WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement (CRS Report for Congress)
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Release Date |
March 3, 2017 |
Report Number |
R44777 |
Report Type |
Report |
Authors |
Fefer, Rachel F.;Jones, Vivian Catherine |
Source Agency |
Congressional Research Service |
Summary:
The Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA), finalized in December 2013, is the newest international
trade agreement in the World Trade Organization (WTO), having entered into force on February
22, 2017, when two-thirds of WTO members, including the United States, ratified the multilateral
agreement. Congress has an interest in the TFA since it may affect U.S. trade flows, the U.S.
economy, and international capacity building efforts.
Trade facilitation measures aim to simplify and streamline international trade procedures to allow
the easier flow of trade across borders and thereby reduce the costs of trade. There is no precise
definition of trade facilitation, even in the WTO agreements. Trade facilitation can be defined
narrowly as improving administrative procedures at the border or more broadly to also encompass
behind-the-border measures and regulations.
The TFA aims to address multiple trade barriers confronted by exporters and importers, whether
small and medium-sized enterprises engaged in e-commerce or large multinational firms
managing complex global supply chains. These barriers include the lack of transparency on
process and documentation requirements for exporting to a given country.
According to WTO estimates, global export gains from full implementation of the TFA could
range from $750 billion to more than $3.6 trillion dollars per year. The Organization for
Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) finds that TFA implementation could lower
trade costs as much as 12.5%-17.5% globally. Different sets of indicators and indices by various
international organizations exist to measure levels of trade facilitation and could be used to
monitor TFA effects.
The TFA has three sections. The first section is the heart of the agreement, containing the
provisions, of which many, but not all, are binding and enforceable. The second section provides
for special and differential treatment for developing country members and least-developed
country members, allowing them more time and assistance to implement the agreement. The TFA
is the first WTO agreement in which members determine their own implementation schedules and
in which progress in implementation is explicitly linked to technical and financial capacity. The
TFA requires that “donor members,” including the United States, provide the needed capacity
building and support to developing and least-developed members. Finally, the third section of the
agreement contains the institutional arrangements for administering the TFA.
Existing and proposed U.S. free trade agreements (FTAs) include trade facilitation commitments.
While the WTO TFA and U.S. FTAs share common features, there are also differences. U.S.
FTAs generally include more enforceable provisions and specific time frames, and do not include
special and differential treatment for developing country participants.
U.S. implementation of the TFA does not require changes from current processes, including
planned efforts to update U.S. systems. In the United States, the U.S. Customs and Border
Protection (CBP) seeks to balance its overarching objectives of promoting efficient trade flows
with enforcing trade laws designed to protect consumers from dangerous and unlawful imports,
and collecting customs duties. The CBP uses several instruments to collect information aimed at
knowing who is importing and what types of goods are being imported, including the CustomsTrade
Partnership against Terrorism (C-TPAT), the Automated Commercial Environment (ACE),
and the International Trade Data System (ITDS).
This report provides an overview of the TFA, its provisions, and the United States’
implementation and role in capacity building, and provides options for Congress to consider in
relation to the TFA.