WTO Ministerial Conference 13-18 December 2005 - Hong
Kong
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Special
focus by the United Nations Office of the High Representative
for Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing
Countries and Small Island Developing States |
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| Doha
Declaration |
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Doha WTO Ministerial
Declaration
WT/MIN(01)/DEC/1
Adopted on 14 November 2001
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Implementation-related
issues and concerns | Agriculture
| Services | Market
access for non-agricultural products | Trade-related
aspects of intellectual property rights | Relationship
between trade and investment | Interaction
between trade and competition policy | Transparency
in government procurement |
Trade facilitation | WTO rules | Dispute
settlement understanding | Trade
and environment | Electronic commerce
| Small economies | Trade,
debt and finance | Trade and transfer
of technology | Technical cooperation
and capacity building | Least Developed
Countries | Special
and differential treatment | Organization
and management of the work programme
1. The multilateral trading system embodied in the World Trade
Organization has contributed significantly to economic growth,
development and employment throughout the past fifty years.
We are determined, particularly in the light of the global economic
slowdown, to maintain the process of reform and liberalization
of trade policies, thus ensuring that the system plays its full
part in promoting recovery, growth and development. We therefore
strongly reaffirm the principles and objectives set out in the
Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization,
and pledge to reject the use of protectionism.
2. International trade can play a major role in the promotion
of economic development and the alleviation of poverty. We recognize
the need for all our peoples to benefit from the increased opportunities
and welfare gains that the multilateral trading system generates.
The majority of WTO members are developing countries. We seek
to place their needs and interests at the heart of the Work
Programme adopted in this Declaration. Recalling the Preamble
to the Marrakesh Agreement, we shall continue to make positive
efforts designed to ensure that developing countries, and especially
the least-developed among them, secure a share in the growth
of world trade commensurate with the needs of their economic
development. In this context, enhanced market access, balanced
rules, and well targeted, sustainably financed technical assistance
and capacity-building programmes have important roles to play.
3. We recognize the particular vulnerability of the least-developed
countries and the special structural difficulties they face
in the global economy. We are committed to addressing the marginalization
of least-developed countries in international trade and to improving
their effective participation in the multilateral trading system.
We recall the commitments made by ministers at our meetings
in Marrakesh, Singapore and Geneva, and by the international
community at the Third UN Conference on Least-Developed Countries
in Brussels, to help least-developed countries secure beneficial
and meaningful integration into the multilateral trading system
and the global economy. We are determined that the WTO will
play its part in building effectively on these commitments under
the Work Programme we are establishing.
4. We stress our commitment to the WTO as the unique forum for
global trade rule-making and liberalization, while also recognizing
that regional trade agreements can play an important role in
promoting the liberalization and expansion of trade and in fostering
development.
5. We are aware that the challenges members face in a rapidly
changing international environment cannot be addressed through
measures taken in the trade field alone. We shall continue to
work with the Bretton Woods institutions for greater coherence
in global economic policy-making.
6. We strongly reaffirm our commitment to the objective of sustainable
development, as stated in the Preamble to the Marrakesh Agreement.
We are convinced that the aims of upholding and safeguarding
an open and non-discriminatory multilateral trading system,
and acting for the protection of the environment and the promotion
of sustainable development can and must be mutually supportive.
We take note of the efforts by members to conduct national environmental
assessments of trade policies on a voluntary basis. We recognize
that under WTO rules no country should be prevented from taking
measures for the protection of human, animal or plant life or
health, or of the environment at the levels it considers appropriate,
subject to the requirement that they are not applied in a manner
which would constitute a means of arbitrary or unjustifiable
discrimination between countries where the same conditions prevail,
or a disguised restriction on international trade, and are otherwise
in accordance with the provisions of the WTO Agreements. We
welcome the WTO´s continued cooperation with UNEP and
other inter-governmental environmental organizations. We encourage
efforts to promote cooperation between the WTO and relevant
international environmental and developmental organizations,
especially in the lead-up to the World Summit on Sustainable
Development to be held in Johannesburg, South Africa, in September
2002.
7. We reaffirm the right of members under the General Agreement
on Trade in Services to regulate, and to introduce new regulations
on, the supply of services.
8. We reaffirm our declaration made at the Singapore Ministerial
Conference regarding internationally recognized core labour
standards. We take note of work under way in the International
Labour Organization (ILO) on the social dimension of globalization.
9. We note with particular satisfaction that this conference
has completed the WTO accession procedures for China and Chinese
Taipei. We also welcome the accession as new members, since
our last session, of Albania, Croatia, Georgia, Jordan, Lithuania,
Moldova and Oman, and note the extensive market-access commitments
already made by these countries on accession. These accessions
will greatly strengthen the multilateral trading system, as
will those of the 28 countries now negotiating their accession.
We therefore attach great importance to concluding accession
proceedings as quickly as possible. In particular, we are committed
to accelerating the accession of least-developed countries.
10. Recognizing the challenges posed by an expanding WTO membership,
we confirm our collective responsibility to ensure internal
transparency and the effective participation of all members.
While emphasizing the intergovernmental character of the organization,
we are committed to making the WTO's operations more transparent,
including through more effective and prompt dissemination of
information, and to improve dialogue with the public. We shall
therefore at the national and multilateral levels continue to
promote a better public understanding of the WTO and to communicate
the benefits of a liberal, rules-based multilateral trading
system.
11. In view of these considerations, we hereby agree to undertake
the broad and balanced Work Programme set out below. This incorporates
both an expanded negotiating agenda and other important decisions
and activities necessary to address the challenges facing the
multilateral trading system.
WORK PROGRAMME
Implementation-related
issues and concerns | Back
to the top
12. We attach the utmost importance to the implementation-related
issues and concerns raised by members and are determined to
find appropriate solutions to them. In this connection, and
having regard to the General Council Decisions of 3 May and
15 December 2000, we further adopt the Decision on Implementation-Related
Issues and Concerns in document WT/MIN(01)/17 to address a number
of implementation problems faced by members. We agree that negotiations
on outstanding implementation issues shall be an integral part
of the Work Programme we are establishing, and that agreements
reached at an early stage in these negotiations shall be treated
in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 47 below. In
this regard, we shall proceed as follows: (a) where we provide
a specific negotiating mandate in this declaration, the relevant
implementation issues shall be addressed under that mandate;
(b) the other outstanding implementation issues shall be addressed
as a matter of priority by the relevant WTO bodies, which shall
report to the Trade Negotiations Committee, established under
paragraph 46 below, by the end of 2002 for appropriate action.
Agriculture
| Back to the top
13. We recognize the work already undertaken in the negotiations
initiated in early 2000 under Article 20 of the Agreement on
Agriculture, including the large number of negotiating proposals
submitted on behalf of a total of 121 members. We recall the
long-term objective referred to in the Agreement to establish
a fair and market-oriented trading system through a programme
of fundamental reform encompassing strengthened rules and specific
commitments on support and protection in order to correct and
prevent restrictions and distortions in world agricultural markets.
We reconfirm our commitment to this programme. Building on the
work carried out to date and without prejudging the outcome
of the negotiations we commit ourselves to comprehensive negotiations
aimed at: substantial improvements in market access; reductions
of, with a view to phasing out, all forms of export subsidies;
and substantial reductions in trade-distorting domestic support.
We agree that special and differential treatment for developing
countries shall be an integral part of all elements of the negotiations
and shall be embodied in the schedules of concessions and commitments
and as appropriate in the rules and disciplines to be negotiated,
so as to be operationally effective and to enable developing
countries to effectively take account of their development needs,
including food security and rural development. We take note
of the non-trade concerns reflected in the negotiating proposals
submitted by Members and confirm that non-trade concerns will
be taken into account in the negotiations as provided for in
the Agreement on Agriculture.
14. Modalities for the further commitments, including provisions
for special and differential treatment, shall be established
no later than 31 March 2003. Participants shall submit their
comprehensive draft Schedules based on these modalities no later
than the date of the Fifth Session of the Ministerial Conference.
The negotiations, including with respect to rules and disciplines
and related legal texts, shall be concluded as part and at the
date of conclusion of the negotiating agenda as a whole.
Services
| Back to the top
15. The negotiations on trade in services shall be conducted
with a view to promoting the economic growth of all trading
partners and the development of developing and least-developed
countries. We recognize the work already undertaken in the negotiations,
initiated in January 2000 under Article XIX of the General Agreement
on Trade in Services, and the large number of proposals submitted
by members on a wide range of sectors and several horizontal
issues, as well as on movement of natural persons. We reaffirm
the Guidelines and Procedures for the Negotiations adopted by
the Council for Trade in Services on 28 March 2001 as the basis
for continuing the negotiations, with a view to achieving the
objectives of the General Agreement on Trade in Services, as
stipulated in the Preamble, Article IV and Article XIX of that
Agreement. Participants shall submit initial requests for specific
commitments by 30 June 2002 and initial offers by 31 March 2003.
Market
access for non-agricultural products | Back
to the top
16. We agree to negotiations which shall aim, by modalities
to be agreed, 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.
Product coverage shall be comprehensive and without a priori
exclusions. The negotiations 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, in accordance with the relevant provisions
of Article XXVIII bis of GATT 1994 and the provisions cited
in paragraph 50 below. To this end, the modalities to be agreed
will include appropriate studies and capacity-building measures
to assist least-developed countries to participate effectively
in the negotiations.
Trade-related
aspects of intellectual property rights | Back
to the top
17. We stress the importance we attach to implementation and
interpretation of the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of
Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS Agreement) in a manner supportive
of public health, by promoting both access to existing medicines
and research and development into new medicines and, in this
connection, are adopting a separate declaration.
18. With a view to completing the work started in the Council
for Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (Council
for TRIPS) on the implementation of Article 23.4, we agree to
negotiate the establishment of a multilateral system of notification
and registration of geographical indications for wines and spirits
by the Fifth Session of the Ministerial Conference. We note
that issues related to the extension of the protection of geographical
indications provided for in Article 23 to products other than
wines and spirits will be addressed in the Council for TRIPS
pursuant to paragraph 12 of this declaration.
19. We instruct the Council for TRIPS, in pursuing its work
programme including under the review of Article 27.3(b), the
review of the implementation of the TRIPS Agreement under Article
71.1 and the work foreseen pursuant to paragraph 12 of this
declaration, to examine, inter alia, the relationship between
the TRIPS Agreement and the Convention on Biological Diversity,
the protection of traditional knowledge and folklore, and other
relevant new developments raised by members pursuant to Article
71.1. In undertaking this work, the TRIPS Council shall be guided
by the objectives and principles set out in Articles 7 and 8
of the TRIPS Agreement and shall take fully into account the
development dimension.
Relationship
between trade and investment | Back
to the top
20. Recognizing the case for a multilateral framework to secure
transparent, stable and predictable conditions for long-term
cross-border investment, particularly foreign direct investment,
that will contribute to the expansion of trade, and the need
for enhanced technical assistance and capacity-building in this
area as referred to in paragraph 21, we agree that negotiations
will take place after the Fifth Session of the Ministerial Conference
on the basis of a decision to be taken, by explicit consensus,
at that session on modalities of negotiations.
21. We recognize the needs of developing and least-developed
countries for enhanced support for technical assistance and
capacity building in this area, including policy analysis and
development so that they may better evaluate the implications
of closer multilateral cooperation for their development policies
and objectives, and human and institutional development. To
this end, we shall work in cooperation with other relevant intergovernmental
organisations, including UNCTAD, and through appropriate regional
and bilateral channels, to provide strengthened and adequately
resourced assistance to respond to these needs.
22. In the period until the Fifth Session, further work in the
Working Group on the Relationship Between Trade and Investment
will focus on the clarification of: scope and definition; transparency;
non-discrimination; modalities for pre-establishment commitments
based on a GATS-type, positive list approach; development provisions;
exceptions and balance-of-payments safeguards; consultation
and the settlement of disputes between members. Any framework
should reflect in a balanced manner the interests of home and
host countries, and take due account of the development policies
and objectives of host governments as well as their right to
regulate in the public interest. The special development, trade
and financial needs of developing and least-developed countries
should be taken into account as an integral part of any framework,
which should enable members to undertake obligations and commitments
commensurate with their individual needs and circumstances.
Due regard should be paid to other relevant WTO provisions.
Account should be taken, as appropriate, of existing bilateral
and regional arrangements on investment.
Interaction
between trade and competition policy | Back
to the top
23. Recognizing the case for a multilateral framework to enhance
the contribution of competition policy to international trade
and development, and the need for enhanced technical assistance
and capacity-building in this area as referred to in paragraph
24, we agree that negotiations will take place after the Fifth
Session of the Ministerial Conference on the basis of a decision
to be taken, by explicit consensus, at that session on modalities
of negotiations.
24. We recognize the needs of developing and least-developed
countries for enhanced support for technical assistance and
capacity building in this area, including policy analysis and
development so that they may better evaluate the implications
of closer multilateral cooperation for their development policies
and objectives, and human and institutional development. To
this end, we shall work in cooperation with other relevant intergovernmental
organisations, including UNCTAD, and through appropriate regional
and bilateral channels, to provide strengthened and adequately
resourced assistance to respond to these needs.
25. In the period until the Fifth Session, further work in the
Working Group on the Interaction between Trade and Competition
Policy will focus on the clarification of: core principles,
including transparency, non-discrimination and procedural fairness,
and provisions on hardcore cartels; modalities for voluntary
cooperation; and support for progressive reinforcement of competition
institutions in developing countries through capacity building.
Full account shall be taken of the needs of developing and least-developed
country participants and appropriate flexibility provided to
address them.
Transparency
in government procurement | Back
to the top
26. Recognizing the case for a multilateral agreement on transparency
in government procurement and the need for enhanced technical
assistance and capacity building in this area, we agree that
negotiations will take place after the Fifth Session of the
Ministerial Conference on the basis of a decision to be taken,
by explicit consensus, at that session on modalities of negotiations.
These negotiations will build on the progress made in the Working
Group on Transparency in Government Procurement by that time
and take into account participants’ development priorities,
especially those of least-developed country participants. Negotiations
shall be limited to the transparency aspects and therefore will
not restrict the scope for countries to give preferences to
domestic supplies and suppliers. We commit ourselves to ensuring
adequate technical assistance and support for capacity building
both during the negotiations and after their conclusion.
Trade
facilitation | Back
to the top
27. Recognizing the case for further expediting the movement,
release and clearance of goods, including goods in transit,
and the need for enhanced technical assistance and capacity
building in this area, we agree that negotiations will take
place after the Fifth Session of the Ministerial Conference
on the basis of a decision to be taken, by explicit consensus,
at that session on modalities of negotiations. In the period
until the Fifth Session, the Council for Trade in Goods shall
review and as appropriate, clarify and improve relevant aspects
of Articles V, VIII and X of the GATT 1994 and identify the
trade facilitation needs and priorities of members, in particular
developing and least-developed countries. We commit ourselves
to ensuring adequate technical assistance and support for capacity
building in this area.
WTO rules
| Back to the top
28. In the light of experience and of the increasing application
of these instruments by members, we agree to negotiations aimed
at clarifying and improving disciplines under the Agreements
on Implementation of Article VI of the GATT 1994 and on Subsidies
and Countervailing Measures, while preserving the basic concepts,
principles and effectiveness of these Agreements and their instruments
and objectives, and taking into account the needs of developing
and least-developed participants. In the initial phase of the
negotiations, participants will indicate the provisions, including
disciplines on trade distorting practices, that they seek to
clarify and improve in the subsequent phase. In the context
of these negotiations, participants shall also aim to clarify
and improve WTO disciplines on fisheries subsidies, taking into
account the importance of this sector to developing countries.
We note that fisheries subsidies are also referred to in paragraph
31.
29. We also agree to negotiations aimed at clarifying and improving
disciplines and procedures under the existing WTO provisions
applying to regional trade agreements. The negotiations shall
take into account the developmental aspects of regional trade
agreements.
Dispute
Settlement Understanding | Back
to the top
30. We agree to negotiations on improvements and clarifications
of the Dispute Settlement Understanding. The negotiations should
be based on the work done thus far as well as any additional
proposals by members, and aim to agree on improvements and clarifications
not later than May 2003, at which time we will take steps to
ensure that the results enter into force as soon as possible
thereafter.
Trade
and environment | Back
to the top
31. With a view to enhancing the mutual supportiveness of trade
and environment, we agree to negotiations, without prejudging
their outcome, on:
(i) the relationship between existing WTO rules and specific
trade obligations set out in multilateral environmental agreements
(MEAs). The negotiations shall be limited in scope to the applicability
of such existing WTO rules as among parties to the MEA in question.
The negotiations shall not prejudice the WTO rights of any Member
that is not a party to the MEA in question;
(ii) procedures for regular information exchange between MEA
Secretariats and the relevant WTO committees, and the criteria
for the granting of observer status;
(iii) the reduction or, as appropriate, elimination of tariff
and non-tariff barriers to environmental goods and services.
We note that fisheries subsidies form part of the negotiations
provided for in paragraph 28.
32. We instruct the Committee on Trade and Environment, in pursuing
work on all items on its agenda within its current terms of
reference, to give particular attention to:
(i) the effect of environmental measures on market access, especially
in relation to developing countries, in particular the least-developed
among them, and those situations in which the elimination or
reduction of trade restrictions and distortions would benefit
trade, the environment and development;
(ii) the relevant provisions of the Agreement on Trade-Related
Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights; and
(iii) labelling requirements for environmental purposes.
Work on these issues should include the identification of any
need to clarify relevant WTO rules. The Committee shall report
to the Fifth Session of the Ministerial Conference, and make
recommendations, where appropriate, with respect to future action,
including the desirability of negotiations. The outcome of this
work as well as the negotiations carried out under paragraph
31(i) and (ii) shall be compatible with the open and non-discriminatory
nature of the multilateral trading system, shall not add to
or diminish the rights and obligations of members under existing
WTO agreements, in particular the Agreement on the Application
of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures, nor alter the balance
of these rights and obligations, and will take into account
the needs of developing and least-developed countries.
33. We recognize the importance of technical assistance and
capacity building in the field of trade and environment to developing
countries, in particular the least-developed among them. We
also encourage that expertise and experience be shared with
members wishing to perform environmental reviews at the national
level. A report shall be prepared on these activities for the
Fifth Session.
Electronic
commerce | Back
to the top
34. We take note of the work which has been done in the General
Council and other relevant bodies since the Ministerial Declaration
of 20 May 1998 and agree to continue the Work Programme on Electronic
Commerce. The work to date demonstrates that electronic commerce
creates new challenges and opportunities for trade for members
at all stages of development, and we recognize the importance
of creating and maintaining an environment which is favourable
to the future development of electronic commerce. We instruct
the General Council to consider the most appropriate institutional
arrangements for handling the Work Programme, and to report
on further progress to the Fifth Session of the Ministerial
Conference. We declare that members will maintain their current
practice of not imposing customs duties on electronic transmissions
until the Fifth Session.
Small economies
| Back to the top
35. We agree to a work programme, under the auspices of the
General Council, to examine issues relating to the trade of
small economies. The objective of this work is to frame responses
to the trade-related issues identified for the fuller integration
of small, vulnerable economies into the multilateral trading
system, and not to create a sub-category of WTO Members. The
General Council shall review the work programme and make recommendations
for action to the Fifth Session of the Ministerial Conference.
Trade,
debt and finance | Back
to the top
36. We agree to an examination, in a Working Group under the
auspices of the General Council, of the relationship between
trade, debt and finance, and of any possible recommendations
on steps that might be taken within the mandate and competence
of the WTO to enhance the capacity of the multilateral trading
system to contribute to a durable solution to the problem of
external indebtedness of developing and least-developed countries,
and to strengthen the coherence of international trade and financial
policies, with a view to safeguarding the multilateral trading
system from the effects of financial and monetary instability.
The General Council shall report to the Fifth Session of the
Ministerial Conference on progress in the examination.
Trade
and transfer of technology | Back
to the top
37. We agree to an examination, in a Working Group under the
auspices of the General Council, of the relationship between
trade and transfer of technology, and of any possible recommendations
on steps that might be taken within the mandate of the WTO to
increase flows of technology to developing countries. The General
Council shall report to the Fifth Session of the Ministerial
Conference on progress in the examination.
Technical
cooperation and capacity building | Back
to the top
38. We confirm that technical cooperation and capacity building
are core elements of the development dimension of the multilateral
trading system, and we welcome and endorse the New Strategy
for WTO Technical Cooperation for Capacity Building, Growth
and Integration. We instruct the Secretariat, in coordination
with other relevant agencies, to support domestic efforts for
mainstreaming trade into national plans for economic development
and strategies for poverty reduction. The delivery of WTO technical
assistance shall be designed to assist developing and least-developed
countries and low-income countries in transition to adjust to
WTO rules and disciplines, implement obligations and exercise
the rights of membership, including drawing on the benefits
of an open, rules-based multilateral trading system. Priority
shall also be accorded to small, vulnerable, and transition
economies, as well as to members and observers without representation
in Geneva. We reaffirm our support for the valuable work of
the International Trade Centre, which should be enhanced.
39. We underscore the urgent necessity for the effective coordinated
delivery of technical assistance with bilateral donors, in the
OECD Development Assistance Committee and relevant international
and regional intergovernmental institutions, within a coherent
policy framework and timetable. In the coordinated delivery
of technical assistance, we instruct the Director-General to
consult with the relevant agencies, bilateral donors and beneficiaries,
to identify ways of enhancing and rationalizing the Integrated
Framework for Trade-Related Technical Assistance to Least-Developed
Countries and the Joint Integrated Technical Assistance Programme
(JITAP).
40. We agree that there is a need for technical assistance to
benefit from secure and predictable funding. We therefore instruct
the Committee on Budget, Finance and Administration to develop
a plan for adoption by the General Council in December 2001
that will ensure long-term funding for WTO technical assistance
at an overall level no lower than that of the current year and
commensurate with the activities outlined above.
41. We have established firm commitments on technical cooperation
and capacity building in various paragraphs in this Ministerial
Declaration. We reaffirm these specific commitments contained
in paragraphs 16, 21, 24, 26, 27, 33, 38-40, 42 and 43, and
also reaffirm the understanding in paragraph 2 on the important
role of sustainably financed technical assistance and capacity-building
programmes. We instruct the Director-General to report to the
Fifth Session of the Ministerial Conference, with an interim
report to the General Council in December 2002 on the implementation
and adequacy of these commitments in the identified paragraphs.
Least-developed
countries | Back
to the top
42. We acknowledge the seriousness of the concerns expressed
by the least-developed countries (LDCs) in the Zanzibar Declaration
adopted by their ministers in July 2001. We recognize that the
integration of the LDCs into the multilateral trading system
requires meaningful market access, support for the diversification
of their production and export base, and trade-related technical
assistance and capacity building. We agree that the meaningful
integration of LDCs into the trading system and the global economy
will involve efforts by all WTO members. We commit ourselves
to the objective of duty-free, quota-free market access for
products originating from LDCs. In this regard, we welcome the
significant market access improvements by WTO members in advance
of the Third UN Conference on LDCs (LDC-III), in Brussels, May
2001. We further commit ourselves to consider additional measures
for progressive improvements in market access for LDCs. Accession
of LDCs remains a priority for the Membership. We agree to work
to facilitate and accelerate negotiations with acceding LDCs.
We instruct the Secretariat to reflect the priority we attach
to LDCs’ accessions in the annual plans for technical
assistance. We reaffirm the commitments we undertook at LDC-III,
and agree that the WTO should take into account, in designing
its work programme for LDCs, the trade-related elements of the
Brussels Declaration and Programme of Action, consistent with
the WTO’s mandate, adopted at LDC-III. We instruct the
Sub-Committee for Least-Developed Countries to design such a
work programme and to report on the agreed work programme to
the General Council at its first meeting in 2002.
43. We endorse the Integrated Framework for Trade-Related Technical
Assistance to Least-Developed Countries (IF) as a viable model
for LDCs’ trade development. We urge development partners
to significantly increase contributions to the IF Trust Fund
and WTO extra-budgetary trust funds in favour of LDCs. We urge
the core agencies, in coordination with development partners,
to explore the enhancement of the IF with a view to addressing
the supply-side constraints of LDCs and the extension of the
model to all LDCs, following the review of the IF and the appraisal
of the ongoing Pilot Scheme in selected LDCs. We request the
Director-General, following coordination with heads of the other
agencies, to provide an interim report to the General Council
in December 2002 and a full report to the Fifth Session of the
Ministerial Conference on all issues affecting LDCs.
Special
and differential treatment | Back
to the top
44. We reaffirm that provisions for special and differential
treatment are an integral part of the WTO Agreements. We note
the concerns expressed regarding their operation in addressing
specific constraints faced by developing countries, particularly
least-developed countries. In that connection, we also note
that some members have proposed a Framework Agreement on Special
and Differential Treatment (WT/GC/W/442). We therefore agree
that all special and differential treatment provisions shall
be reviewed with a view to strengthening them and making them
more precise, effective and operational. In this connection,
we endorse the work programme on special and differential treatment
set out in the Decision on Implementation-Related Issues and
Concerns.
Organization
and management of the work programme | Back
to the top
45. The negotiations to be pursued under the terms of this declaration
shall be concluded not later than 1 January 2005. The Fifth
Session of the Ministerial Conference will take stock of progress
in the negotiations, provide any necessary political guidance,
and take decisions as necessary. When the results of the negotiations
in all areas have been established, a Special Session of the
Ministerial Conference will be held to take decisions regarding
the adoption and implementation of those results.
46. The overall conduct of the negotiations shall be supervised
by a Trade Negotiations Committee under the authority of the
General Council. The Trade Negotiations Committee shall hold
its first meeting not later than 31 January 2002. It shall establish
appropriate negotiating mechanisms as required and supervise
the progress of the negotiations.
47. With the exception of the improvements and clarifications
of the Dispute Settlement Understanding, the conduct, conclusion
and entry into force of the outcome of the negotiations shall
be treated as parts of a single undertaking. However, agreements
reached at an early stage may be implemented on a provisional
or a definitive basis. Early agreements shall be taken into
account in assessing the overall balance of the negotiations.
48. Negotiations shall be open to:
(i) all members of the WTO; and
(ii) States and separate customs territories currently in the
process of accession and those that inform members, at a regular
meeting of the General Council, of their intention to negotiate
the terms of their membership and for whom an accession working
party is established.
Decisions on the outcomes of the negotiations shall be taken
only by WTO members.
49. The negotiations shall be conducted in a transparent manner
among participants, in order to facilitate the effective participation
of all. They shall be conducted with a view to ensuring benefits
to all participants and to achieving an overall balance in the
outcome of the negotiations.
50. The negotiations and the other aspects of the Work Programme
shall take fully into account the principle of special and differential
treatment for developing and least-developed countries embodied
in: Part IV of the GATT 1994; the Decision of 28 November 1979
on Differential and More Favourable Treatment, Reciprocity and
Fuller Participation of Developing Countries; the Uruguay Round
Decision on Measures in Favour of Least-Developed Countries;
and all other relevant WTO provisions.
51. The Committee on Trade and Development and the Committee
on Trade and Environment shall, within their respective mandates,
each act as a forum to identify and debate developmental and
environmental aspects of the negotiations, in order to help
achieve the objective of having sustainable development appropriately
reflected.
52. Those elements of the Work Programme which do not involve
negotiations are also accorded a high priority. They shall be
pursued under the overall supervision of the General Council,
which shall report on progress to the Fifth Session of the Ministerial
Conference.
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