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5 - The liberalization of cross-border trade in services: a developing country perspective

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2011

Sumanta Chaudhuri
Affiliation:
Ex-Counsellor to the Permanent Mission of India to the WTO
Suparna Karmakar
Affiliation:
Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations
Juan A. Marchetti
Affiliation:
World Trade Organization
Martin Roy
Affiliation:
World Trade Organization
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Summary

One of the notable trends in recent years has been the increasing importance of the cross-border supply of services. This is occurring in a large number of services sectors, both through the partial substitution of services earlier supplied by the commercial presence of foreign companies or by moving natural persons, and through trade in newer services such as telemedicine and research and development. The other dynamic trend is the growth in offshoring, with developing countries as important participants. These trends provide huge scope for developing countries to exploit their comparative advantages in labor-intensive services without displacing substantial labor in developed economies, at the same time adding to efficiency gains and cost reductions in the latter. The further opening of markets for cross-border services, by providing the necessary boost to the global growth engine, could become a win-win situation for all.

Current policy with regard to the cross-border supply of services, both in developed and developing nations, seems to be more liberal than reflected in current GATS commitments or offers submitted in the Doha Round. The liberalization of the cross-border supply of services has featured prominently not only in current WTO negotiations, but also in recent preferential trade agreements between various countries. The trend in many of these bilateral negotiations appears to be toward the binding of the actual status quo. The PTA context seems unsuitable for establishing the grounds of a truly open global environment for the supply of services on a cross-border basis, however.

Type
Chapter
Information
Opening Markets for Trade in Services
Countries and Sectors in Bilateral and WTO Negotiations
, pp. 184 - 223
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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