66 WTO members adopt interim e-Com pact
Sixty-six World Trade Organization (WTO) member countries, representing 70 percent of global trade, have adopted a pathway to bring into force electronic commerce (e-Commerce) agreement through interim arrangements.
The adoption to bring the agreement into force via interim arrangements took place on March 28 at the 14th WTO Ministerial Conference (MC14) in Yaoundé, Cameroon.
Bangladesh has yet to officially clarify its stance, with Commerce Minister Khandakar Abdul Muktadir saying nations attending the summit offered varying opinions. While some favoured a four-year extension of the moratorium and others two years, very few sought a permanent moratorium.
Bangladesh has not spoken on this issue yet, he added.
Under the interim mechanism, participating members will begin applying the rules among themselves once 45 of the 66 signatories ratify the deal.
“This step marks a significant milestone. With digital transactions accounting for over 60 percent of global Gross Domestic Product (GDP), there is an urgent need to implement global digital trade rules that allow businesses and consumers to seize the benefits of digital trade,” the WTO said in a joint statement.
The agreement encourages legal frameworks that recognise electronic transactions and treat electronic and paper-based information as legal equivalents.
It also seeks to establish common principles for the interoperability of e-invoicing and the legal recognition of electronic transferable records, such as bills of lading and promissory notes.
Data from the WTO and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development suggest that failing to implement the agreement leaves approximately $159 billion worth of trade “on the table” annually. If implemented globally, the pact could boost global GDP by $8.7 trillion by 2040.
Major economies that have accepted the interim agreement include Singapore, Australia, Japan, the European Union, Canada, and China.
“By moving forward with the E-Commerce Agreement, participating economies are helping to establish a shared regulatory framework that can lower costs and unlock new opportunities,” WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said in the statement.
The agreement is not applicable to Bangladesh as the country remains in favour of continuing the long-standing moratorium on imposing customs duties on electronic transmissions, said Mustafizur Rahman, a distinguished fellow at the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD), who is attending the conference.
“It means only the signatory countries will apply the agreement among themselves. Non-signatory countries like Bangladesh will continue to enjoy the moratorium until the agreement is adopted by the majority of WTO members,” he said.
Rahman said Bangladesh should cautiously observe the development before making a decision, adding that with the massive digitalisation of global trade, a significant volume of transactions now occurs digitally.
As a major importer and exporter of commodities and services, the withdrawal of the e-commerce moratorium could increase business costs for Bangladesh, he said.
The issue of electronic commerce was first raised at the Second Ministerial Conference in 1998, where members adopted a declaration to not impose tariffs on digital transmissions. At the 13th Ministerial Conference in Abu Dhabi in 2024, members had agreed to maintain the moratorium until MC14 or March 31, 2026.
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