Digital Trade Standoff: U.S. and Allies Wage E-Commerce Duties Battle
Diplomats from the U.S. and allied nations are contemplating a separate agreement on e-commerce duties if Brazil and Turkey oppose extending a WTO moratorium. The moratorium, crucial for digital trade, faces challenges in renewal. A stalemate threatens the WTO's legitimacy in setting global digital trade rules.
The United States and its allies are considering a separate moratorium on e-commerce duties amid resistance from Brazil and Turkey against extending the World Trade Organization's (WTO) global agreement. This decision comes on the heels of an unsuccessful renewal attempt at the previous WTO meeting in Yaounde, Cameroon.
The long-standing moratorium, which began in 1998 and prohibits duties on cross-border electronic transmissions, is vital for countries with significant digital economies like the U.S., EU, and Japan. A deadlock persists ahead of the WTO General Council meeting in Geneva, raising concerns about the organization's competence in handling modern trade issues.
U.S. ambassador to the WTO, Joseph Barloon, highlighted that most major trade partners backed a duty-free agreement, yet Brazil and Turkey's opposition hinders a multilateral resolution. The situation underscores the potential erosion of the WTO's role, with experts warning a partial agreement may create uncertainty for international businesses.
(With inputs from agencies.)
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- Brazil
- Turkey
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- plurilateral agreement
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