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According to the WTO Economic Research and Statistics Division, trade in services is the fastest-growing sector of today's global economy and the most dynamic segment of world trade, but its potential remains constrained by a variety of barriers, including limited transparency and predictability of regulations, and rather widespread procedural inefficiencies. WTO Members generally have the right to regulate the supply of services within their territories in order to meet domestic policy objectives. This can lead to asymmetries concerning the degree of development of services regulations in different member states. A significant part of service trade barriers is attributable to regulatory divergence, as well as opaque regulations and cumbersome procedures. Many globally operating companies thus complain that obtaining, filling and submitting a large number of official documents required for their trading operations costs them a considerable amount of time and resources. In this light, a central background for this initiative is the recognition of respective compliance difficulties faced by service suppliers.
Article VI:4 of the GATS provides that the members of the Trade in Services Council develop necessary disciplines through subsidiary bodies, with the goal of ensuring that domestic measures relating to qualification requirements and procedures, technical standards and licensing requirements do not constitute unnecessary barriers to trade in services. The focus of the disciplines, which are treated as additional commitments under Article XVIII GATS, lies on measures that are closely linked to the process of authorization to supply a service. They seek to ensure that existing market access and national treatment commitments are not nullified by burdensome authorization procedures. Hence, the objective is to create good regulatory practices that help mitigate any unintended trade-restrictive effects of procedures for authorizing the supply of services. The disciplines are designed to be compatible with WTO members' diverse regulatory systems and approaches.
The reference paper on services domestic regulation states that each Member shall, to the extent practicable, avoid requiring an applicant to approach more than one competent authority for each application for authorization. The term "authorization" means the permission to supply a service, resulting from a procedure to which an applicant must adhere in order to demonstrate compliance with local requirements and standards. Authorities shall endeavor to accept applications in electronic format and accept copies of documents, that are authenticated in accordance with the Member’s domestic laws and regulations, in place of original documents. Original documents should merely be required to protect the integrity of the authorization process.
For the improvement of procedural transparency the competent authorities shall, if possible, provide (i) an indicative timeframe for processing of an application and (ii) without undue delay information concerning the status of the application upon respective request. They also need to timely ascertain the completeness of an application for processing under the Member’s domestic laws and regulations, which is often an open issue for investors in administrative practice.
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