WTO Membership May Not Lead to More Trade, Study Finds

2002-11-05 19:01 (New York)

WTO Membership May Not Lead to More Trade, Study Finds London, Nov. 6 (Bloomberg) — World Trade Organization membership may not boost a country’s international trade, according to a report published by the U.K.’s Centre for Economic Policy Research.

“There is still little evidence that belonging to the WTO really matters,” Andrew K. Rose, an economics professor at the University of California, Berkeley and fellow at the London-based institute, said in the report. Founded in 1995 as the successor to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, the WTO now has 145 member governments, with more applying every year. China joined last December after 15 years of negotiations; President Vladimir Putin wants Russia to become a member before the end of 2004. The role of the Geneva-based trade arbiter is to promote trade and help settle disputes among its members. Tariffs on industrial goods now average about 4.7 percent, compared with about 40 percent in 1947 when the GATT was formed. The annual volume of global exports grew more than 6 percent on average during the 1990s.

“We currently do not have strong empirical evidence that the GATT/WTO has systematically played a strong role in encouraging trade,” Rose’s study concludes. Other factors, such as higher productivity in traded goods or lower transport costs, may explain why trade has grown faster than income since 1947 when the GATT was founded, he said. Last year the WTO began a new round of talks, aimed at reaching agreement by 2005 on opening markets such as cars, banking and food. The University of Michigan estimates a potential gain in global commerce of $700 billion from halving tariffs as a result of the talks.

–Warren Giles in the Geneva bureau +41 22 317 92 02 or wgiles@bloomberg.net Editor: McGill, *Shankar

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-0- (BN ) Nov/06/2002 0:01 GMT