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Unit 13: World Trade Organization




          Quantitative Restrictions (QRs) on imports are maintained on Balance-of-Payments (BOP) grounds  Notes
          but nation is reducing it QR gradually.
          India has fulfilled its commitment by reducing tariff and eliminating QR, it had also implemented
          the TRIPS measures by implementing new patent laws and presently, Indian patent law is at par
          with international patent law following a product patent and that too for 20 years. India has also
          implemented Trade Related Investment Measures (TRIMs) and General Agreement on Trade
          and Services (GATS).

          The Indian economy has grown rapidly over the past decade, with real GDP growth averaging
          some 6% annually, in part due to the continued structural reform, including trade liberalisation,
          according to a WTO Secretariat report on the trade policies and practices of India. Social indicators
          such as poverty and infant mortality have also improved during the last ten years.





             Case Study  Dispute Settlement

                    n 23rd January 1995, Venezuela complained to the Dispute Settlement Body that
                    the United States was applying rules that discriminated against gasoline imports,
             Oand formally requested  consultations with the United States. Just over a year
             later (on 29th January 1996) the dispute panel completed its final report. (By then, Brazil
             had joined the case, lodging its own complaint in April 1996. The same panel considered
             both complaints.) The United States appealed. The Appellate Body completed its report,
             and the Dispute Settlement Body adopted the report on 20th May 1996, one year and four
             months after the complaint was first lodged.
             The United States and Venezuela then took six and a half months to agree on what the
             United States should do. The agreed period for implementing the solution was 15 months
             from the date the appeal was concluded (20th May 1996 to 20th August 1997).

             The case arose because the United States applied stricter rules on the chemical characteristics
             of imported gasoline than it did for domestically-refined gasoline.
             Venezuela (and later Brazil) said this was unfair because US gasoline did not have to meet
             the  same standards — it violated the “national treatment” principle and could not  be
             justified under exceptions to normal WTO rules for health and environmental conservation
             measures. The dispute panel agreed with Venezuela and Brazil. The appeal report upheld
             the  panel’s conclusions (making some changes to  the panel’s  legal interpretation. The
             United States agreed with Venezuela that it would amend its regulations within 15 months
             and on 26 August 1997 it reported to the Dispute Settlement Body that a new regulation
             had been signed on 19 August. (www.wto.org)
             Question
             Do you think US was right in doing what it did?
             Ans. No, US was not right in doing what it did. Considering the international business
                 environment, US should apply same or similar policies for every nation and every
                 transaction. In this case, US was following a discriminated policy towards import of
                 gasoline  under  which  they  applied different  rules for  imported gasoline  and
                 domestically refined gasoline. Venezuela and Brazil were correct in their approach.
                 If US has to apply a strict standards test for imported gasoline, it should also apply
                 the same for its own domestically produced gasoline or relax the rules from  the
                 imported gasoline also.
          Source: Vivek Mittal, Business Environment, First Edition, Excel Books, New Delhi, 2007


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