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Congressional Research Service
Inforrning the legislalive debate sin ce 1914


Updated January 5, 2021


The World Trade Organization

Overview
The World  Trade Organization (WTO) was established on
January 1, 1995, following the ratification of the Uruguay
Round  Agreements, and today includes 164 members. It
succeeded the 1947 General Agreement on Tariffs and
Trade (GATT),  created as part of the post-WWII effort to
build a stable, open international trading system. The WTO
has three basic functions: (1) administering existing
agreements; (2) serving as a negotiating forum for new
trade liberalization and rules; and (3) providing a
mechanism  to settle disputes. The multiple WTO
agreements cover trade in goods, services, and agriculture;
remove tariff and nontariff barriers; and establish rules on
government practices that directly relate to trade-for
example, trade remedies, technical barriers to trade (TBT),
intellectual property rights (IPR), and government
procurement (Table 1). The agreements are based on the
principles of nondiscrimination among countries-most-
favored nation (MFN) treatment, national treatment, fair
competition, and transparency of trade rules and
regulations. Some exceptions, such as preferential treatment
for developing countries and regional and bilateral trade
agreements outside the WTO, are allowed.
The GATT/WTO system over time has   led to a significant
reduction of trade barriers, supported trade expansion and
economic  growth, and helped manage trade frictions. At the
same time, the WTO  faces serious challenges. One
fundamental concern is that the WTO could lose relevance
due to its inability to adapt to the modern global economy
by its members' failure to negotiate a successful round of
major trade liberalization since 1994. Several members
have proposed reforms to the institution in attempts to
safeguard and improve it.
In 2021, new leaders are to confront these challenges. The
selection process for a new WTO Director-General (DG)
entered its final stages in late 2020, with Nigeria's Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala emerging  as the candidate with the majority
of member's support. The Trump Administration refused to
back her candidacy. President-elect Biden has not opined
on the leadership issue or the WTO specifically, but has
expressed support of multilateral institutions.
Congress has recognized the WTO  as the foundation of the
global trading system, and plays a legislative and oversight
role over WTO  agreements. Some Members  have expressed
support for WTO reforms and U.S. leadership; others
introduced joint resolutions in 2020 to withdraw
congressional approval of WTO agreements. As debates
over the WTO's future intensify, several issues may be of
interest to Congress, including WTO agreements' effects on
the U.S. economy, outcomes of reform and negotiation
efforts, and the value of U.S. membership and leadership.


The   Doha Round
The Doha  Development  Agenda, the latest round of
multilateral trade negotiations, was launched in 2001 but
ended in stalemate, with no clear path forward. The WTO's
large and diverse membership and the single undertaking
approach made  consensus on the broad Doha mandate
difficult. The negotiations were characterized by persistent
differences among the United States, European Union (EU),
and developing countries on major issues, such as
agriculture, industrial tariffs and nontariff barriers, services,
and trade remedies. Developing countries sought the
reduction of agriculture tariffs and subsidies by developed
countries, nonreciprocal market access for manufacturing
sectors, and protection for services industries. In contrast,
developed countries sought reciprocal trade liberalization,
especially commercially meaningful access to advanced
developing countries' industrial and services sectors, while
retaining some protection for their own agricultural sectors.
Agriculture, where multilateral solutions arguably remain
ideal, remains among the thorniest issues on the agenda left
over from Doha. In 2015, members agreed to limited deals,
including on phasing out export subsidies, minimizing
impacts of food aid on local markets, and several measures
for least developed countries.
The lasting legacy of Doha may be the successful
negotiation of the Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA),
which entered into force in early 2017 and aims to remove
customs obstacles and inefficiencies at the border.


Tahl   I. GATT/WTO Rnunds


Source: WTO.
Notes: * In 2015, WTO members failed to reaffirm Doha's mandates
and many observers considered the round to be effectively over.
At the most recent WTO Ministerial Conference in 2017,
no major deliverables were announced, leaving the stakes
high for the next meeting. In 2020, members were forced to


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