The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) was formed in 1947 as a provisional agreement to govern international trade while negotiations for an International Trade Organization (ITO) were ongoing. GATT was designed to encourage free trade by regulating and reducing tariffs between member states and providing a forum for resolving trade disputes. Though intended as a temporary measure, GATT became the principal instrument governing international trade after the ITO failed to materialize. Over successive rounds of negotiations, GATT membership grew and tariff barriers were significantly reduced, leading to large increases in global trade volumes.
The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) was formed in 1947 as a provisional agreement to govern international trade while negotiations for an International Trade Organization (ITO) were ongoing. GATT was designed to encourage free trade by regulating and reducing tariffs between member states and providing a forum for resolving trade disputes. Though intended as a temporary measure, GATT became the principal instrument governing international trade after the ITO failed to materialize. Over successive rounds of negotiations, GATT membership grew and tariff barriers were significantly reduced, leading to large increases in global trade volumes.
The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) was formed in 1947 as a provisional agreement to govern international trade while negotiations for an International Trade Organization (ITO) were ongoing. GATT was designed to encourage free trade by regulating and reducing tariffs between member states and providing a forum for resolving trade disputes. Though intended as a temporary measure, GATT became the principal instrument governing international trade after the ITO failed to materialize. Over successive rounds of negotiations, GATT membership grew and tariff barriers were significantly reduced, leading to large increases in global trade volumes.
The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) was formed in 1947 as a provisional agreement to govern international trade while negotiations for an International Trade Organization (ITO) were ongoing. GATT was designed to encourage free trade by regulating and reducing tariffs between member states and providing a forum for resolving trade disputes. Though intended as a temporary measure, GATT became the principal instrument governing international trade after the ITO failed to materialize. Over successive rounds of negotiations, GATT membership grew and tariff barriers were significantly reduced, leading to large increases in global trade volumes.
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General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade (GATT) GATT
>Out come of the failure of negotiating
governments to Create the international trade organization(ITO). >Negotiated during the UN conference on Trade and Employment. >Formed in 1947 and Transformed to world Trade Objective
• Reduction of Barriers to international
trade. • Achieved through reduction of tariff barriers, quantitative restrictions and subsidies on trade through a series of agreements. • It was a treaty, not an organization. •The General Agreement Tariffs and Trade (GATT) was first signed in 1947 Was designed * To provide an international Forum * That encouraged free trade between member states. * By regulating and reducing tariffs on traded goods. * Providing a common mechanism for resolving trade disputes. GATT? A Treaty, not an organisation • Was the out come of failure of negotiating governments to create the ITO. • The Bretton Woods Conference introduced the idea for an organization to regulate the trade as part of a larger plan for economic recovery after world war II. • As government negotiated states began parallel negotiations for the GATT as a way to attain early tariff reductions. • Once the ITO failed in 1950 the only GATT agreement was left. History Divided into 3 phases: * First: •From 1947 until the Torquay Round Largely concerned which commodities would be covered bythe agreement Freezing existing tariff levels * Second: • From 1959 to 1979 • Focused on reducing tariffs * Third: • Consists only of the Uruguay Round from 1986 to 1994 • It extended the agreement to new areas such as intellectual property, services, capital, and agriculture • Final outcome was creation of WTO History Contd.. • GATT Signatories occasionally negotiated new trade agreements that all countries would enter into • Each set of agreements was called a round • In general, each agreement bound members to reduce certain tariffs. Usually this would include many special-case or modifications for each country. Trade Barriers Tariff and Non-Tariff Barriers While free-trade maximizes world welfare, most nations impose some trade restrictions that benefit special groups in the nation. The most important type of trade restriction historically is the tariff. • This is a tax or duty on the imports or exports. When a small nation imposes an import tariff, the domestic price of the importable commodity rises by the full amount of the tariff for individuals in nation. As a result, domestic production of the importable commodity expands while domestic consumption and imports fall. However, the nation as a whole faces the unchanged world price since the nation Tariffs • Tariffs can be ad-Valorem, specific, or compound. • Ad-Valorem tariff is expressed as a fixed percentage of the value of the traded commodity. •Specific tariff is expressed as a fixed sum per physicalunit of the traded commodity. • A compound tariff is a combination of an Ad Valoremand a specific tariff. Trade Barriers • An import tariff is a duty on the imported commodity, while an export tariff is a duty on the exported commodity. • Export tariffs are prohibited by the U.S. Constitution but often applied by developing countries on their traditional exports (such as Ghana on it’s cocoa and Brazil on it’s coffee) to get better prices and revenues. • Developing nations rely heavy on export tariff to raise revenues because of their ease of collection. Non-Tariff Barrier • International trade also hampered by numerous Technical, administrative, and other regulations. • These include safety regulations for automobile and electrical Non-Tariff Barrier(Subsidies) • National government sometimes grant subsidies to domestic producers to help improve their trade position. Such devices are indirect form of protection provided to domestic businesses, whether Success of GATT • Huge increases in world trade • New members: 23 to 110 • Enormous reductions in tariffs