33EU trade by product
- manufactured goods - almost 90 of EU exports,
2/3 of imports - a big importer of fuel
- net-importer of food in the future?
- the commodity structure of EU trade varies by
geographical area
34Leading exporters and importers in world
merchandise trade, 2005
35Leading exporters and importers in world trade in
commercial services, 2005
36Current accountEU25 trade (bn euro)
37EU Trade with developing countries
3 DIMENSIONS
38Unilateral dimension
- The EU implements unilateral measures as an
additional trade policy instrument in the
interests of development and/or political
stability - General System of Preferences (GSP)
- elimination or reduction of tariffs on a
non-reciprocal basis for an unlimited period of
time - 178 developing countries (
- 2 basic EU GSP policies
- 1. general - available to all developing nations
- 2. super
39Super GSP
- Everything But Arms
- the best unilateral preferences for nations
called least developed nations (except arms and
munitions) - for pushing the EUs idea of labour rights, of
environmental protection, of combating illegal
drugs - for very poor countries
- Afghanistan, Angola, Bangladesh, Benin, Mali,
Somalia
40Bilateral dimension
In addition to the WTO's multilateral
negotiations, the EU concludes bilateral
agreements with third countries and regional
areas. 121 countries potentially linked to the EU
by regional trade agreements, many negotiated in
the 1990s.
- Key EU bilateral agreements include
- Economic Partnership Agreements in negotiation
with ACP countries (Cotonou) - Free Trade Agreements with EFTA, EEA, Euromed,
Mercosur (in negotiation), Mexico, South
Africa... - Customs Unions with Turkey, Andorra and San
Marino - Partnership and Cooperation Agreements with
Russia and Ukraine
41Economic Partnership Agreements with ACP
countries
- Congo, Gabon Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania etc. -
former colonies - 1974 the new agreement - the Lomé Convention
- dute-free status to all industrial exports and
most agricultural exports of ACP nations
(sensitive items - sugar) - the EU did not require the same
- new version - 2000 Cotonou Agreement remove ACP
tariffs against EU tariffs a good way of
integrating - EU is a major market for the ACP nations, but the
ACP markets are marginal markets for EU exporters
42The Euro-Med Association Agreements
- with ten Mediterranean nation Morocco, Algeria,
Tunisia, Egypt, Israel, The Palestinian
Authority, Lebanon, Jordan, Syria and Turkey - bilateral duty-free trade in industrial goods
- provisions for financial an technical
assistance from the EU, trade in services and
foreign direct investment - asymmetric - the EU is faster
- these nations depends heavily on the EU market
- Morocco is a typical case. The EU market accounts
for 71 of its exports whereas the Moroccan
market accounts for less than 1 of EU external
exports.
43Multirateral dimension
Mostly implemented in the framework of the WTO (
the most effective means of managing trade)
aiming at promoting market access with rules, in
the context of effective global governance.
44- Thank you for your attention!!!