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Ministerial Declarations > Framework agreement
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WT/L/579
2 August 2004 |
(04-3297) |
Doha Work Programme
Decision Adopted by the General Council on 1 August
2004
- The General Council reaffirms the Ministerial
Declarations and Decisions adopted at Doha and the
full commitment of all Members to give effect to
them. The Council emphasizes Members' resolve to
complete the Doha Work Programme fully and to
conclude successfully the negotiations launched at
Doha. Taking into account the Ministerial
Statement adopted at Cancún on 14 September 2003,
and the statements by the Council Chairman and the
Director-General at the Council meeting of 15-16
December 2003, the Council takes note of the
report by the Chairman of the Trade Negotiations
Committee (TNC) and agrees to take action as
follows:
-
Agriculture:
the General Council adopts the framework set out
in Annex A to this document.
-
Cotton: the
General Council reaffirms the importance of the
Sectoral Initiative on Cotton and takes note of
the parameters set out in Annex A within which the
trade-related aspects of this issue will be
pursued in the agriculture negotiations. The
General Council also attaches importance to the
development aspects of the Cotton Initiative and
wishes to stress the complementarity between the
trade and development aspects. The Council takes
note of the recent Workshop on Cotton in Cotonou
on 23-24 March 2004 organized by the WTO
Secretariat, and other bilateral and multilateral
efforts to make progress on the development
assistance aspects and instructs the Secretariat
to continue to work with the development community
and to provide the Council with periodic reports
on relevant developments.
Members should work on related issues of
development multilaterally with the international
financial institutions, continue their bilateral
programmes, and all developed countries are urged
to participate. In this regard, the General
Council instructs the Director General to consult
with the relevant international organizations,
including the Bretton Woods Institutions, the Food
and Agriculture Organization and the International
Trade Centre to direct effectively existing
programmes and any additional resources towards
development of the economies where cotton has
vital importance.
-
Non-agricultural
Market Access: the General Council adopts the
framework set out in Annex B to this document.
-
Development:
Principles: development concerns form an
integral part of the Doha Ministerial Declaration.
The General Council rededicates and recommits
Members to fulfilling the development dimension of
the Doha Development Agenda, which places the
needs and interests of developing and
least-developed countries at the heart of the Doha
Work Programme. The Council reiterates the
important role that enhanced market access,
balanced rules, and well targeted, sustainably
financed technical assistance and capacity
building programmes can play in the economic
development of these countries.
Special and Differential Treatment: the
General Council reaffirms that provisions for
special and differential (S&D) treatment are
an integral part of the WTO Agreements. The
Council recalls Ministers' decision in Doha to
review all S&D treatment provisions with a
view to strengthening them and making them more
precise, effective and operational. The Council
recognizes the progress that has been made so far.
The Council instructs the Committee on Trade and
Development in Special Session to expeditiously
complete the review of all the outstanding
Agreement-specific proposals and report to the
General Council, with clear recommendations for a
decision, by July 2005. The Council further
instructs the Committee, within the parameters of
the Doha mandate, to address all other outstanding
work, including on the cross-cutting issues, the
monitoring mechanism and the incorporation of
S&D treatment into the architecture of WTO
rules, as referred to in TN/CTD/7 and report, as
appropriate, to the General Council.
The Council also instructs all WTO bodies to which
proposals in Category II have been referred to
expeditiously complete the consideration of these
proposals and report to the General Council, with
clear recommendations for a decision, as soon as
possible and no later than July 2005. In doing so
these bodies will ensure that, as far as possible,
their meetings do not overlap so as to enable full
and effective participation of developing
countries in these discussions.
Technical Assistance: the General Council
recognizes the progress that has been made since
the Doha Ministerial Conference in expanding
Trade-Related Technical Assistance (TRTA) to
developing countries and low-income countries in
transition. In furthering this effort the Council
affirms that such countries, and in particular
least-developed countries, should be provided with
enhanced TRTA and capacity building, to increase
their effective participation in the negotiations,
to facilitate their implementation of WTO rules,
and to enable them to adjust and diversify their
economies. In this context the Council welcomes
and further encourages the improved coordination
with other agencies, including under the
Integrated Framework for TRTA for the LDCs (IF)
and the Joint Integrated Technical Assistance
Programme (JITAP).
Implementation: concerning
implementation-related issues, the General Council
reaffirms the mandates Ministers gave in paragraph
12 of the Doha Ministerial Declaration and the
Doha Decision on Implementation-Related Issues and
Concerns, and renews Members' determination to
find appropriate solutions to outstanding issues.
The Council instructs the Trade Negotiations
Committee, negotiating bodies and other WTO bodies
concerned to redouble their efforts to find
appropriate solutions as a priority. Without
prejudice to the positions of Members, the Council
requests the Director-General to continue with his
consultative process on all outstanding
implementation issues under paragraph 12(b) of the
Doha Ministerial Declaration, including on issues
related to the extension of the protection of
geographical indications provided for in Article
23 of the TRIPS Agreement to products other than
wines and spirits, if need be by appointing
Chairpersons of concerned WTO bodies as his
Friends and/or by holding dedicated consultations.
The Director-General shall report to the TNC and
the General Council no later than May 2005. The
Council shall review progress and take any
appropriate action no later than July 2005.
Other Development Issues: in the ongoing
market access negotiations, recognising the
fundamental principles of the WTO and relevant
provisions of GATT 1994, special attention shall
be given to the specific trade and development
related needs and concerns of developing
countries, including capacity constraints. These
particular concerns of developing countries,
including relating to food security, rural
development, livelihood, preferences, commodities
and net food imports, as well as prior unilateral
liberalisation, should be taken into
consideration, as appropriate, in the course of
the Agriculture and NAMA negotiations. The
trade-related issues identified for the fuller
integration of small, vulnerable economies into
the multilateral trading system, should also be
addressed, without creating a sub-category of
Members, as part of a work programme, as mandated
in paragraph 35 of the Doha Ministerial
Declaration.
Least-Developed Countries: the General Council
reaffirms the commitments made at Doha concerning
least-developed countries and renews its
determination to fulfil these commitments. Members
will continue to take due account of the concerns
of least-developed countries in the negotiations.
The Council confirms that nothing in this Decision
shall detract in any way from the special
provisions agreed by Members in respect of these
countries.
-
Services:
the General Council takes note of the report to
the TNC by the Special Session of the Council for
Trade in Services and reaffirms Members'
commitment to progress in this area of the
negotiations in line with the Doha mandate. The
Council adopts the recommendations agreed by the
Special Session, set out in Annex C to this
document, on the basis of which further progress
in the services negotiations will be pursued.
Revised offers should be tabled by May 2005.
-
Other
negotiating bodies:
Rules, Trade & Environment and TRIPS: the
General Council takes note of the reports to the
TNC by the Negotiating Group on Rules and by the
Special Sessions of the Committee on Trade and
Environment and the TRIPS Council. The Council
reaffirms Members' commitment to progress in all
of these areas of the negotiations in line with
the Doha mandates.
Dispute Settlement: the General Council takes
note of the report to the TNC by the Special
Session of the Dispute Settlement Body and
reaffirms Members' commitment to progress in this
area of the negotiations in line with the Doha
mandate. The Council adopts the TNC's
recommendation that work in the Special Session
should continue on the basis set out by the
Chairman of that body in his report to the TNC.
-
Trade
Facilitation: taking note of the work done on
trade facilitation by the Council for Trade in
Goods under the mandate in paragraph 27 of the
Doha Ministerial Declaration and the work carried
out under the auspices of the General Council both
prior to the Fifth Ministerial Conference and
after its conclusion, the General Council decides
by explicit consensus to commence negotiations on
the basis of the modalities set out in Annex D to
this document.
Relationship between Trade and Investment,
Interaction between Trade and Competition Policy
and Transparency in Government Procurement:
the Council agrees that these issues, mentioned in
the Doha Ministerial Declaration in paragraphs
20-22, 23-25 and 26 respectively, will not form
part of the Work Programme set out in that
Declaration and therefore no work towards
negotiations on any of these issues will take
place within the WTO during the Doha Round.
-
Other elements
of the Work Programme: the General Council
reaffirms the high priority Ministers at Doha gave
to those elements of the Work Programme which do
not involve negotiations. Noting that a number of
these issues are of particular interest to
developing-country Members, the Council emphasizes
its commitment to fulfil the mandates given by
Ministers in all these areas. To this end, the
General Council and other relevant bodies shall
report in line with their Doha mandates to the
Sixth Session of the Ministerial Conference. The
moratoria covered by paragraph 11.1 of the Doha
Ministerial Decision on Implementation-related
Issues and Concerns and paragraph 34 of the Doha
Ministerial Declaration are extended up to the
Sixth Ministerial Conference.
-
The General Council
agrees that this Decision and its Annexes shall
not be used in any dispute settlement proceeding
under the DSU and shall not be used for
interpreting the existing WTO Agreements.
-
The General Council calls
on all Members to redouble their efforts towards
the conclusion of a balanced overall outcome of
the Doha Development Agenda in fulfilment of the
commitments Ministers took at Doha. The Council
agrees to continue the negotiations launched at
Doha beyond the timeframe set out in paragraph 45
of the Doha Declaration, leading to the Sixth
Session of the Ministerial Conference. Recalling
its decision of 21 October 2003 to accept the
generous offer of the Government of Hong Kong,
China to host the Sixth Session, the Council
further agrees that this Session will be held in
December 2005.

Annex A
Framework for Establishing Modalities in Agriculture
-
The starting point for
the current phase of the agriculture negotiations
has been the mandate set out in Paragraph 13 of
the Doha Ministerial Declaration. This in turn
built on the long-term objective of the Agreement
on Agriculture to establish a fair and
market-oriented trading system through a programme
of fundamental reform. The elements below offer
the additional precision required at this stage of
the negotiations and thus the basis for the
negotiations of full modalities in the next phase.
The level of ambition set by the Doha mandate will
continue to be the basis for the negotiations on
agriculture.
-
The final balance will be
found only at the conclusion of these subsequent
negotiations and within the Single Undertaking. To
achieve this balance, the modalities to be
developed will need to incorporate operationally
effective and meaningful provisions for special
and differential treatment for developing country
Members. Agriculture is of critical importance to
the economic development of developing country
Members and they must be able to pursue
agricultural policies that are supportive of their
development goals, poverty reduction strategies,
food security and livelihood concerns. Non-trade
concerns, as referred to in Paragraph 13 of the
Doha Declaration, will be taken into account.
-
The reforms in all three
pillars form an interconnected whole and must be
approached in a balanced and equitable manner.
-
The General Council
recognizes the importance of cotton for a certain
number of countries and its vital importance for
developing countries, especially LDCs. It will be
addressed ambitiously, expeditiously, and
specifically, within the agriculture negotiations.
The provisions of this framework provide a basis
for this approach, as does the sectoral initiative
on cotton. The Special Session of the Committee on
Agriculture shall ensure appropriate
prioritization of the cotton issue independently
from other sectoral initiatives. A subcommittee on
cotton will meet periodically and report to the
Special Session of the Committee on Agriculture to
review progress. Work shall encompass all
trade-distorting policies affecting the sector in
all three pillars of market access, domestic
support, and export competition, as specified in
the Doha text and this Framework text.
-
Coherence between trade
and development aspects of the cotton issue will
be pursued as set out in paragraph 1.b of the text
to which this Framework is annexed.

DOMESTIC SUPPORT
- The Doha Ministerial Declaration calls for
"substantial reductions in trade-distorting
domestic support". With a view to achieving
these substantial reductions, the negotiations in
this pillar will ensure the following:
-
Special and
differential treatment remains an integral
component of domestic support. Modalities to be
developed will include longer implementation
periods and lower reduction coefficients for all
types of trade-distorting domestic support and
continued access to the provisions under Article
6.2.
-
There will be a
strong element of harmonisation in the reductions
made by developed Members. Specifically, higher
levels of permitted trade-distorting domestic
support will be subject to deeper cuts.
-
Each such Member
will make a substantial reduction in the overall
level of its trade-distorting support from bound
levels.
-
As well as this
overall commitment, Final Bound Total AMS and
permitted de minimis levels will be subject to
substantial reductions and, in the case of the
Blue Box, will be capped as specified in paragraph
15 in order to ensure results that are coherent
with the long-term reform objective. Any
clarification or development of rules and
conditions to govern trade distorting support will
take this into account.
Overall Reduction: A Tiered Formula
-
The overall base level of
all trade-distorting domestic support, as measured
by the Final Bound Total AMS plus permitted de
minimis level and the level agreed in paragraph 8
below for Blue Box payments, will be reduced
according to a tiered formula. Under this formula,
Members having higher levels of trade-distorting
domestic support will make greater overall
reductions in order to achieve a harmonizing
result. As the first instalment of the overall
cut, in the first year and throughout the
implementation period, the sum of all
trade-distorting support will not exceed 80 per
cent of the sum of Final Bound Total AMS plus
permitted de minimis plus the Blue Box at
the level determined in paragraph 15.
-
The following parameters
will guide the further negotiation of this tiered
formula:
-
This commitment
will apply as a minimum overall commitment. It
will not be applied as a ceiling on reductions of
overall trade-distorting domestic support, should
the separate and complementary formulae to be
developed for Total AMS, de minimis and Blue Box
payments imply, when taken together, a deeper cut
in overall trade-distorting domestic support for
an individual Member.
-
The base for
measuring the Blue Box component will be the
higher of existing Blue Box payments during a
recent representative period to be agreed and the
cap established in paragraph 15 below.
Final Bound Total AMS: A Tiered Formula
- To achieve reductions with a harmonizing effect:
-
Final Bound Total
AMS will be reduced substantially, using a tiered
approach.
-
Members having
higher Total AMS will make greater reductions.
-
To prevent
circumvention of the objective of the Agreement
through transfers of unchanged domestic support
between different support categories,
product-specific AMSs will be capped at
their respective average levels according to a
methodology to be agreed.
-
Substantial
reductions in Final Bound Total AMS will result in
reductions of some product-specific support.
- Members may make greater than formula reductions
in order to achieve the required level of cut in
overall trade-distorting domestic support.
De Minimis
-
Reductions in de minimis
will be negotiated taking into account the
principle of special and differential treatment.
Developing countries that allocate almost all de minimis
support for subsistence and resource-poor farmers
will be exempt.
-
Members may make greater
than formula reductions in order to achieve the
required level of cut in overall trade-distorting
domestic support.
Blue Box
- Members recognize the role of the Blue Box in
promoting agricultural reforms. In this light,
Article 6.5 will be reviewed so that Members may
have recourse to the following measures:
-
such payments are based on fixed and
unchanging areas and yields; or
-
such payments are made on 85% or less of a
fixed and unchanging base level of production;
or
-
livestock payments are made on a fixed and
unchanging number of head.
Or
-
such payments are based on fixed and unchanging
bases and yields; or
-
livestock payments made on a fixed and unchanging
number of head; and
-
such payments are made on 85% or less of a fixed
and unchanging base level of production.
- The above criteria, along with additional
criteria will be negotiated. Any such criteria will
ensure that Blue Box payments are less
trade-distorting than AMS measures, it being
understood that:
- Blue Box support will not exceed 5% of a
Member’s average total value of agricultural
production during an historical period. The historical
period will be established in the negotiations. This
ceiling will apply to any actual or potential Blue Box
user from the beginning of the implementation period.
In cases where a Member has placed an exceptionally
large percentage of its trade-distorting support in
the Blue Box, some flexibility will be provided on a
basis to be agreed to ensure that such a Member is not
called upon to make a wholly disproportionate cut.
Green Box
- Green Box criteria will be reviewed and
clarified with a view to ensuring that Green Box
measures have no, or at most minimal, trade-distorting
effects or effects on production. Such a review and
clarification will need to ensure that the basic
concepts, principles and effectiveness of the Green
Box remain and take due account of non-trade concerns.
The improved obligations for monitoring and
surveillance of all new disciplines foreshadowed in
paragraph 48 below will be particularly important with
respect to the Green Box.

EXPORT COMPETITION
- The Doha Ministerial Declaration calls for
"reduction of, with a view to phasing out, all
forms of export subsidies". As an outcome of the
negotiations, Members agree to establish detailed
modalities ensuring the parallel elimination of all
forms of export subsidies and disciplines on all
export measures with equivalent effect by a credible
end date.
End Point
- The following will be eliminated by the end
date to be agreed:
-
Export subsidies as scheduled.
-
Export credits, export credit guarantees or
insurance programmes with repayment periods beyond 180
days.
-
Terms and conditions relating to export credits,
export credit guarantees or insurance programmes with
repayment periods of 180 days and below which are not
in accordance with disciplines to be agreed. These
disciplines will cover, inter alia, payment of
interest, minimum interest rates, minimum premium
requirements, and other elements which can constitute
subsidies or otherwise distort trade.
-
Trade distorting practices with respect to
exporting STEs including eliminating export subsidies
provided to or by them, government financing, and the
underwriting of losses. The issue of the future use of
monopoly powers will be subject to further
negotiation.
-
Provision of food aid that is not in
conformity with operationally effective disciplines to
be agreed. The objective of such disciplines will be
to prevent commercial displacement. The role of
international organizations as regards the provision
of food aid by Members, including related humanitarian
and developmental issues, will be addressed in the
negotiations. The question of providing food aid
exclusively in fully grant form will also be addressed
in the negotiations.
- Effective transparency provisions for paragraph
18 will be established. Such provisions, in accordance
with standard WTO practice, will be consistent with
commercial confidentiality considerations.
Implementation
-
Commitments and disciplines in paragraph 18
will be implemented according to a schedule and
modalities to be agreed. Commitments will be
implemented by annual instalments. Their phasing will
take into account the need for some coherence with
internal reform steps of Members.
-
The negotiation of the elements in paragraph 18
and their implementation will ensure equivalent and
parallel commitments by Members.
Special and Differential Treatment
-
Developing country Members will benefit from
longer implementation periods for the phasing out of
all forms of export subsidies.
-
Developing countries will continue to benefit
from special and differential treatment under the
provisions of Article 9.4 of the Agreement on
Agriculture for a reasonable period, to be negotiated,
after the phasing out of all forms of export subsidies
and implementation of all disciplines identified above
are completed.
-
Members will ensure that the disciplines on
export credits, export credit guarantees or insurance
programs to be agreed will make appropriate provision
for differential treatment in favour of
least-developed and net food-importing developing
countries as provided for in paragraph 4 of the
Decision on Measures Concerning the Possible Negative
Effects of the Reform Programme on Least-Developed and
Net Food-Importing Developing Countries. Improved
obligations for monitoring and surveillance of all new
disciplines as foreshadowed in paragraph 48 will be
critically important in this regard. Provisions to be
agreed in this respect must not undermine the
commitments undertaken by Members under the
obligations in paragraph 18 above.
-
STEs in developing country Members which enjoy
special privileges to preserve domestic consumer price
stability and to ensure food security will receive
special consideration for maintaining monopoly status.
Special Circumstances
- In exceptional circumstances, which cannot be
adequately covered by food aid, commercial export
credits or preferential international financing
facilities, ad hoc temporary financing arrangements
relating to exports to developing countries may be
agreed by Members. Such agreements must not have the
effect of undermining commitments undertaken by
Members in paragraph 18 above, and will be based on
criteria and consultation procedures to be
established.

MARKET ACCESS
- The Doha Ministerial Declaration calls for
"substantial improvements in market access".
Members also agreed that special and differential
treatment for developing Members would be an integral
part of all elements in the negotiations.
The Single Approach: a Tiered Formula
-
To ensure that a single approach for developed
and developing country Members meets all the
objectives of the Doha mandate, tariff reductions will
be made through a tiered formula that takes into
account their different tariff structures.
-
To ensure that such a formula will lead to
substantial trade expansion, the following principles
will guide its further negotiation:
-
Tariff reductions will be made from bound rates.
Substantial overall tariff reductions will be achieved
as a final result from negotiations.
-
Each Member (other than LDCs) will make a
contribution. Operationally effective special and
differential provisions for developing country Members
will be an integral part of all elements.
-
Progressivity in tariff reductions will be
achieved through deeper cuts in higher tariffs with
flexibilities for sensitive products. Substantial
improvements in market access will be achieved for all
products.
- The number of bands, the thresholds for
defining the bands and the type of tariff reduction in
each band remain under negotiation. The role of a
tariff cap in a tiered formula with distinct treatment
for sensitive products will be further evaluated.
Sensitive Products
Selection
- Without undermining the overall objective of
the tiered approach, Members may designate an
appropriate number, to be negotiated, of tariff lines
to be treated as sensitive, taking account of existing
commitments for these products.
Treatment
-
The principle of ‘substantial improvement’
will apply to each product.
-
‘Substantial improvement’ will be achieved
through combinations of tariff quota commitments and
tariff reductions applying to each product.
However, balance in this negotiation will be found
only if the final negotiated result also reflects the
sensitivity of the product concerned.
-
Some MFN-based tariff quota expansion will be
required for all such products. A base for such an
expansion will be established, taking account of
coherent and equitable criteria to be developed in the
negotiations. In order not to undermine the objective
of the tiered approach, for all such products, MFN
based tariff quota expansion will be provided under
specific rules to be negotiated taking into account
deviations from the tariff formula.
Other Elements
-
Other elements that will give the flexibility
required to reach a final balanced result include
reduction or elimination of in-quota tariff rates,
and operationally effective improvements in tariff
quota administration for existing tariff quotas so as
to enable Members, and particularly developing country
Members, to fully benefit from the market access
opportunities under tariff rate quotas.
-
Tariff escalation will be addressed through a
formula to be agreed.
-
The issue of tariff simplification remains
under negotiation.
-
The question of the special agricultural
safeguard (SSG) remains under negotiation.
Special and differential treatment
-
Having regard to their rural development, food
security and/or livelihood security needs, special and
differential treatment for developing countries will
be an integral part of all elements of the
negotiation, including the tariff reduction formula,
the number and treatment of sensitive products,
expansion of tariff rate quotas, and implementation
period.
-
Proportionality will be achieved by requiring
lesser tariff reduction commitments or tariff quota
expansion commitments from developing country Members.
-
Developing country Members will have the
flexibility to designate an appropriate number of
products as Special Products, based on criteria of
food security, livelihood security and rural
development needs. These products will be eligible for
more flexible treatment. The criteria and treatment of
these products will be further specified during the
negotiation phase and will recognize the fundamental
importance of Special Products to developing
countries.
-
A Special Safeguard Mechanism (SSM) will be
established for use by developing country Members.
-
Full implementation of the long-standing
commitment to achieve the fullest liberalisation of
trade in tropical agricultural products and for
products of particular importance to the
diversification of production from the growing of
illicit narcotic crops is overdue and will be
addressed effectively in the market access
negotiations.
-
The importance of long-standing preferences is
fully recognised. The issue of preference erosion will
be addressed. For the further consideration in this
regard, paragraph 16 and other relevant provisions of
TN/AG/W/1/Rev.1 will be used as a reference.

LEAST- DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
-
Least-Developed Countries, which will have full
access to all special and differential treatment
provisions above, are not required to undertake
reduction commitments. Developed Members, and
developing country Members in a position to do so,
should provide duty-free and quota-free market access
for products originating from least-developed
countries.
-
Work on cotton under all the pillars will
reflect the vital importance of this sector to certain
LDC Members and we will work to achieve ambitious
results expeditiously.

RECENTLY ACCEDED MEMBERS
- The particular concerns of recently acceded
Members will be effectively addressed through specific
flexibility provisions.

MONITORING AND SURVEILLANCE
- Article 18 of the Agreement on Agriculture will
be amended with a view to enhancing monitoring so as
to effectively ensure full transparency, including
through timely and complete notifications with respect
to the commitments in market access, domestic support
and export competition. The particular concerns of
developing countries in this regard will be addressed.

OTHER ISSUES
-
Issues of interest but not agreed: sectoral
initiatives, differential export taxes, GIs.
-
Disciplines on export prohibitions and
restrictions in Article 12.1 of the Agreement on
Agriculture will be strengthened.

Annex B
Framework for Establishing Modalities in
Market Access for Non-Agricultural Products
-
This Framework contains the initial elements for
future work on modalities by the Negotiating Group on
Market Access. Additional negotiations are required to
reach agreement on the specifics of some of these
elements. These relate to the formula, the issues
concerning the treatment of unbound tariffs in indent
two of paragraph 5, the flexibilities for
developing-country participants, the issue of
participation in the sectorial tariff component and
the preferences. In order to finalize the modalities,
the Negotiating Group is instructed to address these
issues expeditiously in a manner consistent with the
mandate of paragraph 16 of the Doha Ministerial
Declaration and the overall balance therein.
-
We reaffirm that negotiations on market access
for non-agricultural products shall aim to reduce or
as appropriate eliminate tariffs, including the
reduction or elimination of tariff peaks, high
tariffs, and tariff escalation, as well as non-tariff
barriers, in particular on products of export interest
to developing countries. We also reaffirm the
importance of special and differential treatment and
less than full reciprocity in reduction commitments as
integral parts of the modalities.
-
We acknowledge the substantial work undertaken
by the Negotiating Group on Market Access and the
progress towards achieving an agreement on negotiating
modalities. We take note of the constructive dialogue
on the Chair's Draft Elements of Modalities
(TN/MA/W/35/Rev.1) and confirm our intention to use
this document as a reference for the future work of
the Negotiating Group. We instruct the Negotiating
Group to continue its work, as mandated by paragraph
16 of the Doha Ministerial Declaration with its
corresponding references to the relevant provisions of
Article XXVIII bis of GATT 1994 and to the provisions
cited in paragraph 50 of the Doha Ministerial
Declaration, on the basis set out below.
-
We recognize that a formula approach is key to
reducing tariffs, and reducing or eliminating tariff
peaks, high tariffs, and tariff escalation. We agree
that the Negotiating Group should continue its work on
a non-linear formula applied on a line-by-line basis
which shall take fully into account the special needs
and interests of developing and least-developed
country participants, including through less than full
reciprocity in reduction commitments.
-
We further agree on the following elements
regarding the formula:
-
product coverage shall be comprehensive without a
priori exclusions;
-
tariff reductions or elimination shall commence
from the bound rates after full implementation of
current concessions; however, for unbound tariff
lines, the basis for commencing the tariff reductions
shall be [two] times the MFN applied rate in the base
year;
-
the base year for MFN applied tariff rates shall
be 2001 (applicable rates on 14 November);
-
credit shall be given for autonomous
liberalization by developing countries provided that
the tariff lines were bound on an MFN basis in the WTO
since the conclusion of the Uruguay Round;
-
all non-ad valorem duties shall be converted to
ad valorem equivalents on the basis of a methodology
to be determined and bound in ad valorem terms;
-
negotiations shall commence on the basis of the
HS96 or HS2002 nomenclature, with the results of the
negotiations to be finalized in HS2002 nomenclature;
-
the reference period for import data shall be
1999-2001.
-
We furthermore agree that, as an exception,
participants with a binding coverage of
non-agricultural tariff lines of less than [35]
percent would be exempt from making tariff reductions
through the formula. Instead, we expect them to bind
[100] percent of non-agricultural tariff lines at an
average level that does not exceed the overall average
of bound tariffs for all developing countries after
full implementation of current concessions.
-
We recognize that a sectorial tariff component,
aiming at elimination or harmonization is another key
element to achieving the objectives of paragraph 16 of
the Doha Ministerial Declaration with regard to the
reduction or elimination of tariffs, in particular on
products of export interest to developing countries.
We recognize that participation by all participants
will be important to that effect. We therefore
instruct the Negotiating Group to pursue its
discussions on such a component, with a view to
defining product coverage, participation, and adequate
provisions of flexibility for developing-country
participants.
-
We agree that developing-country participants
shall have longer implementation periods for tariff
reductions. In addition, they shall be given the
following flexibility:
-
applying less than formula cuts to up to [10]
percent of the tariff lines provided that the cuts are
no less than half the formula cuts and that these
tariff lines do not exceed [10] percent of the total
value of a Member's imports; or
-
keeping, as an exception, tariff lines unbound,
or not applying formula cuts for up to [5] percent of
tariff lines provided they do not exceed [5] percent
of the total value of a Member's imports.
We furthermore agree that this flexibility could
not be used to exclude entire HS Chapters.
-
We agree that least-developed country
participants shall not be required to apply the
formula nor participate in the sectorial approach,
however, as part of their contribution to this round
of negotiations, they are expected to substantially
increase their level of binding commitments.
-
Furthermore, in recognition of the need to
enhance the integration of least-developed countries
into the multilateral trading system and support the
diversification of their production and export base,
we call upon developed-country participants and other
participants who so decide, to grant on an autonomous
basis duty-free and quota-free market access for
non-agricultural products originating from
least-developed countries by the year […].
-
We recognize that newly acceded Members shall
have recourse to special provisions for tariff
reductions in order to take into account their
extensive market access commitments undertaken as part
of their accession and that staged tariff reductions
are still being implemented in many cases. We instruct
the Negotiating Group to further elaborate on such
provisions.
-
We agree that pending agreement on core
modalities for tariffs, the possibilities of
supplementary modalities such as zero-for-zero sector
elimination, sectorial harmonization, and request
& offer, should be kept open.
-
In addition, we ask developed-country
participants and other participants who so decide to
consider the elimination of low duties.
-
We recognize that NTBs are an integral and
equally important part of these negotiations and
instruct participants to intensify their work on NTBs.
In particular, we encourage all participants to make
notifications on NTBs by 31 October 2004 and to
proceed with identification, examination,
categorization, and ultimately negotiations on NTBs.
We take note that the modalities for addressing NTBs
in these negotiations could include request/offer,
horizontal, or vertical approaches; and should fully
take into account the principle of special and
differential treatment for developing and
least-developed country participants.
-
We recognize that appropriate studies and
capacity building measures shall be an integral part
of the modalities to be agreed. We also recognize the
work that has already been undertaken in these areas
and ask participants to continue to identify such
issues to improve participation in the negotiations.
-
We recognize the challenges that may be faced
by non-reciprocal preference beneficiary Members and
those Members that are at present highly dependent on
tariff revenue as a result of these negotiations on
non-agricultural products. We instruct the Negotiating
Group to take into consideration, in the course of its
work, the particular needs that may arise for the
Members concerned.
-
We furthermore encourage the Negotiating Group
to work closely with the Committee on Trade and
Environment in Special Session with a view to
addressing the issue of non-agricultural environmental
goods covered in paragraph 31 (iii) of the Doha
Ministerial Declaration.

Annex C
Recommendations of the Special Session of the
Council for Trade in Services
-
Members who have not yet submitted their
initial offers must do so as soon as possible.
-
A date for the submission of a round of revised
offers should be established as soon as feasible.
-
With a view to providing effective market
access to all Members and in order to ensure a
substantive outcome, Members shall strive to ensure a
high quality of offers, particularly in sectors and
modes of supply of export interest to developing
countries, with special attention to be given to
least-developed countries.
-
Members shall aim to achieve progressively
higher levels of liberalization with no a priori
exclusion of any service sector or mode of supply and
shall give special attention to sectors and modes of
supply of export interest to developing countries.
Members note the interest of developing countries, as
well as other Members, in Mode 4.
-
Members must intensify their efforts to
conclude the negotiations on rule-making under GATS
Articles VI:4, X, XIII and XV in accordance with their
respective mandates and deadlines.
-
Targeted technical assistance should be
provided with a view to enabling developing countries
to participate effectively in the negotiations.
-
For the purpose of the Sixth Ministerial
meeting, the Special Session of the Council for Trade
in Services shall review progress in these
negotiations and provide a full report to the Trade
Negotiations Committee, including possible
recommendations.

Annex D
Modalities for Negotiations on Trade Facilitation
-
Negotiations shall aim to clarify and improve
relevant aspects of Articles V, VIII and X of the GATT
1994 with a view to further expediting the movement,
release and clearance of goods, including goods in
transit. Negotiations shall also aim at enhancing
technical assistance and support for capacity building
in this area. The negotiations shall further aim at
provisions for effective cooperation between customs
or any other appropriate authorities on trade
facilitation and customs compliance issues.
-
The results of the negotiations shall take fully
into account the principle of special and differential
treatment for developing and least-developed
countries. Members recognize that this principle
should extend beyond the granting of traditional
transition periods for implementing commitments. In
particular, the extent and the timing of entering into
commitments shall be related to the implementation
capacities of developing and least-developed Members.
It is further agreed that those Members would not be
obliged to undertake investments in infrastructure
projects beyond their means.
-
Least-developed country Members will only be
required to undertake commitments to the extent
consistent with their individual development,
financial and trade needs or their administrative and
institutional capabilities.
-
As an integral part of the negotiations, Members
shall seek to identify their trade facilitation needs
and priorities, particularly those of developing and
least-developed countries, and shall also address the
concerns of developing and least-developed countries
related to cost implications of proposed measures.
-
It is recognized that the provision of technical
assistance and support for capacity building is vital
for developing and least-developed countries to enable
them to fully participate in and benefit from the
negotiations. Members, in particular developed
countries, therefore commit themselves to adequately
ensure such support and assistance during the
negotiations.
-
Support and assistance should also be provided
to help developing and least-developed countries
implement the commitments resulting from the
negotiations, in accordance with their nature and
scope. In this context, it is recognized that
negotiations could lead to certain commitments whose
implementation would require support for
infrastructure development on the part of some
Members. In these limited cases, developed-country
Members will make every effort to ensure support and
assistance directly related to the nature and scope of
the commitments in order to allow implementation. It
is understood, however, that in cases where required
support and assistance for such infrastructure is not
forthcoming, and where a developing or least-developed
Member continues to lack the necessary capacity,
implementation will not be required. While every
effort will be made to ensure the necessary support
and assistance, it is understood that the commitments
by developed countries to provide such support are not
open-ended.
-
Members agree to review the effectiveness of the
support and assistance provided and its ability to
support the implementation of the results of the
negotiations.
-
In order to make technical assistance and
capacity building more effective and operational and
to ensure better coherence, Members shall invite
relevant international organizations, including the
IMF, OECD, UNCTAD, WCO and the World Bank to undertake
a collaborative effort in this regard.
-
Due account shall be taken of the relevant work
of the WCO and other relevant international
organizations in this area.
-
Paragraphs 45-51 of the Doha Ministerial
Declaration shall apply to these negotiations. At its
first meeting after the July session of the General
Council, the Trade Negotiations Committee shall
establish a Negotiating Group on Trade Facilitation
and appoint its Chair. The first meeting of the
Negotiating Group shall agree on a work plan and
schedule of meetings.
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