The
agenda
The
15 original Uruguay Round subjects
Tariffs
Non-tariff barriers
Natural resource products
Textiles and clothing
Agriculture
Tropical products
GATT articles
Tokyo Round codes
Anti-dumping
Subsidies
Intellectual property
Investment measures
Dispute settlement
The GATT system
Services
| Key
dates |
| Sep 86 |
Punta
del Este: |
launch |
| Dec 88 |
Montreal: |
ministerial
mid-term review |
| Apr 89 |
Geneva: |
mid-term
review completed |
| Dec 90 |
Brussels: |
“closing”
ministerial meeting ends in deadlock |
| Dec 91 |
Geneva: |
first
draft of Final Act completed |
| Nov 92 |
Washington: |
US
and EC achieve “Blair House” breakthrough on
agriculture |
| Jul 93 |
Tokyo: |
Quad
achieve market access breakthrough at G7 summit |
| Dec 93 |
Geneva: |
most
negotiations end (some market access talks remain) |
| Apr 94 |
Marrakesh: |
agreements
signed |
| Jan 95 |
Geneva: |
WTO
created, agreements take effect |
|

At
times it seemed doomed to fail. But in the end, the Uruguay Round
brought about the biggest reform of the world’s trading system
since GATT was created at the end of the Second World War. And yet,
despite its troubled progress, the Uruguay Round did see some
early results. Within only two years, participants had agreed on a
package of cuts in import duties on tropical products — which
are mainly exported by developing countries. They had also revised
the rules for settling disputes, with some measures implemented on
the spot. And they called for regular reports on GATT members’
trade policies, a move considered important for making trade
regimes transparent around the world.
A
round to end all rounds? back
to top
The
seeds of the Uruguay Round were sown in November 1982 at a
ministerial meeting of GATT members in Geneva. Although the
ministers intended to launch a major new negotiation, the
conference stalled on the issue of agriculture and was widely
regarded as a failure. In fact, the work programme that the
ministers agreed formed the basis for what was to become the
Uruguay Round negotiating agenda.
Nevertheless,
it took four more years of exploring, clarifying issues and
painstaking consensus-building, before ministers agreed to launch
the new round. They did so in September 1986, in Punta del Este,
Uruguay. They eventually accepted a negotiating agenda which
covered virtually every outstanding trade policy issue. The talks
were going to extend the trading system into several new areas,
notably trade in services and intellectual property, and to reform
trade in the sensitive sectors of agriculture and textiles. All
the original GATT articles were up for review. It was the biggest
negotiating mandate on trade ever agreed, and the ministers gave
themselves four years to complete it.
Two
years later, in December 1988, ministers met again in Montreal,
Canada for what was supposed to be an assessment of progress at
the round’s half-way point. The purpose was to clarify the
agenda for the remaining two years, but the talks ended in a
deadlock that was not resolved until officials met more quietly in
Geneva the following April.
Despite
the difficulty, during the Montreal meeting, ministers did agree a
package of early results. These included some concessions on
market access for tropical products — aimed at assisting
developing countries — as well as a streamlined dispute
settlement system,
and the Trade
Policy Review Mechanism
which provided for the first comprehensive, systematic and regular
reviews of national trade policies and practices of GATT members.
The round was supposed to end when ministers met once more in
Brussels, in December 1990. But they disagreed on how to reform
agricultural trade and decided to extend the talks. The Uruguay
Round entered its bleakest period.
Despite
the poor political outlook, a considerable amount of technical
work continued, leading to the first draft of a final legal
agreement. This draft “Final Act” was compiled by the then
GATT director general, Mr Arthur Dunkel, who chaired the
negotiations at officials’ level. It was put on the table in
Geneva in December 1991. The text fulfilled every part of the
Punta del Este mandate, with one exception — it did not contain
the participating countries’ lists of commitments for cutting
import duties and opening their services markets. The draft became
the basis for the final agreement.
For
the following two years, the negotiations lurched between
impending failure, to predictions of imminent success. Several
deadlines came and went. New points of major conflict emerged to
join agriculture: services, market access, anti-dumping rules, and
the proposed creation of a new institution. Differences between
the United States and European Communities (EU) became central to
hopes for a final, successful conclusion.
In
November 1992, the US and EU settled most of their differences on
agriculture in a deal known informally as the “Blair House
accord”. By July 1993 the “Quad” (US, EU, Japan and Canada)
announced significant progress in negotiations on tariffs and
related subjects (“market access”). It took until 15 December
1993 for every issue to be finally resolved and for negotiations
on market access for goods and services to be concluded (although
some final touches were completed in talks on market access a few
weeks later). On 15 April 1994, the deal was signed by ministers
from most of the 125 participating governments at a meeting in
Marrakesh, Morocco.
The
delay had some merits. It allowed some negotiations to progress
further than would have been possible in 1990: for example some
aspects of services and intellectual property, and the creation of
the WTO itself. But the task had been immense, and
negotiation-fatigue was felt in trade bureaucracies around the
world. The difficulty of reaching agreement on a complete package
containing almost the entire range of current trade issues led
some to conclude that a negotiation on this scale would never
again be possible. Yet, the Uruguay Round agreements contain
timetables for new negotiations on a number of topics. And by
1996, some countries were openly calling for a new round early in
the next century. The response was mixed; but the Marrakesh
agreement does already include commitments to reopen negotiations
on a range of subjects at the turn of the century
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