May 25, 1998

TIME-BOUND, LIMITED 'NO-TAX' ON ELECTRONIC COMMERCE

 

Geneva 20 May (Chakravarthi Raghavan) -- The 2nd Ministerial Conference of the WTO adopted Wednesday a declaration on electronic commerce for a work programme and continued 'no customs duties' on such commerce, with the standstill renewable only by consensus by the WTO General Council before the 3rd Ministerial.  

After some protracted 'consultations', it was agreed at an informal heads of delegations meet Tuesday that a plurilateral declaration will be allowed to be introduced at the Ministerial working session, with a gentleman's agreement that the political declaration would not be objected to, but that it would be adopted as a Ministerial Declaration without any binding legal effect. 

The text of the declaration mandated the General Council at its next meeting in special session (set for September), to establish a comprehensive work programme "to examine all trade-related issues relating to global electronic commerce including those issues identified by Members." 

The work programme, the text said, will involve the relevant WTO bodies, "take into account the economic, financial and development needs of developing countries, and recognize that work is also being undertaken in other international fora." 

The General Council is asked to produce a report on the progress of the work programme and any recommendations for action to be submitted at our third session.  

Without prejudice to the outcome of the work programme or the rights and obligations of Members under the WTO Agreements, "we also declare that Members will continue their current practice of not imposing customs duties on electronic transmissions." 

"When reporting to our third session, the General Council will review this declaration, the extension of which will be decided by consensus, taking into account the progress of the work programme."  

The US and its supporters had to give up their earlier formulation, which could have meant the standstill on no duties would continue indefinitely unless revoked by consensus.  

Several Third World delegations said that while they now had no 'duties', the high profile to the issue has set their revenue departments thinking, in their perpetual need to get revenues.  

And no one is ready to give up or bind this into the WTO, unless the US has something to offer in return by tariff reductions and bindings in other areas of interest to countries.  

At the WTO final plenary, after the declaration was adopted, Pakistan entered its reservations, both on its right to levy a tax, on the basis of adequate economic analysis, nationally and relevant international organizations, and that the way the declaration should not be a precedent to bring new issues into the WTO.