Title: WORLD TRADE ORGANISATION Symposium on CROSS-BORDER SUPPLY OF SERVICES
1WORLD TRADE ORGANISATIONSymposium on
CROSS-BORDER SUPPLY OF SERVICES
- Sebastián Sáez
- CONSULTANT
2CONTENT
- ECONOMIC IMPORTANCE OF MODE 1
- RELEVANCE FOR DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
- REGULATORS PERSPECTIVE
- THE WAY FORWARD
3ECONOMIC IMPORTANCE OF MODE 1 International
transactions by mode of supply
MODE OF SUPPLY CATEGORY VALUE (a) (bn 1997) SHARE(a) () 1997
Mode 1 Commercial services (excluding travel) 890 41.0
Mode 2 Travel/Tourism 430 19.8
Mode 3 Gross output of foreign affiliates 820 37.8
Mode 4 Compensation of employees 30 1.4
Sources (a) Karsenty (2000), Deardorff Stern
(2004)
4RELEVANCE FOR DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
- Less expensive way to supply services
- Developing countries invest relatively small
amount of capital abroad - Successful experiences have emerged real
opportunities exist - Mode 4 is highly sensitive from a political point
of view - Efforts to expand trade under mode 1.
5REGULATORS PERSPECTIVE
- THE PROBLEM
- Market Access and National Treatment commitments
do not provide effective access to market - Non-discriminatory regulations may act as
deterrents to trade in services - Issue is relevant to developing countries the
sum of all regulatory costs is equivalent to a
specific tariff on services export - Asymmetric impact of regulations on trade
opportunities.
6REGULATORS PERSPECTIVE
- IMPACT OF MODE 1 LIBERALISATION ON REGULATIONS
AND REGULATORS - How to maintain domestic regulations effective?
- Raison dêtre is closely linked to its capacity
to exert effective control - New forms of regulation must be devised and a
more flexible approach with regard to trade
restrictions must be applied - Mutual co-operation between regulators at the
international level very difficult venue.
7REGULATORS PERSPECTIVE
Taxation issues identified
- Whose laws and regulations key to enforcement
- Double taxation, evasion and loss of
tax-collection - Consumer protection
8THE WAY FORWARD
- Understanding of Cross-border supply of services
- Defined cross-border trade modes 12
- Electronic commerce
- Domestic regulation
- New services
- Subsidies
- Taxation
- Data processing
- Horizontal commitments
- Specific commitments exceptions to general rule.
9ADVANTAGES
- Similar level of liberalisation for WTO members
avoids selective negotiations and addressing some
members trade interests - Provides a common understanding and avoids
disputes - Dynamic it does not depend on classification,
and it captures technology change
10ADVANTAGES
- Developing countries have less leverage in
negotiations with industrialized countries a
common approach circumvents power politics - Domestic regulations provide comfort to
regulators and public opinion, not a blank
cheque - Members may still negotiate exception under
specific commitments for politically sensitive
sectors.