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Updated January 14, 2021


WTO Agreement on Government Procurement (GPA)


During the past 50 years, the United States has played a
prominent role in developing international trade rules on
government procurement. Most U.S. free trade agreements
include government procurement obligations. The most
notable international procurement agreement to which the
United States is a party is the World Trade Organization
(WTO)'s  Agreement on Government  Procurement (GPA).
The GPA  has opened procurement opportunities around the
world to foreign competition, worth trillions of U.S. dollars
annually. It also requires parties to establish transparent and
nondiscriminatory rules for covered procurement. In
particular, the agreement enables U.S. businesses to bid for
certain government contracts in the markets of other GPA
parties. Likewise, it allows foreign businesses to bid for
contracts tendered by U.S. procuring entities in areas where
federal and state governments have agreed to open up their
procurement markets. The WTO  estimates the size of the
procurement market covered by the GPA at $1.7 trillion;
data limitations make it difficult to quantify accurately the
extent to which governments acquire goods and services
from suppliers of other GPA parties.
The Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)  pandemic has
increased Congress' interest in better understanding the role
of international trade in U.S. government procurement. In
particular, some Members and the Trump Administration
have sought ways to incentivize U.S. domestic production
by prioritizing the procurement of domestic goods and
services by the federal government and limiting waivers to
statutory domestic preference provisions such as the Buy
American  Act. Within this context, some Members have
raised questions about the GPA, including (1) how U.S.
commitments  under the agreement affect federal agency
acquisitions of goods and services, and (2) how the federal
government is meeting negotiating objectives with respect
to the GPA, specified by Congress in 2015, under Trade
Promotion Authority (P.L. 114-26).
Background
In recognition of the economic and political benefits of
open, transparent, and nondiscriminatory trade, the United
States and other major trading partners established the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) in the
aftermath of World War II. The first six rounds of GATT
trade negotiations dealt primarily with tariff measures. The
seventh round-the Tokyo  Round (1973-1979)-took   a
significant step in addressing nontariff barriers, such as
government procurement policies. Negotiators addressed
many  of these barriers in a series of codes, including the
Government  Procurement Code, which went into effect in
1981. The Code imposed a set of rules that signatories had
to apply in their procurement procedures and practices.
Later, as part of the GATT's Uruguay Round-which
resulted in the creation of the WTO in 1995-Code-
signatories negotiated a new agreement, the WTO GPA. It
entered into force in 1996. The GPA extended the scope of
the 1981 Code to include additional entities and thresholds,


as well as applicability to procurements of services and
construction services. Signatories agreed to enter into
negotiations to expand the GPA's membership and
coverage three years after the agreement entered into force.
Figure 1. Parties and Observers to the WTO   GPA


     WTO  GP'A Parties UPar ties
     and Observers      Observers Negotiating Accession
                        Other Observers
Source: CRS with information from the WTO.
In 2012, after more than a decade of negotiations, GPA
parties adopted a revision to the 1996 agreement, which
entered into force in 2014. It reflected new procurement
practices, clarified obligations, and expanded the scope of
procurement activity covered by the 1996 GPA.
General Oblgations under the GPA
The GPA  governs procurement by any contractual means
and applies to laws, regulations, and practices regarding any
covered procurement. It may thus cover procurement by
central and sub-central government entities, as well as
utilities and other government enterprises that a party
designates. The GPA does not cover every country or
sector. The parties bound by the GPA negotiate market
access commitments on a reciprocal basis. In its schedule of
commitments  (i.e., Appendix), each party specifies
government entities, as well as categories of goods and
services-subject to limitations and monetary thresholds-
that are open to procurement bids by companies from other
GPA  parties. For example, the U.S. Appendix covers 85
federal entities and voluntary commitments by 37 states.
Consistent with the overall framework of the WTO, the
agreement requires nondiscrimination and transparency in
contracting-the GPA's two cornerstone principles. In
addition, the GPA contains obligations regarding tendering,
selection, and awarding requirements, qualification of
suppliers, offsets, and challenge procedures. It also contains
general exceptions from GPA obligations. For example,
countries typically exclude certain defense and national
security-related purchases, and in the case of the United
States, set-asides for small and minority-owned businesses.
In negotiating reciprocal GPA procurement commitments,
the United States has not required that other parties open all
of their markets to foreign competition in the same nominal
amounts, or offered to open all U.S. markets to foreign


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