WTO trade agreement could lift global exports by $1tn a year – report

26th October 2015

By: Natalie Greve

Creamer Media Contributing Editor Online

  

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The first detailed study into the potential impact of the implementation of the World Trade Organisation’s (WTO’s) Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) has pointed to its potential to increase global merchandise exports by up to $1-trillion a year, with developing countries likely to capture more than half of the available gains.

The TFA, which was agreed on by WTO members in 2013, became the first multilateral trade agreement successfully negotiated at the WTO and sought to ease global trade through the standardisation, streamlining and acceleration of customs processes around the world.

Key findings of the WTO’s flagship World Trade Report, released on Monday, revealed that the agreement had the potential to boost global merchandise exports by between $750-billion and $1-trillion a year, with developing countries' exports estimated to increase by between $170-billion and $730-billion a year as a result.

Developed economies' exports were estimated to increase by between $310-billion and $580-billion a year as a result of the deal, while the study found that
fuller, faster implementation of the TFA would increase the likelihood of impacts reaching the higher ends of these ranges.

The agreement was also expected to grow world exports by an estimated 2.7% and boost the global gross domestic product by 0.5%.

The TFA was also likely to help developing countries diversify their exports, increasing the number of new products exported by as much as 20%, with least-developed countries (LDCs)  likely to see a much larger increase of up to 35%.

Developing countries were expected to enter 30% more foreign markets and LDCs a further 60%, the report held.

Full implementation of the TFA could, meanwhile, reduce the trade costs of members by an average of 14.5%, while increasing customs duties and other taxes collected at the border.

WTO director-general Roberto Azevêdo believed the report provided new evidence of the significant boost that the agreement would provide by expanding world trade, reducing costs and helping developing and LDCs integrate into an increasingly globalised production system.

“More and more developing countries are seeking to join global trade networks. Yet, all too often, outdated and uncoordinated customs processes slow down the movement of goods and raise costs to prohibitive levels.

“By standardising, streamlining and speeding-up customs processes around the world, the FTA will help to solve this problem. It is global trade's equivalent of the shift from dial-up Internet access to broadband and it will have a similar impact,” he commented.

Azevêdo argued that the report highlighted the importance of implementing the agreement in full and as quickly as possible.

“In fact, the report shows the benefits of the agreement will be substantially larger depending on the scope and pace of implementation. The more extensive and faster the implementation of the TFA, the greater the gains,” he held.

Edited by Chanel de Bruyn
Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor Online

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