THE GENERAL AGREEMENT ON TARIFFS AND TRADE
(GATT 1947, as amended through 1966)
|
TABLE OF CONTENTS
THE GENERAL AGREEMENT ON TARIFFS AND TRADE
Preamble
The Governments of the COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA, the KINGDOM OF BELGIUM, the
UNITED STATES of BRAZIL, BURMA, CANADA, CEYLON, the REPUBLIC OF CHILE, the
REPUBLIC of CHINA, the REPUBLIC OF CUBA, the CZECHOSLOVAK REPUBLIC, the FRENCH
REPUBLIC, INDIA, LEBANON, the GRAND-DUCHY OF LUXEMBURG, the KINGDOM OF THE
NETHERLANDS, NEW ZEALAND, the KINGDOM OF NORWAY, PAKISTAN, SOUTHERN RHODESIA,
SYRIA, the UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA, the UNITED KINGDOM of GREAT BRITAIN AND
NORTHERN IRELAND, and the UNITED STATES of AMERICA:
Recognizing that their relations in the field of trade and economic endeavour
should be conducted with a view to raising standards of living, ensuring full
employment and a large and steadily growing volume of real income and effective
demand, developing the full use of the resources of the world and expanding the
production and exchange of goods,
Being desirous of contributing to these objectives by entering into
reciprocal and mutually advantageous arrangements directed to the substantial
reduction of tariffs and other barriers to trade and to the elimination of
discriminatory treatment in international commerce,
Have through their Representatives agreed as follows:
PART I
Article I
General Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment
- With respect to customs duties and charges of any kind imposed on or in
connection with importation or exportation or imposed on the international
transfer of payments for imports or exports, and with respect to the method of
levying such duties and charges, and with respect to all rules and formalities
in connection with importation and exportation, and with respect to all
matters referred to in paragraphs 2 and 4 of Article III, any advantage,
favour, privilege or immunity granted by any contracting party to any product
originating in or destined for any other country shall be accorded immediately
and unconditionally to the like product originating in or destined for the
territories of all other contracting parties.
- The provisions of paragraph 1 of this Article shall not require the
elimination of any preferences in respect of import duties or charges which do
not exceed the levels provided for in paragraph 4 of this Article and which
fall within the following descriptions:
- (a) Preferences in force exclusively between two or more of the
territories listed in Annex A, subject to the conditions set forth therein;
- (b) Preferences in force exclusively between two or more territories
which on July 1, 1939, were connected by common sovereignty or relations of
protection or suzerainty and which are listed in Annexes B, C and D, subject
to the conditions set forth therein;
- (c) Preferences in force exclusively between the United States of
America and the Republic of Cuba;
- (d) Preferences in force exclusively between neighbouring countries
listed in Annexes E and F.
- The provisions of paragraph 1 shall not apply to preferences between the
countries formerly a part of the Ottoman Empire and detached from it on July
24, 1923, provided such preferences are approved under paragraph 5 of Article
XXV, which shall be applied in this respect in the light of paragraph 1 of
Article XXIX.
- The margin of preference on any product in respect of which a preference
is permitted under paragraph 2 of this Article but is not specifically set
forth as a maximum margin of preference in the appropriate Schedule annexed to
this Agreement shall not exceed:
- (a) in respect of duties or charges on any product described in such
Schedule, the difference between the most-favoured-nation and preferential
rates provided for therein; if no preferential rate is provided for, the
preferential rate shall for the purposes of this paragraph be taken to be
that in force on April 10, 1947, and, if no most-favoured-nation rate is
provided for, the margin shall not exceed the difference between the
most-favoured-nation and preferential rates existing on April 10, 1947;
- (b) in respect of duties or charges on any product not described in the
appropriate Schedule, the difference between the most-favoured nation and
preferential rates existing on April 10, 1947.
In the case of the
contracting parties named in Annex G, the date of April 10, 1947, referred to
in sub-paragraphs (a) and (b) of this paragraph shall be replaced by the
respective dates set forth in that Annex.
Article II
Schedules of Concessions
-
- (a) Each contracting party shall accord to the commerce of the other
contracting parties treatment no less favourable than that provided for in
the appropriate Part of the appropriate Schedule annexed to this Agreement.
- (b) The products described in Part I of the Schedule relating to any
contracting party, which are the products of territories of other
contracting parties, shall, on their importation into the territory to which
the Schedule relates, and subject to the terms, conditions or qualifications
set forth in that Schedule, be exempt from ordinary customs duties in excess
of those set forth and provided for therein. Such products shall also be
exempt from all other duties or charges of any kind imposed on or in
connection with importation in excess of those imposed on the date of this
Agreement or those directly and mandatorily required to be imposed
thereafter by legislation in force in the importing territory on that date.
- (c) The products described in Part II of the Schedule relating to any
contracting party which are the products of territories entitled under
Article I to receive preferential treatment upon importation into the
territory to which the Schedule relates shall, on their importation into
such territory, and subject to the terms, conditions or qualifications set
forth in that Schedule, be exempt from ordinary customs duties in excess of
those set forth and provided for in Part II of that Schedule. Such products
shall also be exempt from all other duties or charges of any kind imposed on
or in connection with importation in excess of those imposed on the date of
this Agreement or those directly and mandatorily required to be imposed
thereafter by legislation in force in the importing territory on that date.
Nothing in this Article shall prevent any contracting party from maintaining
its requirements existing on the date of this Agreement as to the
eligibility of goods for entry at preferential rates of duty.
- Nothing in this Article shall prevent any contracting party from imposing
at any time on the importation of any product:
- (a) a charge equivalent to an internal tax imposed consistently with the
provisions of paragraph 2 of Article III in respect of the like domestic
product or in respect of an article from which the imported product has been
manufactured or produced in whole or in part;
- (b) any anti-dumping or countervailing duty applied consistently with
the provisions of Article VI;
- (c) fees or other charges commensurate with the cost of services
rendered.
- No contracting party shall alter its method of determining dutiable value
or of converting currencies so as to impair the value of any of the
concessions provided for in the appropriate Schedule annexed to this
Agreement.
- If any contracting party establishes, maintains or authorizes, formally or
in effect, a monopoly of the importation of any product described in the
appropriate Schedule annexed to this Agreement, such monopoly shall not,
except as provided for in that Schedule or as otherwise agreed between the
parties which initially negotiated the concession, operate so as to afford
protection on the average in excess of the amount of protection provided for
in that Schedule. The provisions of this paragraph shall not limit the use by
contracting parties of any form of assistance to domestic producers permitted
by other provisions of this Agreement.
- If any contracting party considers that a product is not receiving from
another contracting party the treatment which the first contracting party
believes to have been contemplated by a concession provided for in the
appropriate Schedule annexed to this Agreement, it shall bring the matter
directly to the attention of the other contracting party. If the latter agrees
that the treatment contemplated was that claimed by the first contracting
party, but declares that such treatment cannot be accorded because a court or
other proper authority has ruled to the effect that the product involved
cannot be classified under the tariff laws of such contracting party so as to
permit the treatment contemplated in this Agreement, the two contracting
parties, together with any other contracting parties substantially interested,
shall enter promptly into further negotiations with a view to a compensatory
adjustment of the matter.
-
- (a) The specific duties and charges included in the Schedules relating
to contracting parties members of the International Monetary Fund, and
margins of preference in specific duties and charges maintained by such
contracting parties, are expressed in the appropriate currency at the par
value accepted or provisionally recognized by the Fund at the date of this
Agreement. Accordingly, in case this par value is reduced consistently with
the Articles of Agreement of the International Monetary Fund by more than
twenty per centum, such specific duties and charges and margins of
preference may be adjusted to take account of such reduction; Provided that
the CONTRACTING PARTIES (i.e., the contracting parties acting jointly as
provided for in Article XXV) concur that such adjustments will not impair
the value of the concessions provided for in the appropriate Schedule or
elsewhere in this Agreement, due account being taken of all factors which
may influence the need for, or urgency of, such adjustments.
- (b) Similar provisions shall apply to any contracting party not a member
of the Fund, as from the date on which such contracting party becomes a
member of the Fund or enters into a special exchange agreement in pursuance
of Article XV.
- The Schedules annexed to this Agreement are hereby made an integral part
of Part I of this Agreement.
PART II
Article III
National Treatment on Internal Taxation and
Regulation
- The contracting parties recognize that internal taxes and other internal
charges, and laws, regulations and requirements affecting the internal sale,
offering for sale, purchase, transportation, distribution or use of products,
and internal quantitative regulations requiring the mixture, processing or use
of products in specified amounts or proportions, should not be applied to
imported or domestic products so as to afford protection to domestic
production.
- The products of the territory of any contracting party imported into the
territory of any other contracting party shall not be subject, directly or
indirectly, to internal taxes or other internal charges of any kind in excess
of those applied, directly or indirectly, to like domestic products. Moreover,
no contracting party shall otherwise apply internal taxes or other internal
charges to imported or domestic products in a manner contrary to the
principles set forth in paragraph 1.
- With respect to any existing internal tax which is inconsistent with the
provisions of paragraph 2, but which is specifically authorized under a trade
agreement, in force on April 10, 1947, in which the import duty on the taxed
product is bound against increase, the contracting party imposing the tax
shall be free to postpone the application of the provisions of paragraph 2 to
such tax until such time as it can obtain release from the obligations of such
trade agreement in order to permit the increase of such duty to the extent
necessary to compensate for the elimination of the protective element of the
tax.
- The products of the territory of any contracting party imported into the
territory of any other contracting party shall be accorded treatment no less
favourable than that accorded to like products of national origin in respect
of all laws, regulations and requirements affecting their internal sale,
offering for sale, purchase, transportation, distribution or use. The
provisions of this paragraph shall not prevent the application of differential
internal transportation charges which are based exclusively on the economic
operation of the means of transport and not on the nationality of the product.
- No contracting party shall establish or maintain any internal quantitative
regulation relating to the mixture, processing or use of products in specified
amounts or proportions which requires, directly or indirectly, that any
specified amount or proportion of any product which is the subject of the
regulation must be supplied from domestic sources. Moreover, no contracting
party shall otherwise apply internal quantitative regulations in a manner
contrary to the principles set forth in paragraph 1.
- The provisions of paragraph 5 shall not apply to any internal quantitative
regulation in force in the territory of any contracting party on July 1, 1939,
April 10, 1947, or March 24, 1948, at the option of that contracting party;
Provided that any such regulation which is contrary to the provisions of
paragraph 5 shall not be modified to the detriment of imports and shall be
treated as a customs duty for the purpose of negotiation.
- No internal quantitative regulation relating to the mixture, processing or
use of products in specified amounts or proportions shall be applied in such a
manner as to allocate any such amount or proportion among external sources of
supply.
-
- (a) The provisions of this Article shall not apply to laws, regulations
or requirements governing the procurement by governmental agencies of
products purchased for governmental purposes and not with a view to
commercial resale or with a view to use in the production of goods for
commercial sale.
- (b) The provisions of this Article shall not prevent the payment of
subsidies exclusively to domestic producers, including payments to domestic
producers derived from the proceeds of internal taxes or charges applied
consistently with the provisions of this Article and subsidies effected
through governmental purchases of domestic products.
- The contracting parties recognize that internal maximum price control
measures, even though conforming to the other provisions of this Article, can
have effects prejudicial to the interests of contracting parties supplying
imported products. Accordingly, contracting parties applying such measures
shall take account of the interests of exporting contracting parties with a
view to avoiding to the fullest practicable extent such prejudicial effects.
- The provisions of this Article shall not prevent any contracting party
from establishing or maintaining internal quantitative regulations relating to
exposed cinematograph films and meeting the requirements of Article IV.
Article IV
Special Provisions relating to Cinematograph
Films
If any contracting party establishes or maintains
internal quantitative regulations relating to exposed cinematograph films, such
regulations shall take the form of screen quotas which shall conform to the
following requirements:
- (a) Screen quotas may require the exhibition of cinematograph films of
national origin during a specified minimum proportion of the total screen time
actually utilized, over a specified period of not less than one year, in the
commercial exhibition of all films of whatever origin, and shall be computed
on the basis of screen time per theatre per year or the equivalent thereof;
- (b) With the exception of screen time reserved for films of national
origin under a screen quota, screen time including that released by
administrative action from screen time reserved for films of national origin,
shall not be allocated formally or in effect among sources of supply;
- (c) Notwithstanding the provisions of sub-paragraph (b) of this Article,
any contracting party may maintain screen quotas conforming to the
requirements of sub-paragraph (a) of this Article which reserve a minimum
proportion of screen time for films of a specified origin other than that of
the contracting party imposing such screen quotas; Provided that no such
minimum proportion of screen time shall be increased above the level in effect
on April 10, 1947;
- (d) Screen quotas shall be subject to negotiation for their limitation,
liberalization or elimination.
Article V
Freedom of Transit
- Goods (including baggage), and also vessels and other means of transport,
shall be deemed to be in transit across the territory of a contracting party
when the passage across such territory, with or without trans-shipment,
warehousing, breaking bulk, or change in the mode of transport, is only a
portion of a complete journey beginning and terminating beyond the frontier of
the contracting party across whose territory the traffic passes. Traffic of
this nature is termed in this Article "traffic in transit".
- There shall be freedom of transit through the territory of each
contracting party, via the routes most convenient for international transit,
for traffic in transit to or from the territory of other contracting parties.
No distinction shall be made which is based on the flag of vessels, the place
of origin, departure, entry, exit or destination, or on any circumstances
relating to the ownership of goods, of vessels or of other means of transport.
- Any contracting party may require that traffic in transit through its
territory be entered at the proper custom house, but, except in cases of
failure to comply with applicable customs laws and regulations, such traffic
coming from or going to the territory of other contracting parties shall not
be subject to any unnecessary delays or restrictions and shall be exempt from
customs duties and from all transit duties or other charges imposed in respect
of transit, except charges for transportation or those commensurate with
administrative expenses entailed by transit or with the cost of services
rendered.
- All charges and regulations imposed by contracting parties on traffic in
transit to or from the territories of other contracting parties shall be
reasonable, having regard to the conditions of the traffic.
- With respect to all charges, regulations and formalities in connection
with transit, each contracting party shall accord to traffic in transit to or
from the territory of any other contracting party treatment no less favourable
than the treatment accorded to traffic in transit to or from any third
country.
- Each contracting party shall accord to products which have been in transit
through the territory of any other contracting party treatment no less
favourable than that which would have been accorded to such products had they
been transported from their place of origin to their destination without going
through the territory of such other contracting party. Any contracting party
shall, however, be free to maintain its requirements of direct consignment
existing on the date of this Agreement, in respect of any goods in regard to
which such direct consignment is a requisite condition of eligibility for
entry of the goods at preferential rates of duty or has relation to the
contracting party's prescribed method of valuation for duty purposes.
- The provisions of this Article shall not apply to the operation of
aircraft in transit, but shall apply to air transit of goods (including
baggage).
Article VI
Anti-dumping and Countervailing Duties
- The contracting parties recognize that dumping, by which products of one
country are introduced into the commerce of another country at less than the
normal value of the products, is to be condemned if it causes or threatens
material injury to an established industry in the territory of a contracting
party or materially retards the establishment of a domestic industry. For the
purposes of this Article, a product is to be considered as being introduced
into the commerce of an importing country at less than its normal value, if
the price of the product exported from one country to another
- (a) is less than the comparable price, in the ordinary course of trade,
for the like product when destined for consumption in the exporting country,
or,
- (b) in the absence of such domestic price, is less than either
- (i) the highest comparable price for the like product for export to
any third country in the ordinary course of trade, or
- (ii) the cost of production of the product in the country of origin
plus a reasonable addition for selling cost and profit.
Due allowance shall be made in each case for differences
in conditions and terms of sale, for differences in taxation, and for other
differences affecting price comparability.
- In order to offset or prevent dumping, a contracting party may levy on any
dumped product an anti-dumping duty not greater in amount than the margin of
dumping in respect of such product. For the purposes of this Article, the
margin of dumping is the price difference determined in accordance with the
provisions of paragraph 1.
- No countervailing duty shall be levied on any product of the territory of
any contracting party imported into the territory of another contracting party
in excess of an amount equal to the estimated bounty or subsidy determined to
have been granted, directly or indirectly, on the manufacture, production or
export of such product in the country of origin or exportation, including any
special subsidy to the transportation of a particular product. The term
"countervailing duty" shall be understood to mean a special duty levied for
the purpose of offsetting any bounty or subsidy bestowed, directly or
indirectly, upon the manufacture, production or export of any merchandise.
- No product of the territory of any contracting party imported into the
territory of any other contracting party shall be subject to anti-dumping or
countervailing duty by reason of the exemption of such product from duties or
taxes borne by the like product when destined for consumption in the country
of origin or exportation, or by reason of the refund of such duties or taxes.
- No product of the territory of any contracting party imported into the
territory of any other contracting party shall be subject to both anti-
dumping and countervailing duties to compensate for the same situation of
dumping or export subsidization.
-
- (a) No contracting party shall levy any anti-dumping or countervailing
duty on the importation of any product of the territory of another
contracting party unless it determines that the effect of the dumping or
subsidization, as the case may be, is such as to cause or threaten material
injury to an established domestic industry, or is such as to retard
materially the establishment of a domestic industry.
- (b) The CONTRACTING PARTIES may waive the requirement of subparagraph
(a) of this paragraph so as to permit a contracting party to levy an
anti-dumping or countervailing duty on the importation of any product for
the purpose of offsetting dumping or subsidization which causes or threatens
material injury to an industry in the territory of another contracting party
exporting the product concerned to the territory of the importing
contracting party. The CONTRACTING PARTIES shall waive the requirements of
sub-paragraph (a) of this paragraph, so as to permit the levying of a
countervailing duty, in cases in which they find that a subsidy is causing
or threatening material injury to an industry in the territory of another
contracting party exporting the product concerned to the territory of the
importing contracting party.
- (c) In exceptional circumstances, however, where delay might cause
damage which would be difficult to repair, a contracting party may levy a
countervailing duty for the purpose referred to in sub-paragraph (b) of this
paragraph without the prior approval of the CONTRACTING PARTIES; Provided
that such action shall be reported immediately to the CONTRACTING PARTIES
and that the countervailing duty shall be withdrawn promptly if the
CONTRACTING PARTIES disapprove.
- A system for the stabilization of the domestic price or of the return to
domestic producers of a primary commodity, independently of the movements of
export prices, which results at times in the sale of the commodity for export
at a price lower than the comparable price charged for the like commodity to
buyers in the domestic market, shall be presumed not to result in material
injury within the meaning of paragraph 6 if it is determined by consultation
among the contracting parties substantially interested in the commodity
concerned that:
- (a) the system has also resulted in the sale of the commodity for export
at a price higher than the comparable price charged for the like commodity
to buyers in the domestic market, and
- (b) the system is so operated, either because of the effective
regulation of production, or otherwise, as not to stimulate exports unduly
or otherwise seriously prejudice the interests of other contracting parties.
Article VII
Valuation for Customs Purposes
- The contracting parties recognize the validity of the general principles
of valuation set forth in the following paragraphs of this Article, and they
undertake to give effect to such principles, in respect of all products
subject to duties or other charges or restrictions on importation and
exportation based upon or regulated in any manner by value. Moreover, they
shall, upon a request by another contracting party review the operation of any
of their laws or regulations relating to value for customs purposes in the
light of these principles. The CONTRACTING PARTIES may request from
contracting parties reports on steps taken by them in pursuance of the
provisions of this Article.
-
- (a) The value for customs purposes of imported merchandise should be
based on the actual value of the imported merchandise on which duty is
assessed, or of like merchandise, and should not be based on the value of
merchandise of national origin or on arbitrary or fictitious values.
- (b) "Actual value" should be the price at which, at a time and place
determined by the legislation of the country of importation, such or like
merchandise is sold or offered for sale in the ordinary course of trade
under fully competitive conditions. To the extent to which the price of such
or like merchandise is governed by the quantity in a particular transaction,
the price to be considered should uniformly be related to either (i)
comparable quantities, or (ii) quantities not less favourable to importers
than those in which the greater volume of the merchandise is sold in the
trade between the countries of exportation and importation.
- (c) When the actual value is not ascertainable in accordance with
sub-paragraph (b) of this paragraph, the value for customs purposes should
be based on the nearest ascertainable equivalent of such value.
- The value for customs purposes of any imported product should not include
the amount of any internal tax, applicable within the country of origin or
export, from which the imported product has been exempted or has been or will
be relieved by means of refund.
-
- (a) Except as otherwise provided for in this paragraph, where it is
necessary for the purposes of paragraph 2 of this Article for a contracting
party to convert into its own currency a price expressed in the currency of
another country, the conversion rate of exchange to be used shall be based,
for each currency involved, on the par value as established pursuant to the
Articles of Agreement of the International Monetary Fund or on the rate of
exchange recognized by the Fund, or on the par value established in
accordance with a special exchange agreement entered into pursuant to
Article XV of this Agreement.
- (b) Where no such established par value and no such recognized rate of
exchange exist, the conversion rate shall reflect effectively the current
value of such currency in commercial transactions.
- (c) The CONTRACTING PARTIES, in agreement with the International
Monetary Fund, shall formulate rules governing the conversion by contracting
parties of any foreign currency in respect of which multiple rates of
exchange are maintained consistently with the Articles of Agreement of the
International Monetary Fund. Any contracting party may apply such rules in
respect of such foreign currencies for the purposes of paragraph 2 of this
Article as an alternative to the use of par values. Until such rules are
adopted by the CONTRACTING PARTIES, any contracting party may employ, in
respect of any such foreign currency, rules of conversion for the purposes
of paragraph 2 of this Article which are designed to reflect effectively the
value of such foreign currency in commercial transactions.
- (d) Nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to require any
contracting party to alter the method of converting currencies for customs
purposes which is applicable in its territory on the date of this Agreement,
if such alteration would have the effect of increasing generally the amounts
of duty payable.
- The bases and methods for determining the value of products subject to
duties or other charges or restrictions based upon or regulated in any manner
by value should be stable and should be given sufficient publicity to enable
traders to estimate, with a reasonable degree of certainty, the value for
customs purposes.
Article VIII
Fees and Formalities connected with Importation and
Exportation
-
- (a) All fees and charges of whatever character (other than import and
export duties and other than taxes within the purview of Article III)
imposed by contracting parties on or in connexion with importation or
exportation shall be limited in amount to the approximate cost of services
rendered and shall not represent an indirect protection to domestic products
or a taxation of imports or exports for fiscal purposes.
- (b) The contracting parties recognize the need for reducing the number
and diversity of fees and charges referred to in sub-paragraph (a).
- (c) The contracting parties also recognize the need for minimizing the
incidence and complexity of import and export formalities and for decreasing
and simplifying import and export documentation requirements.
- A contracting party shall, upon request by another contracting party or by
the CONTRACTING PARTIES, review the operation of its laws and regulations in
the light of the provisions of this Article.
- No contracting party shall impose substantial penalties for minor breaches
of customs regulations or procedural requirements. In particular, no penalty
in respect of any omission or mistake in customs documentation which is easily
rectifiable and obviously made without fraudulent intent or gross negligence
shall be greater than necessary to serve merely as a warning.
- The provisions of this Article shall extend to fees, charges, formalities
and requirements imposed by governmental authorities in connexion with
importation and exportation, including those relating to:
- (a) consular transactions, such as consular invoices and certificates;
- (b) quantitative restrictions;
- (c) licensing;
- (d) exchange control;
- (e) statistical services;
- (f) documents, documentation and certification;
- (g) analysis and inspection; and
- (h) quarantine, sanitation and fumigation.
Article IX
Marks of Origin
- Each contracting party shall accord to the products of the territories of
other contracting parties treatment with regard to marking requirements no
less favourable than the treatment accorded to like products of any third
country.
- The contracting parties recognize that, in adopting and enforcing laws and
regulations relating to marks of origin, the difficulties and inconveniences
which such measures may cause to the commerce and industry of exporting
countries should be reduced to a minimum, due regard being had to the
necessity of protecting consumers against fraudulent or misleading
indications.
- Whenever it is administratively practicable to do so, contracting parties
should permit required marks of origin to be affixed at the time of
importation.
- The laws and regulations of contracting parties relating to the marking of
imported products shall be such as to permit compliance without seriously
damaging the products, or materially reducing their value, or unreasonably
increasing their cost.
- As a general rule, no special duty or penalty should be imposed by any
contracting party for failure to comply with marking requirements prior to
importation unless corrective marking is unreasonably delayed or deceptive
marks have been affixed or the required marking has been intentionally
omitted.
- The contracting parties shall co-operate with each other with a view to
preventing the use of trade names in such manner as to misrepresent the true
origin of a product, to the detriment of such distinctive regional or
geographical names of products of the territory of a contracting party as are
protected by its legislation. Each contracting party shall accord full and
sympathetic consideration to such requests or representations as may be made
by any other contracting party regarding the application of the undertaking
set forth in the preceding sentence to names of products which have been
communicated to it by the other contracting party.
Article X
Publication and Administration of Trade
Regulations
- Laws, regulations, judicial decisions and administrative rulings of
general application, made effective by any contracting party, pertaining to
the classification or the valuation of products for customs purposes, or to
rates of duty, taxes or other charges, or to requirements, restrictions or
prohibitions on imports or exports or on the transfer of payments therefor, or
affecting their sale, distribution, transportation, insurance, warehousing,
inspection, exhibition, processing, mixing or other use, shall be published
promptly in such a manner as to enable governments and traders to become
acquainted with them. Agreements affecting international trade policy which
are in force between the government or a governmental agency of any
contracting party and the government or governmental agency of any other
contracting party shall also be published. The provisions of this paragraph
shall not require any contracting party to disclose confidential information
which would impede law enforcement or otherwise be contrary to the public
interest or would prejudice the legitimate commercial interests of particular
enterprises, public or private.
- No measure of general application taken by any contracting party effecting
an advance in a rate of duty or other charge on imports under an established
and uniform practice, or imposing a new or more burdensome requirement,
restriction or prohibition on imports, or on the transfer of payments
therefor, shall be enforced before such measure has been officially published.
-
- (a) Each contracting party shall administer in a uniform, impartial and
reasonable manner all its laws, regulations, decisions and rulings of the
kind described in paragraph 1 of this Article.
- (b) Each contracting party shall maintain, or institute as soon as
practicable, judicial, arbitral or administrative tribunals or procedures
for the purpose, inter alia, of the prompt review and correction of
administrative action relating to customs matters. Such tribunals or
procedures shall be independent of the agencies entrusted with
administrative enforcement and their decisions shall be implemented by, and
shall govern the practice of, such agencies unless an appeal is lodged with
a court or tribunal of superior jurisdiction within the time prescribed for
appeals to be lodged by importers; Provided that the central administration
of such agency may take steps to obtain a review of the matter in another
proceeding if there is good cause to believe that the decision is
inconsistent with established principles of law or the actual facts.
- (c) The provisions of sub-paragraph (b) of this paragraph shall not
require the elimination or substitution of procedures in force in the
territory of a contracting party on the date of this Agreement which in fact
provide for an objective and impartial review of administrative action even
though such procedures are not fully or formally independent of the agencies
entrusted with administrative enforcement. Any contracting party employing
such procedures shall, upon request, furnish the CONTRACTING PARTIES with
full information thereon in order that they may determine whether such
procedures conform to the requirements of this sub-paragraph.
Article XI
General Elimination of Quantitative
Restrictions
- No prohibitions or restrictions other than duties, taxes or other charges,
whether made effective through quotas, import or export licences or other
measures, shall be instituted or maintained by any contracting party on the
importation of any product of the territory of any other contracting party or
on the exportation or sale for export of any product destined for the
territory of any other contracting party.
- The provisions of paragraph I of this Article shall not extend to the
following:
- (a) Export prohibitions or restrictions temporarily applied to prevent
or relieve critical shortages of foodstuffs or other products essential to
the exporting contracting party;
- (b) Import and export prohibitions or restrictions necessary to the
application of standards or regulations for the classification, grading or
marketing of commodities in international trade;
- (c) Import restrictions on any agricultural or fisheries product,
imported in any form, necessary to the enforcement of governmental measures
which operate:
- (i) to restrict the quantities of the like domestic product permitted
to be marketed or produced, or, if there is no substantial domestic
production of the like product, of a domestic product for which the
imported product can be directly substituted; or
- (ii) to remove a temporary surplus of the like domestic product, or,
if there is no substantial domestic production of the like product, of a
domestic product for which the imported product can be directly
substituted, by making the surplus available to certain groups of domestic
consumers free of charge or at prices below the current market level; or
- (iii) to restrict the quantities permitted to be produced of any
animal product the production of which is directly dependent, wholly or
mainly, on the imported commodity, if the domestic production of that
commodity is relatively negligible.
Any contracting party
applying restrictions on the importation of any product pursuant to
sub-paragraph (c) of this paragraph shall give public notice of the total
quantity or value of the product permitted to be imported during a specified
future period and of any change in such quantity or value. Moreover, any
restrictions applied under (i) above shall not be such as will reduce the
total of imports relative to the total of domestic production, as compared
with the proportion which might reasonably be expected to rule between the two
in the absence of restrictions. In determining this proportion, the
contracting party shall pay due regard to the proportion prevailing during a
previous representative period and to any special factors which may have
affected or may be affecting the trade in the product concerned.
Article XII
Restrictions to Safeguard the Balance of
Payments
- Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph 1 of Article XI, any
contracting party, in order to safeguard its external financial position and
its balance of payments, may restrict the quantity or value of merchandise
permitted to be imported, subject to the provisions of the following
paragraphs of this Article.
-
- (a) Import restrictions instituted, maintained or intensified by a
contracting party under this Article shall not exceed those necessary:
- (i) to forestall the imminent threat of, or to stop, a serious decline
in its monetary reserves, or
- (ii) in the case of a contracting party with very low monetary
reserves, to achieve a reasonable rate of increase in its reserves.
Due regard shall be paid in either case to any special factors
which may be affecting the reserves of such contracting party or its need
for reserves, including, where special external credits or other resources
are available to it, the need to provide for the appropriate use of such
credits or resources.
- (b) Contracting parties applying restrictions under sub-paragraph (a) of
this paragraph shall progressively relax them as such conditions improve,
maintaining them only to the extent that the conditions specified in that
sub-paragraph still justify their application. They shall eliminate the
restrictions when conditions would no longer justify their institution or
maintenance under that sub-paragraph.
-
- (a) Contracting parties undertake, in carrying out their domestic
policies, to pay due regard to the need for maintaining or restoring
equilibrium in their balance of payments on a sound and lasting basis and to
the desirability of avoiding an uneconomic employment of productive
resources. They recognize that, in order to achieve these ends, it is
desirable so far as possible to adopt measures which expand rather than
contract international trade.
- (b) Contracting parties applying restrictions under this Article may
determine the incidence of the restrictions on imports of different products
or classes of products in such a way as to give priority to the importation
of those products which are more essential.
- (c) Contracting parties applying restrictions under this Article
undertake:
- (i) to avoid unnecessary damage to the commercial or economic
interests of any other contracting party;
- (ii) not to apply restrictions so as to prevent unreasonably the
importation of any description of goods in minimum commercial quantities
the exclusion of which would impair regular channels of trade; and
- (iii) not to apply restrictions which would prevent the importation of
commercial samples or prevent compliance with patent, trade mark,
copyright, or similar procedures.
- (d) The contracting parties recognize that, as a result of domestic
policies directed towards the achievement and maintenance of full and
productive employment or towards the development of economic resources, a
contracting party may experience a high level of demand for imports
involving a threat to its monetary reserves of the sort referred to in
paragraph 2(a) of this Article. Accordingly, a contracting party otherwise
complying with the provisions of this Article shall not be required to
withdraw or modify restrictions on the ground that a change in those
policies would render unnecessary restrictions which it is applying under
this Article.
-
- (a) Any contracting party applying new restrictions or raising the
general level of its existing restrictions by a substantial intensification
of the measures applied under this Article shall immediately after
instituting or intensifying such restrictions (or, in circumstances in which
prior consultation is practicable, before doing so) consult with the
CONTRACTING PARTIES as to the nature of its balance of payments
difficulties, alternative corrective measures which may be available, and
the possible effect of the restrictions on the economies of other
contracting parties.
- (b) On a date to be determined by them, the CONTRACTING PARTIES shall
review all restrictions still applied under this Article on that date.
Beginning one year after that date, contracting parties applying import
restrictions under this Article shall enter into consultations of the type
provided for in sub-paragraph (a) of this paragraph with the CONTRACTING
PARTIES annually.
- (c)
- (i) If, in the course of consultations with a contracting party under
sub-paragraph (a) or (b) above, the CONTRACTING PARTIES find that the
restrictions are not consistent with the provisions of this Article or
with those of Article XIII (subject to the provisions of Article XIV),
they shall indicate the nature of the inconsistency and may advise that
the restrictions be suitably modified.
- (ii) If, however, as a result of the consultations, the CONTRACTING
PARTIES determine that the restrictions are being applied in a manner
involving an inconsistency of a serious nature with the provisions of this
Article or with those of Article XIII (subject to the provisions of
Article XIV) and that damage to the trade of any contracting party is
caused or threatened thereby, they shall so inform the contracting party
applying the restrictions and shall make appropriate recommendations for
securing conformity with such provisions within a specified period of
time. If such contracting party does not comply with these recommendations
within the specified period, the CONTRACTING PARTIES may release any
contracting party the trade of which is adversely affected by the
restrictions from such obligations under this Agreement towards the
contracting party applying the restrictions as they determine to be
appropriate in the circumstances.
- (d) The CONTRACTING PARTIES shall invite any contracting party which is
applying restrictions under this Article to enter into consultations with
them at the request of any contracting party which can establish a prima
facie case that the restrictions are inconsistent with the provisions of
this Article or with those of Article XIII (subject to the provisions of
Article XIV) and that its trade is adversely affected thereby. However, no
such invitation shall be issued unless the CONTRACTING PARTIES have
ascertained that direct discussions between the contracting parties
concerned have not been successful. If, as a result of the consultations
with the CONTRACTING PARTIES, no agreement is reached and they determine
that the restrictions are being applied inconsistently with such provisions,
and that damage to the trade of the contracting party initiating the
procedure is caused or threatened thereby, they shall recommend the
withdrawal or modification of the restrictions. If the restrictions are not
withdrawn or modified within such time as the CONTRACTING PARTIES may
prescribe, they may release the contracting party initiating the procedure
from such obligations under this Agreement towards the contracting party
applying the restrictions as they determine to be appropriate in the
circumstances.
- (e) In proceeding under this paragraph, the CONTRACTING PARTIES shall
have due regard to any special external factors adversely affecting the
export trade of the contracting party applying restrictions.
- (f) Determinations under this paragraph shall be rendered expeditiously
and, if possible, within sixty days of the initiation of the consultations.
- If there is a persistent and widespread application of import restrictions
under this Article, indicating the existence of a general disequilibrium which
is restricting international trade, the CONTRACTING PARTIES shall initiate
discussions to consider whether other measures might be taken, either by those
contracting parties the balances of payments of which are under pressure or by
those the balances of payments of which are tending to be exceptionally
favourable, or by any appropriate intergovernmental organization, to remove
the underlying causes of the disequilibrium. On the invitation of the
CONTRACTING PARTIES, contracting parties shall participate in such
discussions.
Article XIII
Non-discriminatory Administration of Quantitative
Restrictions
- No prohibition or restriction shall be applied by any contracting party on
the importation of any product of the territory of any other contracting party
or on the exportation of any product destined for the territory of any other
contracting party, unless the importation of the like product of all third
countries or the exportation of the like product to all third countries is
similarly prohibited or restricted.
- In applying import restrictions to any product, contracting parties shall
aim at a distribution of trade in such product approaching as closely as
possible the shares which the various contracting parties might be expected to
obtain in the absence of such restrictions, and to this end shall observe the
following provisions:
- (a) Wherever practicable, quotas representing the total amount of
permitted imports (whether allocated among supplying countries or not) shall
be fixed, and notice given of their amount in accordance with paragraph 3
(b) of this Article;
- (b) In cases in which quotas are not practicable, the restrictions may
be applied by means of import licences or permits without a quota;
- (c) Contracting parties shall not, except for purposes of operating
quotas allocated in accordance with sub-paragraph (d) of this paragraph,
require that import licences or permits be utilized for the importation of
the product concerned from a particular country or source;
- (d) In cases in which a quota is allocated among supplying countries,
the contracting party applying the restrictions may seek agreement with
respect to the allocation of shares in the quota with all other contracting
parties having a substantial interest in supplying the product concerned. In
cases in which this method is not reasonably practicable, the contracting
party concerned shall allot to contracting parties having a substantial
interest in supplying the product shares based upon the proportions,
supplied by such contracting parties during a previous representative
period, of the total quantity or value of imports of the product, due
account being taken of any special factors which may have affected or may be
affecting the trade in the product. No conditions or formalities shall be
imposed which would prevent any contracting party from utilizing fully the
share of any such total quantity or value which has been allotted to it,
subject to importation being made within any prescribed period to which the
quota may relate.
-
- (a) In cases in which import licences are issued in connection with
import restrictions, the contracting party applying the restrictions shall
provide, upon the request of any contracting party having an interest in the
trade in the product concerned, all relevant information concerning the
administration of the restrictions, the import licences granted over a
recent period and the distribution of such licences among supplying
countries; Provided that there shall be no obligation to supply information
as to the names of importing or supplying enterprises.
- (b) In the case of import restrictions involving the fixing of quotas,
the contracting party applying the restrictions shall give public notice of
the total quantity or value of the product or products which will be
permitted to be imported during a specified future period and of any change
in such quantity or value. Any supplies of the product in question which
were en route at the time at which public notice was given shall not be
excluded from entry; Provided that they may be counted so far as
practicable, against the quantity permitted to be imported in the period in
question, and also, where necessary, against the quantities permitted to be
imported in the next following period or periods; and Provided further that
if any contracting party customarily exempts from such restrictions products
entered for consumption or withdrawn from warehouse for consumption during a
period of thirty days after the day of such public notice, such practice
shall be considered full compliance with this sub-paragraph.
- (c) In the case of quotas allocated among supplying countries, the
contracting party applying the restrictions shall promptly inform all other
contracting parties having an interest in supplying the product concerned of
the shares in the quota currently allocated, by quantity or value, to the
various supplying countries and shall give public notice thereof.
- With regard to restrictions applied in accordance with paragraph 2 (d) of
this Article or under paragraph 2 (c) of Article XI, the selection of a
representative period for any product and the appraisal of any special factors
affecting the trade in the product shall be made initially by the contracting
party applying the restriction; Provided that such contracting party shall,
upon the request of any other contracting party having a substantial interest
in supplying that product or upon the request of the CONTRACTING PARTIES,
consult promptly with the other contracting party or the CONTRACTING PARTIES
regarding the need for an adjustment of the proportion determined or of the
base period selected, or for the reappraisal of the special factors involved,
or for the elimination of conditions, formalities or any other provisions
established unilaterally relating to the allocation of an adequate quota or
its unrestricted utilization.
- The provisions of this Article shall apply to any tariff quota instituted
or maintained by any contracting party, and, in so far as applicable, the
principles of this Article shall also extend to export restrictions.
Article XIV
Exceptions to the Rule of
Non-discrimination
- A contracting party which applies restrictions under Article XII or under
Section B of Article XVIII may, in the application of such restrictions,
deviate from the provisions of Article XIII in a manner having equivalent
effect to restrictions on payments and transfers for current international
transactions which that contracting party may at that time apply under Article
VIII or XIV of the Articles of Agreement of the International Monetary Fund,
or under analogous provisions of a special exchange agreement entered into
pursuant to paragraph 6 of Article XV.
- A contracting party which is applying import restrictions under Article
XII or under Section B of Article XVIII may, with the consent of the
CONTRACTING PARTIES, temporarily deviate from the provisions of Article XIII
in respect of a small part of its external trade where the benefits to the
contracting party or contracting parties concerned substantially outweigh any
injury which may result to the trade of other contracting parties.
- The provisions of Article XIII shall not preclude a group of territories
having a common quota in the International Monetary Fund from applying against
imports from other countries, but not among themselves, restrictions in
accordance with the provisions of Article XII or of Section B of Article XVIII
on condition that such restrictions are in all other respects consistent with
the provisions of Article XIII.
- A contracting party applying import restrictions under Article XII or
under Section B of Article XVIII shall not be precluded by Articles XI to XV
or Section B of Article XVIII of this Agreement from applying measures to
direct its exports in such a manner as to increase its earnings of currencies
which it can use without deviation from the provisions of Article XIII.
- A contracting party shall not be precluded by Articles XI to XV,
inclusive, or by Section B of Article XVIII, of this Agreement from applying
quantitative restrictions:
- (a) having equivalent effect to exchange restrictions authorized under
Section 3 (b) of Article VII of the Articles of Agreement of the
International Monetary Fund, or
- (b) under the preferential arrangements provided for in Annex A of this
Agreement, pending the outcome of the negotiations referred to therein.
Article XV
Exchange Arrangements
- The CONTRACTING PARTIES shall seek co-operation with the International
Monetary Fund to the end that the CONTRACTING PARTIES and the Fund may pursue
a co-ordinated policy with regard to exchange questions within the
jurisdiction of the Fund and questions of quantitative restrictions and other
trade measures within the jurisdiction of the CONTRACTING PARTIES.
- In all cases in which the CONTRACTING PARTIES are called upon to consider
or deal with problems concerning monetary reserves, balances of payments or
foreign exchange arrangements, they shall consult fully with the International
Monetary Fund. In such consultations, the CONTRACTING PARTIES shall accept all
findings of statistical and other facts presented by the Fund relating to
foreign exchange, monetary reserves and balances of payments, and shall accept
the determination of the Fund as to whether action by a contracting party in
exchange matters is in accordance with the Articles of Agreement of the
International Monetary Fund, or with the terms of a special exchange agreement
between that contracting party and the CONTRACTING PARTIES. The CONTRACTING
PARTIES, in reaching their final decision in cases involving the criteria set
forth in paragraph 2 (a) of Article XII or in paragraph 9 of Article XVIII,
shall accept the determination of the Fund as to what constitutes a serious
decline in the contracting party's monetary reserves, a very low level of its
monetary reserves or a reasonable rate of increase in its monetary reserves,
and as to the financial aspects of other matters covered in consultation in
such cases.
- The CONTRACTING PARTIES shall seek agreement with the Fund regarding
procedures for consultation under paragraph 2 of this Article.
- Contracting parties shall not, by exchange action, frustrate the intent of
the provisions of this Agreement, nor, by trade action, the intent of the
provisions of the Articles of Agreement of the International Monetary Fund.
- If the CONTRACTING PARTIES consider, at any time, that exchange
restrictions on payments and transfers in connexion with imports are being
applied by a contracting party in a manner inconsistent with the exceptions
provided for in this Agreement for quantitative restrictions, they shall
report thereon to the Fund.
- Any contracting party which is not a member of the Fund shall, within a
time to be determined by the CONTRACTING PARTIES after consultation with the
Fund, become a member of the Fund, or, failing that, enter into a special
exchange agreement with the CONTRACTING PARTIES. A contracting party which
ceases to be a member of the Fund shall forthwith enter into a special
exchange agreement with the CONTRACTING PARTIES. Any special exchange
agreement entered into by a contracting party under this paragraph shall
thereupon become part of its obligations under this Agreement.
-
- (a) A special exchange agreement between a contracting party and the
CONTRACTING PARTIES under paragraph 6 of this Article shall provide to the
satisfaction of the CONTRACTING PARTIES that the objectives of this
Agreement will not be frustrated as a result of action in exchange matters
by the contracting party in question.
- (b) The terms of any such agreement shall not impose obligations on the
contracting party in exchange matters generally more restrictive than those
imposed by the Articles of Agreement of the International Monetary Fund on
members of the Fund.
- A contracting party which is not a member of the Fund shall furnish such
information within the general scope of section 5 of Article VIII of the
Articles of Agreement of the International Monetary Fund as the CONTRACTING
PARTIES may require in order to carry out their functions under this
Agreement.
- Nothing in this Agreement shall preclude:
- (a) the use by a contracting party of exchange controls or exchange
restrictions in accordance with the Articles of Agreement of the
International Monetary Fund or with that contracting party's special
exchange agreement with the CONTRACTING PARTIES, or
- (b) the use by a contracting party of restrictions or controls on
imports or exports, the sole effect of which, additional to the effects
permitted under Articles XI, XII, XIII and XIV, is to make effective such
exchange controls or exchange restrictions.
Article XVI
Subsidies
Section A--Subsidies in General
- If any contracting party grants or maintains any subsidy, including any
form of income or price support, which operates directly or indirectly to
increase exports of any product from, or to reduce imports of any product
into, its territory, it shall notify the CONTRACTING PARTIES in writing of the
extent and nature of the subsidization, of the estimated effect of the
subsidization on the quantity of the affected product or products imported
into or exported from its territory and of the circumstances making the
subsidization necessary. In any case in which it is determined that serious
prejudice to the interests of any other contracting party is caused or
threatened by any such subsidization, the contracting party granting the
subsidy shall, upon request, discuss with the other contracting party or
parties concerned, or with the CONTRACTING PARTIES, the possibility of
limiting the subsidization.
Section B--Additional Provisions on Export Subsidies
- The contracting parties recognize that the granting by a contracting party
of a subsidy on the export of any product may have harmful effects for other
contracting parties, both importing and exporting, may cause undue disturbance
to their normal commercial interests, and may hinder the achievement of the
objectives of this Agreement.
- Accordingly, contracting parties should seek to avoid the use of subsidies
on the export of primary products. If, however, a contracting party grants
directly or indirectly any form of subsidy which operates to increase the
export of any primary product from its territory, such subsidy shall not be
applied in a manner which results in that contracting party having more than
an equitable share of world export trade in that product, account being taken
of the shares of the contracting parties in such trade in the product during a
previous representative period, and any special factors which may have
affected or may be affecting such trade in the product.
- Further, as from 1 January 1958 or the earliest practicable date
thereafter, contracting parties shall cease to grant either directly or
indirectly any form of subsidy on the export of any product other than a
primary product which subsidy results in the sale of such product for export
at a price lower than the comparable price charged for the like product to
buyers in the domestic market. Until 31 December 1957 no contracting party
shall extend the scope of any such subsidization beyond that existing on 1
January 1955 by the introduction of new, or the extension of existing,
subsidies.
- The CONTRACTING PARTIES shall review the operation of the provisions of
this Article from time to time with a view to examining its effectiveness, in
the light of actual experience, in promoting the objectives of this Agreement
and avoiding subsidization seriously prejudicial to the trade or interests of
contracting parties.
Article XVII
State Trading Enterprises
-
- (a) Each contracting party undertakes that if it establishes or
maintains a State enterprise, wherever located, or grants to any enterprise,
formally or in effect, exclusive or special privileges, such enterprise
shall, in its purchases or sales involving either imports or exports, act in
a manner consistent with the general principles of non-discriminatory
treatment prescribed in this Agreement for governmental measures affecting
imports or exports by private traders.
- (b) The provisions of sub-paragraph (a) of this paragraph shall be
understood to require that such enterprises shall, having due regard to the
other provisions of this Agreement, make any such purchases or sales solely
in accordance with commercial considerations, including price, quality,
availability, marketability, transportation and other conditions of purchase
or sale, and shall afford the enterprises of the other contracting parties
adequate opportunity, in accordance with customary business practice, to
compete for participation in such purchases or sales.
- (c) No contracting party shall prevent any enterprise (whether or not an
enterprise described in sub-paragraph (a) of this paragraph) under its
jurisdiction from acting in accordance with the principles of subparagraphs
(a) and (b) of this paragraph.
- The provisions of paragraph 1 of this Article shall not apply to imports
of products for immediate or ultimate consumption in governmental use and not
otherwise for resale or use in the production of goods for sale. With respect
to such imports, each contracting party shall accord to the trade of the other
contracting parties fair and equitable treatment.
- The contracting parties recognize that enterprises of the kind described
in paragraph 1 (a) of this Article might be operated so as to create serious
obstacles to trade; thus negotiations on a reciprocal and mutually
advantageous basis designed to limit or reduce such obstacles are of
importance to the expansion of international trade.
-
- (a) Contracting parties shall notify the CONTRACTING PARTIES of the
products which arc imported into or exported from their territories by
enterprises of the kind described in paragraph 1 (a) of this Article.
- (b) A contracting party establishing, maintaining or authorizing an
import monopoly of a product, which is not the subject of a concession under
Article II, shall, on the request of another contracting party having a
substantial trade in the product concerned, inform the CONTRACTING PARTIES
of the import mark-up on the product during a recent representative period,
or, when it is not possible to do so, of the price charged on the resale of
the product.
- (c) The CONTRACTING PARTIES may, at the request of a contracting party
which has reason to believe that its interests under this Agreement are
being adversely affected by the operations of an enterprise of the kind
described in paragraph 1 (a), request the contracting party establishing,
maintaining or authorizing such enterprise to supply information about its
operations related to the carrying out of the provisions of this Agreement.
- (d) The provisions of this paragraph shall not require any contracting
party to disclose confidential information which would impede law
enforcement or otherwise be contrary to the public interest or would
prejudice the legitimate commercial interests of particular enterprises.
Article XVIII
Governmental Assistance to Economic
Development
- The contracting parties recognize that the attainment of the objectives of
this Agreement will be facilitated by the progressive development of their
economies, particularly of those contracting parties the economies of which
can only support low standards of living and are in the early stages of
development.
- The contracting parties recognize further that it may be necessary for
those contracting parties, in order to implement programmes and policies of
economic development designed to raise the general standard of living of their
people, to take protective or other measures affecting imports, and that such
measures are justified in so far as they facilitate the attainment of the
objectives of this Agreement. They agree, therefore, that those contracting
parties should enjoy additional facilities to enable them (a) to maintain
sufficient flexibility in their tariff structure to be able to grant the
tariff protection required for the establishment of a particular industry and
(b) to apply quantitative restrictions for balance of payments purposes in a
manner which takes full account of the continued high level of demand for
imports likely to be generated by their programmes of economic development.
- The contracting parties recognize finally that, with those additional
facilities which are provided for in Sections A and B of this Article, the
provisions of this Agreement would normally be sufficient to enable
contracting parties to meet the requirements of their economic development.
They agree, however, that there may be circumstances where no measure
consistent with those provisions is practicable to permit a contracting party
in the process of economic development to grant the governmental assistance
required to promote the establishment of particular industries with a view to
raising the general standard of living of its people. Special procedures are
laid down in Sections C and D of this Article to deal with those cases.
-
- (a) Consequently, a contracting party the economy of which can only
support low standards of living and is in the early stages of development
shall be free to deviate temporarily from the provisions of the other
Articles of this Agreement, as provided in Sections A, B and C of this
Article.
- (b) A contracting party the economy of which is in the process of
development, but which does not come within the scope of sub-paragraph (a)
above, may submit applications to the CONTRACTING PARTIES under Section D of
this Article.
- The contracting parties recognize that the export earnings of contracting
parties, the economies of which are of the type described in paragraph 4 (a)
and (b) above and which depend on exports of a small number of primary
commodities, may be seriously reduced by a decline in the sale of such
commodities. Accordingly, when the exports of primary commodities by such a
contracting party are seriously affected by measures taken by another
contracting party, it may have resort to the consultation provisions of
Article XXII of this Agreement.
- The CONTRACTING PARTIES shall review annually all measures applied
pursuant to the provisions of Sections C and D of this Article.
Section A
-
- (a) If a contracting party coming within the scope of paragraph 4 (a) of
this Article considers it desirable, in order to promote the establishment
of a particular industry with a view to raising the general standard of
living of its people, to modify or withdraw a concession included in the
appropriate Schedule annexed to this Agreement, it shall notify the
CONTRACTING PARTIES to this effect and enter into negotiations with any
contracting party with which such concession was initially negotiated, and
with any other contracting party determined by the CONTRACTING PARTIES to
have a substantial interest therein. If agreement is reached between such
contracting parties concerned, they shall be free to modify or withdraw
concessions under the appropriate Schedules to this Agreement in order to
give effect to such agreement, including any compensatory adjustments
involved.
- (b) If agreement is not reached within sixty days after the notification
provided for in sub-paragraph (a) above, the contracting party which
proposes to modify or withdraw the concession may refer the matter to the
CONTRACTING PARTIES, which shall promptly examine it. If they find that the
contracting party which proposes to modify or withdraw the concession has
made every effort to reach an agreement and that the compensatory adjustment
offered by it is adequate, that contracting party shall be free to modify or
withdraw the concession if, at the same time, it gives effect to the
compensatory adjustment. If the CONTRACTING PARTIES do not find that the
compensation offered by a contracting party proposing to modify or withdraw
the concession is adequate, but find that it has made every reasonable
effort to offer adequate compensation, that contracting party shall be free
to proceed with such modification or withdrawal. If such action is taken,
any other contracting party referred to in sub-paragraph (a) above shall be
free to modify or withdraw substantially equivalent concessions initially
negotiated with the contracting party which has taken the action.
Section B
- The contracting parties recognize that contracting parties coming within
the scope of paragraph 4 (a) of this Article tend, when they are in rapid
process of development, to experience balance of payments difficulties arising
mainly from efforts to expand their internal markets as well as from the
instability in their terms of trade.
- In order to safeguard its external financial position and to ensure a
level of reserves adequate for the implementation of its programme of economic
development, a contracting party coming within the scope of paragraph 4 (a) of
this Article may, subject to the provisions of paragraphs 10 to 12, control
the general level of its imports by restricting the quantity or value of
merchandise permitted to be imported; Provided that the import restrictions
instituted, maintained or intensified shall not exceed those necessary:
- (a) to forestall the threat of, or to stop, a serious decline in its
monetary reserves, or
- (b) in the case of a contracting party with inadequate monetary
reserves, to achieve a reasonable rate of increase in its reserves.
Due regard shall be paid in either case to any special factors which
may be affecting the reserves of the contracting party or its need for
reserves, including, where special external credits or other resources are
available to it, the need to provide for the appropriate use of such credits
or resources.
- In applying these restrictions, the contracting party may determine their
incidence on imports of different products or classes of products in such a
way as to give priority to the importation of those products which are more
essential in the light of its policy of economic development; Provided that
the restrictions are so applied as to avoid unnecessary damage to the
commercial or economic interests of any other contracting party and not to
prevent unreasonably the importation of any description of goods in minimum
commercial quantities the exclusion of which would impair regular channels of
trade; and Provided further that the restrictions are not so applied as to
prevent the importation of commercial samples or to prevent compliance with
patent, trade mark, copyright or similar procedures.
- In carrying out its domestic policies, the contracting party concerned
shall pay due regard to the need for restoring equilibrium in its balance of
payments on a sound and lasting basis and to the desirability of assuring an
economic employment of productive resources. It shall progressively relax any
restrictions applied under this Section as conditions improve, maintaining
them only to the extent necessary under the terms of paragraph 9 of this
Article and shall eliminate them when conditions no longer justify such
maintenance; Provided that no contracting party shall be required to withdraw
or modify restrictions on the ground that a change in its development policy
would render unnecessary the restrictions which it is applying under this
Section.
-
- (a) Any contracting party applying new restrictions or raising the
general level of its existing restrictions by a substantial intensification
of the measures applied under this Section, shall immediately after
instituting or intensifying such restrictions (or, in circumstances in which
prior consultation is practicable, before doing so) consult with the
CONTRACTING PARTIES as to the nature of its balance of payments
difficulties, alternative corrective measures which may be available, and
the possible effect of the restrictions on the economies of other
contracting parties.
- (b) On a date to be determined by them, the CONTRACTING PARTIES shall
review all restrictions still applied under this Section on that date.
Beginning two years after that date, contracting parties applying
restrictions under this Section shall enter into consultations of the type
provided for in sub-paragraph (a) above with the CONTRACTING PARTIES at
intervals of approximately, but not less than, two years according to a
programme to be drawn up each year by the CONTRACTING PARTIES; Provided that
no consultation under this sub-paragraph shall take place within two years
after the conclusion of a consultation of a general nature under any other
provision of this paragraph.
- (c)
- (i) If, in the course of consultations with a contracting party under
sub-paragraph (a) or (b) of this paragraph, the CONTRACTING PARTIES find
that the restrictions are not consistent with the provisions of this
Section or with those of Article XIII (subject to the provisions of
Article XIV), they shall indicate the nature of the inconsistency and may
advise that the restrictions be suitably modified.
- (ii) If, however, as a result of the consultations, the CONTRACTING
PARTIES determine that the restrictions are being applied in a manner
involving an inconsistency of a serious nature with the provisions of this
Section or with those of Article XIII (subject to the provisions of
Article XIV) and that damage to the trade of any contracting party is
caused or threatened thereby, they shall so inform the contracting party
applying the restrictions and shall make appropriate recommendations for
securing conformity with such provisions within a specified period. If
such contracting party does not comply with these recommendations within
the specified period, the CONTRACTING PARTIES may release any contracting
party the trade of which is adversely affected by the restrictions from
such obligations under this Agreement towards the contracting party
applying the restrictions as they determine to be appropriate in the
circumstances.
- (d) The CONTRACTING PARTIES shall invite any contracting party which is
applying restrictions under this Section to enter into consultations with
them at the request of any contracting party which can establish a prima
facie case that the restrictions are inconsistent with the provisions of
this Section or with those of Article XIII (subject to the provisions of
Article XIV) and that its trade is adversely affected thereby. However, no
such invitation shall be issued unless the CONTRACTING PARTIES have
ascertained that direct discussions between the contracting parties
concerned have not been successful. If, as a result of the consultations
with the CONTRACTING PARTIES no agreement is reached and they determine that
the restrictions are being applied inconsistently with such provisions, and
that damage to the trade of the contracting party initiating the procedure
is caused or threatened thereby, they shall recommend the withdrawal or
modification of the restrictions. If the restrictions are not withdrawn or
modified within such time as the CONTRACTING PARTIES may prescribe, they may
release the contracting party initiating the procedure from such obligations
under this Agreement towards the contracting party applying the restrictions
as they determine to be appropriate in the circumstances.
- (e) If a contracting party against which action has been taken in
accordance with the last sentence of sub-paragraph (c) (ii) or (d) of this
paragraph, finds that the release of obligations authorized by the
CONTRACTING PARTIES adversely affects the operation of its programme and
policy of economic development, it shall be free, not later than sixty days
after such action is taken, to give written notice to the Executive
Secretary 1 to the CONTRACTING PARTIES of its intention to withdraw from
this Agreement and such withdrawal shall take effect on the sixtieth day
following the day on which the notice is received by him.
- (f) In proceeding under this paragraph, the CONTRACTING PARTIES shall
have due regard to the factors referred to in paragraph 2 of this Article.
Determinations under this paragraph shall be rendered expeditiously and, if
possible, within sixty days of the initiation of the consultations.
Section C
- If a contracting party coming within the scope of paragraph 4 (a) of this
Article finds that governmental assistance is required to promote the
establishment of a particular industry with a view to raising the general
standard of living of its people, but that no measure consistent with the
other provisions of this Agreement is practicable to achieve that objective,
it may have recourse to the provisions and procedures set out in this Section.
- The contracting party concerned shall notify the CONTRACTING PARTIES of
the special difficulties which it meets in the achievement of the objective
outlined in paragraph 13 of this Article and shall indicate the specific
measure affecting imports which it proposes to introduce in order to remedy
these difficulties. It shall not introduce that measure before the expiration
of the time-limit laid down in paragraph 15 or 17, as the case may be, or if
the measure affects imports of a product which is the subject of a concession
included in the appropriate Schedule annexed to this Agreement, unless it has
secured the concurrence of the CONTRACTING PARTIES in accordance with the
provisions of paragraph 18; Provided that, if the industry receiving
assistance has already started production, the contracting party may, after
informing the CONTRACTING PARTIES, take such measures as may be necessary to
prevent, during that period, imports of the product or products concerned from
increasing substantially above a normal level.
- If, within thirty days of the notification of the measure, the CONTRACTING
PARTIES do not request the contracting party concerned to consult with them,
that contracting party shall be free to deviate from the relevant provisions
of the other Articles of this Agreement to the extent necessary to apply the
proposed measure.
- If it is requested by the CONTRACTING PARTIES to do so, the contracting
party concerned shall consult with them as to the purpose of the proposed
measure, as to alternative measures which may be available under this
Agreement, and as to the possible effect of the measure proposed on the
commercial and economic interests of other contracting parties. If, as a
result of such consultation, the CONTRACTING PARTIES agree that there is no
measure consistent with the other provisions of this Agreement which is
practicable in order to achieve the objective outlined in paragraph 13 of this
Article, and concur in the proposed measure, the contracting party concerned
shall be released from its obligations under the relevant provisions of the
other Articles of this Agreement to the extent necessary to apply that
measure.
- If, within ninety days after the date of the notification of the proposed
measure under paragraph 14 of this Article, the CONTRACTING PARTIES have not
concurred in such measure, the contracting party concerned may introduce the
measure proposed after informing the CONTRACTING PARTIES.
- If the proposed measure affects a product which is the subject of a
concession included in the appropriate Schedule annexed to this Agreement, the
contracting party concerned shall enter into consultations with any other
contracting party with which the concession was initially negotiated, and with
any other contracting party determined by the CONTRACTING PARTIES to have a
substantial interest therein. The CONTRACTING PARTIES shall concur in the
measure if they agree that there is no measure consistent with the other
provisions of this Agreement which is practicable in order to achieve the
objective set forth in paragraph 13 of this Article, and if they are
satisfied:
- (a) that agreement has been reached with such other contracting parties
as a result of the consultations referred to above, or
- (b) if no such agreement has been reached within sixty days after the
notification provided for in paragraph 14 has been received by the
CONTRACTING PARTIES, that the contracting party having recourse to this
Section has made all reasonable efforts to reach an agreement and that the
interests of other contracting parties are adequately safeguarded.
The contracting party having recourse to this Section shall
thereupon be released from its obligations under the relevant provisions of
the other Articles of this Agreement to the extent necessary to permit it to
apply the measure.
- If a proposed measure of the type described in paragraph 13 of this
Article concerns an industry the establishment of which has in the initial
period been facilitated by incidental protection afforded by restrictions
imposed by the contracting party concerned for balance of payments purposes
under the relevant provisions of this Agreement, that contracting party may
resort to the provisions and procedures of this Section; Provided that it
shall not apply the proposed measure without the concurrence of the
CONTRACTING PARTIES.
- Nothing in the preceding paragraphs of this Section shall authorize any
deviation from the provisions of Articles I, II and XIII of this Agreement.
The provisos to paragraph 10 of this Article shall also be applicable to any
restriction under this Section.
- At any time while a measure is being applied under paragraph 17 of this
Article any contracting party substantially affected by it may suspend the
application to the trade of the contracting party having recourse to this
Section of such substantially equivalent concessions or other obligations
under this Agreement the suspension of which the CONTRACTING PARTIES do not
disapprove; Provided that sixty days' notice of such suspension is given to
the CONTRACTING PARTIES not later than six months after the measure has been
introduced or changed substantially to the detriment of the contracting party
affected. Any such contracting party shall afford adequate opportunity for
consultation in accordance with the provisions of Article XXII of this
Agreement.
Section D
- A contracting party coming within the scope of sub-paragraph 4 (b) of this
Article desiring, in the interest of the development of its economy, to
introduce a measure of the type described in paragraph 13 of this Article in
respect of the establishment of a particular industry may apply to the
CONTRACTING PARTIES for approval of such measure. The CONTRACTING PARTIES
shall promptly consult with such contracting party and shall, in making their
decision, be guided by the considerations set out in paragraph 16. If the
CONTRACTING PARTIES concur in the proposed measure the contracting party
concerned shall be released from its obligations under the relevant provisions
of the other Articles of this Agreement to the extent necessary to permit it
to apply the measure. If the proposed measure affects a product which is the
subject of a concession included in the appropriate Schedule annexed to this
Agreement, the provisions of paragraph 18 shall apply.
- Any measure applied under this Section shall comply with the provisions of
paragraph 20 of this Article.
Article XIX
Emergency Action on Imports of Particular
Products
-
- (a) If, as a result of unforeseen developments and of the effect of the
obligations incurred by a contracting party under this Agreement, including
tariff concessions, any product is being imported into the territory of that
contracting party in such increased quantities and under such conditions as
to cause or threaten serious injury to domestic producers in that territory
of like or directly competitive products, the contracting party shall be
free, in respect of such product, and to the extent and for such time as may
be necessary to prevent or remedy such injury, to suspend the obligation in
whole or in part or to withdraw or modify the concession.
- (b) If any product, which is the subject of a concession with respect to
a preference, is being imported into the territory of a contracting party in
the circumstances set forth in sub-paragraph (a) of this paragraph, so as to
cause or threaten serious injury to domestic producers of like or directly
competitive products in the territory of a contracting party which receives
or received such preference, the importing contracting party shall be free,
if that other contracting party so requests, to suspend the relevant
obligation in whole or in part or to withdraw or modify the concession in
respect of the product, to the extent and for such time as may be necessary
to prevent or remedy such injury.
- Before any contracting party shall take action pursuant to the provisions
of paragraph 1 of this Article, it shall give notice in writing to the
CONTRACTING PARTIES as far in advance as may be practicable and shall afford
the CONTRACTING PARTIES and those contracting parties having a substantial
interest as exporters of the product concerned an opportunity to consult with
it in respect of the proposed action. When such notice is given in relation to
a concession with respect to a preference, the notice shall name the
contracting party which has requested the action. In critical circumstances,
where delay would cause damage which it would be difficult to repair, action
under paragraph 1 of this Article may be taken provisionally without prior
consultation, on the condition that consultation shall be effected immediately
after taking such action.
-
- (a) If agreement among the interested contracting parties with respect
to the action is not reached, the contracting party which proposes to take
or continue the action shall, nevertheless, be free to do so, and if such
action is taken or continued, the affected contracting parties shall then be
free, not later than ninety days after such action is taken, to suspend,
upon the expiration of thirty days from the day on which written notice of
such suspension is received by the CONTRACTING PARTIES, the application to
the trade of the contracting party taking such action, or, in the case
envisaged in paragraph 1 (b) of this Article, to the trade of the
contracting party requesting such action, of such substantially equivalent
concessions or other obligations under this Agreement the suspension of
which the CONTRACTING PARTIES do not disapprove.
- (b) Notwithstanding the provisions of sub-paragraph (a) of this
paragraph, where action is taken under paragraph 2 of this Article without
prior consultation and causes or threatens serious injury in the territory
of a contracting party to the domestic producers of products affected by the
action, that contracting party shall, where delay would cause damage
difficult to repair, be free to suspend, upon the taking of the action and
throughout the period of consultation, such concessions or other obligations
as may be necessary to prevent or remedy the injury.
Article XX
General Exceptions
Subject to the requirement
that such measures are not applied in a manner which would constitute a means of
arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination between countries where the same
conditions prevail, or a disguised restriction on international trade, nothing
in this Agreement shall be construed to prevent the adoption or enforcement by
any contracting party of measures:
- (a) necessary to protect public morals;
- (b) necessary to protect human, animal or plant life or health;
- (c) relating to the importation or exportation of gold or silver;
- (d) necessary to secure compliance with laws or regulations which are not
inconsistent with the provisions of this Agreement, including those relating
to customs enforcement, the enforcement of monopolies operated under paragraph
4 of Article II and Article XVII, the protection of patents, trade marks and
copyrights, and the prevention of deceptive practices;
- (e) relating to the products of prison labour;
- (f) imposed for the protection of national treasures of artistic, historic
or archaeological value;
- (g) relating to the conservation of exhaustible natural resources if such
measures are made effective in conjunction with restrictions on domestic
production or consumption;
- (h) undertaken in pursuance of obligations under any intergovernmental
commodity agreement which conforms to criteria submitted to the CONTRACTING
PARTIES and not disapproved by them or which is itself so submitted and not so
disapproved;
- (i) involving restrictions on exports of domestic materials necessary to
ensure essential quantities of such materials to a domestic processing
industry during periods when the domestic price of such materials is held
below the world price as part of a governmental stabilization plan; Provided
that such restrictions shall not operate to increase the exports of or the
protection afforded to such domestic industry, and shall not depart from the
provisions of this Agreement relating to non-discrimination;
- (j) essential to the acquisition or distribution of products in general or
local short supply; Provided that any such measures shall be consistent with
the principle that all contracting parties are entitled to an equitable share
of the international supply of such products, and that any such measures,
which are inconsistent with the other provisions of this Agreement shall be
discontinued as soon as the . conditions giving rise to them have ceased to
exist. The CONTRACTING PARTIES shall review the need for this sub-paragraph
not later than 30 June 1960.
Article
Security Exceptions
Nothing in this Agreement
shall be construed
- (a) to require any contracting party to furnish any information the
disclosure of which it considers contrary to its essential security interests;
or
- (b) to prevent any contracting party from taking any action which it
considers necessary for the protection of its essential security interests
- (i) relating to fissionable materials or the materials from which they
are derived;
- (ii) relating to the traffic in arms, ammunition and implements of war
and to such traffic in other goods and materials as is carried on directly
or indirectly for the purpose of supplying a military establishment;
- (iii) taken in time of war or other emergency in international
relations; or
- (c) to prevent any contracting party from taking any action in pursuance
of its obligations under the United Nations Charter for the maintenance of
international peace and security.
Article XXII
Consultation
- Each contracting party shall accord sympathetic consideration to, and
shall afford adequate opportunity for consultation regarding, such
representations as may be made by another contracting party with respect to
any matter affecting the operation of this Agreement.
- The CONTRACTING PARTIES may, at the request of a contracting party,
consult with any contracting party or parties in respect of any matter for
which it has not been possible to find a satisfactory solution through
consultation under paragraph 1.
Article XXIII
Nullification or Impairment
- If any contracting party should consider that any benefit accruing to it
directly or indirectly under this Agreement is being nullified or impaired or
that the attainment of any objective of the Agreement is being impeded as the
result of
- (a) the failure of another contracting party to carry out its
obligations under this Agreement, or
- (b) the application by another contracting party of any measure, whether
or not it conflicts with the provisions of this Agreement, or
- (c) the existence of any other situation,
the contracting party
may, with a view to the satisfactory adjustment of the matter, make written
representations or proposals to the other contracting party or parties which
it considers to be concerned. Any contracting party thus approached shall give
sympathetic consideration to the representations or proposals made to it.
- If no satisfactory adjustment is effected between the contracting parties
concerned within a reasonable time, or if the difficulty is of the type
described in paragraph 1(c) of this Article, the matter may be referred to the
CONTRACTING PARTIES. The CONTRACTING PARTIES shall promptly investigate any
matter so referred to them and shalt make appropriate recommendations to the
contracting parties which they consider to be concerned, or give a ruling on
the matter, as appropriate. The CONTRACTING PARTIES may consult with
contracting parties, with the Economic and Social Council of the United
Nations and with any appropriate inter-governmental organization in cases
where they consider such consultation necessary. If the CONTRACTING PARTIES
consider that the circumstances are serious enough to justify such action,
they may authorize a contracting party or parties to suspend the application
to any other contracting party or parties of such concessions or other
obligations under this Agreement as they determine to be appropriate in the
circumstances. If the application to any contracting party of any concession
or other obligation is in fact suspended, that contracting party shall then be
free, not later than sixty days after such action is taken, to give written
notice to the Executive Secretary to the CONTRACTING PARTIES of its intention
to withdraw from this Agreement and such withdrawal shall take effect upon the
sixtieth day following the day on which such notice is received by him.
PART III
Article XXIV
Territorial Application
Frontier Traffic
Customs
Unions and Free-trade Areas
- The provisions of this Agreement shalt apply to the metropolitan customs
territories of the contracting parties and to any other customs territories in
respect of which this Agreement has been accepted under Article XXVI or is
being applied under Article XXXIII or pursuant to the Protocol of Provisional
Application. Each such customs territory shall, exclusively for the purposes
of the territorial application of this Agreement, be treated as though it were
a contracting party; Provided that the provisions of this paragraph shall not
be construed to create any rights or obligations as between two or more
customs territories in respect of which this Agreement has been accepted under
Article XXVI or is being applied under Article XXXIII or pursuant to the
Protocol of Provisional Application by a single contracting party.
- For the purposes of this Agreement a customs territory shall be understood
to mean any territory with respect to which separate tariffs or other
regulations of commerce are maintained for a substantial part of the trade of
such territory with other territories.
- The provisions of this Agreement shalt not be construed to prevent:
- (a) Advantages accorded by any contracting party to adjacent countries
in order to facilitate frontier traffic;
- (b) Advantages accorded to the trade with the Free Territory of Trieste
by countries contiguous to that territory, provided that such advantages are
not in conflict with the Treaties of Peace arising out of the Second World
War.
- The contracting parties recognize the desirability of increasing freedom
of trade by the development, through voluntary agreements, of closer
integration between the economies of the countries parties to such agreements.
They also recognize that the purpose of a customs union or of a free-trade
area should be to facilitate trade between the constituent territories and not
to raise barriers to the trade of other contracting parties with such
territories.
- Accordingly, the provisions of this Agreement shall not prevent, as
between the territories of contracting parties, the formation of a customs
union or of a free-trade area or the adoption of an interim agreement
necessary for the formation of a customs union or of a free-trade area;
Provided that:
- (a) with respect to a customs union, or an interim agreement leading to
the formation of a customs union, the duties and other regulations of
commerce imposed at the institution of any such union or interim agreement
in respect of trade with contracting parties not parties to such union or
agreement shall not on the whole be higher or more restrictive than the
general incidence of the duties and regulations of commerce applicable in
the constituent territories prior to the formation of such union or the
adoption of such interim agreement, as the case may be;
- (b) with respect to a free-trade area, or an interim agreement leading
to the formation of a free-trade area, the duties and other regulations of
commerce maintained in each of the constituent territories and applicable at
the formation of such free-trade area or the adoption of such interim
agreement to the trade of contracting parties not included in such area or
not parties to such agreement shall not be higher or more restrictive than
the corresponding duties and other regulations of commerce existing in the
same constituent territories prior to the formation of the free-trade area,
or interim agreement, as the case may be; and
- (c) any interim agreement referred to in sub-paragraphs (a) and (b)
shall include a plan and schedule for the formation of such a customs union
or of such a free-trade area within a reasonable length of time.
- If, in fulfilling the requirements of sub-paragraph 5 (a), a contracting
party proposes to increase any rate of duty inconsistently with the provisions
of Article II, the procedure set forth in Article XXVIII shall apply. In
providing for compensatory adjustment, due account shall be taken of the
compensation already afforded by the reductions brought about in the
corresponding duty of the other constituents of the union.
-
- (a) Any contracting party deciding to enter into a customs union or
free-trade area, or an interim agreement leading to the formation of such a
union or area, shall promptly notify the CONTRACTING PARTIES and shall make
available to them such information regarding the proposed union or area as
will enable them to make such reports and recommendations to contracting
parties as they may deem appropriate.
- (b) If, after having studied the plan and schedule included in an
interim agreement referred to in paragraph 5 in consultation with the
parties to that agreement and taking due account of the information made
available in accordance with the provisions of sub-paragraph (a), the
CONTRACTING PARTIES find that such agreement is not likely to result in the
formation of a customs union or of a free-trade area within the period
contemplated by the parties to the agreement or that such period is not a
reasonable one, the CONTRACTING PARTIES shall make recommendations to the
parties to the agreement. The parties shall not maintain or put into force,
as the case may be, such agreement if they are not prepared to modify it in
accordance with these recommendations.
- (c) Any substantial change in the plan or schedule referred to in
paragraph 5 (c) shall be communicated to the CONTRACTING PARTIES, which may
request the contracting parties concerned to consult with them if the change
seems likely to jeopardize or delay unduly the formation of the customs
union or of the free-trade area.
- For the purposes of this Agreement:
- (a) A customs union shall be understood to mean the substitution of a
single customs territory for two or more customs territories, so that
- (i) duties and other restrictive regulations of commerce (except,
where necessary, those permitted under Articles XI, XII, XIII, XIV, XV and
XX) are eliminated with respect to substantially all the trade between the
constituent territories of the union or at least with respect to
substantially all the trade in products originating in such territories,
and,
- (ii) subject to the provisions of paragraph 9, substantially the same
duties and other regulations of commerce are applied by each of the
members of the union to the trade of territories not included in the
union;
- (b) A free-trade area shall be understood to mean a group of two or more
customs territories in which the duties and other restrictive regulations of
commerce (except, where necessary, those permitted under Articles XI, XII,
XIII, XIV, XV and XX) are eliminated on substantially all the trade between
the constituent territories in products originating in such territories.
- The preferences referred to in paragraph 2 of Article I shall not be
affected by the formation of a customs union or of a free-trade area but may
be eliminated or adjusted by means of negotiations with contracting parties
affected. This procedure of negotiations with affected contracting parties
shall, in particular, apply to the elimination of preferences required to
conform with the provisions of paragraph 8 (a) (i) and paragraph 8 (b).
- The CONTRACTING PARTIES may by a two-thirds majority approve proposals
which do not fully comply with the requirements of paragraphs 5 to 9
inclusive, provided that such proposals lead to the formation of a customs
union or a free-trade area in the sense of this Article.
- Taking into account the exceptional circumstances arising out of the
establishment of India and Pakistan as independent States and recognizing the
fact that they have long constituted an economic unit, the contracting parties
agree that the provisions of this Agreement shall not prevent the two
countries from entering into special arrangements with respect to the trade
between them, pending the establishment of their mutual trade relations on a
definitive basis.
- Each contracting party shall take such reasonable measures as may be
available to it to ensure observance of the provisions of this Agreement by
the regional and local governments and authorities within its territory.
Article XXV
Joint Action by the Contracting Parties
- Representatives of the contracting parties shall meet from time to time
for the purpose of giving effect to those provisions of this Agreement which
involve joint action and, generally, with a view to facilitating the operation
and furthering the objectives of this Agreement. Wherever reference is made in
this Agreement to the contracting parties acting jointly they are designated
as the CONTRACTING PARTIES.
- The Secretary-General of the United Nations is requested to convene the
first meeting of the CONTRACTING PARTIES, which shall take place not later
than March 1, 1948.
- Each contracting party shall be entitled to have one vote at all meetings
of the CONTRACTING PARTIES.
- Except as otherwise provided for in this Agreement, decisions of the
CONTRACTING PARTIES shall be taken by a majority of the votes cast.
- In exceptional circumstances not elsewhere provided for in this Agreement,
the CONTRACTING PARTIES may waive an obligation imposed upon a contracting
party by this Agreement; Provided that any such decision shall be approved by
a two-thirds majority of the votes cast and that such majority shall comprise
more than half of the contracting parties. The CONTRACTING PARTIES may also by
such a vote
- (i) define certain categories of exceptional circumstances to which
other voting requirements shall apply for the waiver of obligations, and
- (ii) prescribe such criteria as may be necessary for the application of
this paragraph.
Article XXVI
Acceptance, Entry into Force and
Registration
- The date of this Agreement shall be 30 October 1947.
- This Agreement shall be open for acceptance by any contracting party
which, on 1 March 1955, was a contracting party or was negotiating with a view
to accession to this Agreement.
- This Agreement, done in a single English original and in a single French
original, both texts authentic, shall be deposited with the Secretary-General
of the United Nations, who shall furnish certified copies thereof to all
interested governments.
- Each government accepting this Agreement shall deposit an instrument of
acceptance with the Executive Secretary to the CONTRACTING PARTIES, who will
inform all interested governments of the date of deposit of each instrument of
acceptance and of the day on which this Agreement enters into force under
paragraph 6 of this Article.
-
- (a) Each government accepting this Agreement does so in respect of its
metropolitan territory and of the other territories for which it has
international responsibility, except such separate customs territories as it
shall notify to the Executive Secretary to the CONTRACTING PARTIES at the
time of its own acceptance.
- (b) Any government, which has so notified the Executive Secretary under
the exceptions in sub-paragraph (a) of this paragraph, may at any time give
notice to the Executive Secretary that its acceptance shall be effective in
respect of any separate customs territory or territories so excepted and
such notice shall take effect on the thirtieth day following the day on
which it is received by the Executive Secretary.
- (c) If any of the customs territories, in respect of which a contracting
party has accepted this Agreement, possesses or acquires full autonomy in
the conduct of its external commercial relations and of the other matters
provided for in this Agreement, such territory shall, upon sponsorship
through a declaration by the responsible contracting party establishing the
above-mentioned fact, be deemed to be a contracting party.
- This Agreement shall enter into force, as among the governments which have
accepted it, on the thirtieth day following the day on which instruments of
acceptance have been deposited with the Executive Secretary to the CONTRACTING
PARTIES on behalf of governments named in Annex H, the territories of which
account for 85 per centum of the total external trade of the territories of
such governments, computed in accordance with the applicable column of
percentages set forth therein. The instrument of acceptance of each other
government shall tak