EU calls on trading partners
EU calls on trading partners to remove protectionist barriers
Almost 280 trade restrictive measures have been put in place by the European Union's major trade partners during the economic crisis over the last 18 months according to a new report published today by the European Commission. Contrary to the G20 commitment, hardly any measures have been removed despite signs of economic recovery in most countries. The European Commission calls on trading partners to remove these restrictions in order to give a much needed boost to the recovery.
EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht said: "There is a risk that trade restrictive measures introduced by our partners during the crisis will become part of the trade regime even when the economy picks up speed. What we need now is an exit strategy from protectionism."
The European Commission has been issuing reports on the trade restrictive measures adopted by major trade partners since the beginning of the economic crisis. This monitoring mechanism has been important to prevent an escalation of trade protectionism during the downturn.
The recent report covers the EU's thirty main trading partners over the period from October 2008 to April 2010. The protectionist measures range from classical trade barriers such as import bans or tariff increases to "buy national" and other behind-the-border policies. The report finds that many of the new barriers are rapidly becoming permanent features of the world trading system.
Background
At the Washington Summit in November 2008, the G20 committed to a self-imposed standstill in terms of new barriers to investment or to trade in goods and services, new export restrictions or WTO inconsistent measures to stimulate exports. The London and Pittsburgh G20 summits in April 2009 and September 2009, reinforced this commitment and provided an explicit mandate to the WTO to monitor and to report publicly on the evolution of the situation on a quarterly basis.
The EU is firmly committed to this pledge. Its own monitoring report complements the monitoring exercise done by the WTO.
The main conclusions of the new report are as follows:
• Despite an overall gradual improvement of the
world economy, growth remains uneven, marking a clear
difference between the situation of industrialised and
emerging economies. There still exists a risk that
increasing unemployment could fuel a second wave of
protectionist policies in the course of 2010.
• Between
November 2009 and April 2010, 73 further trade restrictive
measures have been introduced, thus bringing the total
figure of measures in force to 278. The tendency towards new
protectionist measures noted in past reports remains
unabated.
• Fewer than 20 measures taken in the context
of the crisis have been withdrawn or have expired between
November 2009 and April 2010. This figure is clearly
disappointing and contrary to the commitment made by G20
leaders to "rectify" such measures. Continuing to add to the
stock of protectionist measures without rectifying them puts
the economic recovery at risk.
• The creation of the
Customs Union of Russia, Kazakhstan and Belarus, effective
from 1 January 2010, saw the consolidation of most of
Russia's duty increases introduced during the economic
crisis. This remains by far the most striking example of
entrenching the crisis-related measures in the permanent
trade environment, with long-term implications for the
resumption of trade flows with Russia.
• The recourse
to 'Buy National' policy remains of concern. Moreover, in
the field of government procurement there is still a
tendency to adopt discriminatory measures.
• G20
members need to reaffirm their commitment to the removal of
the measures in place. Vigilance and monitoring are no
longer sufficient. Trade flows need to rebound in a balanced
way across the globe to help the recovery gain ground.
The report covers measures from the following countries/customs territories: Algeria, Argentina, Australia, Belarus, Brazil, Canada, China, Ecuador, Egypt, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Paraguay, Philippines, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Switzerland Taiwan, Turkey, Ukraine, USA, Vietnam.
ENDS