Trade and investment barriers
The European Parliament adopted a resolution on trade and investment barriers.
It discusses the tariff and non tariff barriers (NTBs) that pose difficulties for the EUs market access to different countries in the world, including Russia, Japan, China, India, Brazil and Argentina. The Commission's Trade and Investment Barriers Report 2011 lists examples where the EU's market access to different countries in the world, including industrialised and major emerging economies and WTO members, is being constrained more by various non-tariff barriers (NTBs) than by trade tariffs, which are being waived substantially as globalisation progresses.
Reducing NTBs: Parliament is of the view that removing or reducing unjustified NTBs applied by the EU's key strategic partner countries by means of regulatory dialogue should be one of the key regulatory priorities of the new EU trade policy under the Europe 2020 Strategy.
Accordingly, it calls on the Commission systematically to address the great variety, technical complexity and political sensitivity of NTBs as part of a holistic strategy, including enhanced regulatory dialogue, with respect to all the EUs trading partners, particularly those of strategic importance. It also takes the view that insistence on reciprocity of market access for industrialised and emerging countries should be an integral part of EU trade strategy, on a par with the removal or lowering of NTBs.
Members call on the Commission to draw a clear distinction between those NTBs which give rise to unfair distortions of competition and those which reflect legitimate public-policy aims, notably in relation to public health and the protection of the environment. They emphasise, for example, that the European laws on GMOs and the health- and plant-health-related rules affecting agriculture cannot be regarded as unfair NTBs but should, on the contrary, be defended in the international trade arena. They also remind the Commission that European Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) policy towards developing countries should remain within the TRIPS agreement obligations and must fully respect the 2001 Doha Declaration on the TRIPS agreement and Public Health, especially in the field of generic medicines and public health, so as to leave the developing countries policy space to address public interest concerns.
Trade agreements: Parliament asks the Commission to address these widespread and persistent issues in all plurilateral and bilateral trade agreements, especially bilateral free trade agreements (FTAs), and to ensure that NTBs are given at least as much attention as is currently afforded tariff elimination in all appropriate regulatory fora, particularly in its trade negotiations with industrialised and emerging economies. In the field of cooperation with developing countries, especially LDCs and Small Island Developing States (SIDs), priority must be accorded to aid for trade and to technical and financial assistance, in order to help such countries improve their regulatory environment while taking account of their specific needs in terms of developing their internal markets and protecting their embryonic industries and their agricultural structures, which in many cases are vulnerable.
The Commission is invited to:
- continue its efforts to maintain an up-to-date inventory of key barriers faced by EU exporters and investors in important third-country markets, in particular FTA partners, including the number and nature of concerns raised by Member States and companies, as a tool for assessing the situation in the third countries;
- investigate whether there is a correlation between specific NTBs in the EU and in third countries and current job creation or losses in the EU;
- explore the possibility of establishing an early warning mechanism to detect NTBs and strengthen its existing analytical tools for qualitative evaluation thereof and a clearer definition of unjustified NTBs. This mechanism should work via the EU delegations based in third countries, in cooperation with the bodies already set up by Member States;
- improve international regulatory cooperation and convergence of regulatory requirements on the basis of international standards and, where possible, engage in regulatory dialogue to address existing or potential future barriers to trade with a view to limiting disputes and associated trade costs;
- among the parties to the Government Procurement Agreement (GPA), promote the public procurement disciplines based on international standards as developed in the GPA and to use or expand existing regulatory dialogues in order to enhance cooperation on the regulatory framework and the restructuring and, where appropriate, removal of existing direct and indirect discriminatory practices in the relations of the EU with its industrialised partner countries;
- maintain a positive and strong stance during the negotiations on China's signing of the GPA in order to secure an equal reciprocal opening-up of Chinese procurement procedures as well as equal treatment and predictable conditions for European businesses.
Priority sectors: Parliament considers that due priority should be given to trade and investment barriers that affect European service sectors, including ICT and telecommunication, professional and business services, financial services, construction, retail and distribution.
With regard to raw materials, the committee considers that the Commission should pursue a sustainable, comprehensive and cross-policy strategy, while recognising that export restrictions and export taxes may be seen as important for the support of development objectives, the protection of the environment or the sustainable exploitation of natural resources in LDCs and SIDs and other developing countries, with the exclusion of BRIC countries. Noting that the majority of WTO members using export taxes are developing countries and LDCs, Members call on the EU to refrain from attempting to ban the use of export taxes for LDCs and SIDs and other developing countries, with the exclusion of BRIC countries, at the WTO and in bilateral trade agreements and Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs), as it would limit their policy space to use this tool for value-addition, diversification, infant industry protection, food security, revenue and environmental considerations as long as they have not reached advanced developing status.
Mechanism within the WTO: according to the Parliament, one of the keys to lowering NTBs to trade and investment is reform of the GPA in the WTO, with due regard to the multifunctional nature of procurement policies, and they call on the major emerging economies to participate in this process and to sign and ratify the future agreement without delay.
Lastly, Members take the view that a mediation mechanism should be created in the WTO to facilitate the removal of NTBs in a constructive, effective, rapid and non-confrontational manner, inspired by the SOLVIT system, in accordance with similar earlier suggestions from both the EU and India.