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Tweet[IWS] CRS: WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION (WTO): ISSUES IN THE DEBATE ON CONTINUED U.S. PARTICIPATION [16 June 2010]
IWS Documented News Service
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Institute for Workplace Studies----------------- Professor Samuel B. Bacharach
School of Industrial & Labor Relations-------- Director, Institute for Workplace Studies
Cornell University
16 East 34th Street, 4th floor---------------------- Stuart Basefsky
New York, NY 10016 -------------------------------Director, IWS News Bureau
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Congressional Research Service (CRS)
World Trade Organization (WTO): Issues in the Debate on Continued U.S. Participation
Raymond J. Ahearn, Specialist in International Trade and Finance
Ian F. Fergusson, Specialist in International Trade and Finance
June 16, 2010
http://opencrs.com/document/R41291/2010-06-16/download/1013/
[full-text, 41 pages]
Summary
Following World War II, the United States led efforts to establish an open and nondiscriminatory
trading system with the expressed goal of raising the economic well-being of all countries and
bolstering world peace. These efforts culminated in the creation of the General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade (GATT) in 1948, a provisional agreement on tariffs and trade rules that
governed world trade for 47 years. The World Trade Organization (WTO) succeeded the GATT in
1995 and today serves as a permanent body that administers the rules and agreements negotiated
and signed by 153 participating parties, as well as a forum for dispute settlement and
negotiations.
Section 125 of the Uruguay Round Agreements (P.L. 103-465), which is the law that approved
and implemented the agreements reached during the Uruguay Round of multilateral trade
negotiations, provided that the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) must submit to Congress every
five years a report that analyzes the costs and benefits of continued U.S. participation in the
WTO. The USTR submitted its report to Congress on March 1, 2010, triggering a 90 legislative
day timetable in which any Member of Congress may introduce a privileged joint resolution
withdrawing congressional approval of the WTO Agreement (to date no withdrawal resolution
has been introduced in the 111th Congress).
Most observers maintain that U.S. withdrawal from the WTO is at best highly unlikely for both
substantive and procedural reasons. Substantively, the withdrawal of U.S. participation could
undermine a multilateral system of trade rules and practices, formulated and implemented under
U.S. leadership, that on balance has contributed to increased economic prosperity and security at
home and abroad. Procedurally, a withdrawal resolution would have to pass both the House and
Senate and then surmount a likely Presidential veto via an override with a two-thirds majority
vote. Nevertheless, such a resolution provides an opportunity for Members of Congress
periodically to debate “whether the WTO is an effective organization” and ways it could better
serve U.S. interests.
The purpose of this report is to analyze some of the main issues in any debate on U.S.
participation in the WTO and to address some of the criticisms leveled at the organization.
Academic studies indicate that the United States benefits from broad reductions in trade barriers
worldwide, but some workers and industries might not share in those gains. Decisions in the
WTO are made by member governments, which determine their negotiating positions, file dispute
challenges, and implement their decisions. However, some argue that smaller countries are left
out of decision-making and that governments tend to represent the interests of large corporations
disproportionately.
The United States has been a frequent participant in WTO dispute proceedings, both as a
complainant and as a respondent. There have been complaints that countries do not adhere to
decisions and that U.S. trade remedy laws have not been judged properly. It is also argued that
this multilateral dispute settlement process is unique and that the United States has successfully
used the process to advance its economic interests.
Certain advocates for the environment, food safety, labor, development, and financial regulation
have criticized the WTO. Much of the criticism is based on interpretations of various WTO
agreements or rulings that have been controversial. An appendix sets out the legislative
procedures for the WTO withdrawal resolution. This report will be updated as events warrant.
Contents
Introduction ...............................................................................................................................1
Background on the GATT/WTO System .....................................................................................2
GATT ..................................................................................................................................3
WTO ...................................................................................................................................5
Stakeholders in the WTO Debate.................................................................................................8
Economic Costs and Benefits of the WTO.................................................................................10
Decisionmaking in the WTO and National Sovereignty Issues...................................................14
Governance........................................................................................................................15
Decisionmaking ............................................................................................................15
Transparency in the WTO .............................................................................................18
Sovereignty........................................................................................................................19
The WTO Dispute Process ........................................................................................................19
Criticisms of the WTO from Environmental, Food Safety, Labor, Development, and
Financial Regulation Perspectives ..........................................................................................22
Environmental Concerns .....................................................................................................23
Health and Safety Concerns ................................................................................................24
Labor Concerns...................................................................................................................25
Development Concerns .......................................................................................................27
Financial Services Regulation Concerns ..............................................................................28
Possible Consequences of U.S. Withdrawal from the WTO .......................................................31
Tables
Table 1. Summary of GATT Negotiating Rounds.........................................................................4
Table 2. Uruguay Round Tariff Bindings .....................................................................................6
Table 3. Snapshot of Cases Involving the United States .............................................................21
Appendixes
Appendix. Legislative Procedure for U.S. Withdrawal from the WTO .......................................33
Contacts
Author Contact Information ......................................................................................................38
Acknowledgments ....................................................................................................................38
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