Trade barriers in services must go
Media release
15 April 2016
Trade barriers in services must go
Services businesses are suffering from trade barriers that are reducing economic growth, says ExportNZ.
ExportNZ is part of a global services coalition that is urging negotiators at the Trade in Services Negotiations (TiSA) taking place this week in Geneva to achieve an effective agreement that will reduce barriers to services trade.
ExportNZ Executive Director
Catherine Beard says services are a major part of most
countries’ economies and the export of services is growing
faster than goods exports both in New Zealand and globally.
Catherine Beard said as well as commercial services
exporters (accountants, lawyers, engineering consultants,
architects, education services, financial services, ICT
services and others) many manufactured and goods exports are
now bundled with a services offering.
“The main barriers to services trade are inconsistent regulations between countries, lack of international recognition of skills and qualifications, restrictive standards and specifications, lack of regulatory transparency, regulatory instability, inadequate dispute resolution, lack of access to human capital, lack of access to skilled talent and bureaucracy generally. Many of these barriers could be reduced by international agreement.
“Together with Services Industry Associations in the UK, Canada, Australia, Taiwan, Japan, Hong Kong, Europe, Columbia and Mexico we urge the negotiators to progress with a high quality deal that enables the freer flow of services trade.”
The
Global Services Coalition statement is
attached
GSC_Joint_Statement_on_TiSA.pdf
Trade
in Services Agreement:
The Trade in Services Agreement (TiSA) is a trade agreement currently being negotiated by 23 members of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), including the EU. Together, the participating countries account for 70% of world trade in services.
TiSA is based on the WTO's General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS), which involves all WTO members. The key provisions of the GATS – scope, definitions, market access, national treatment and exemptions – are also found in TiSA.
The talks are based on proposals made by the participants. TiSA aims at opening up markets and improving rules in areas such as licensing, financial services, telecoms, e-commerce, maritime transport, and professionals moving abroad temporarily to provide services.
23 WTO members are taking part in the TiSA talks: Australia, Canada, Chile, Chinese Taipei, Colombia, Costa Rica, the EU, Hong Kong China, Iceland, Israel, Japan, Korea, Liechtenstein, Mauritius, Mexico, New Zealand, Norway, Pakistan, Panama, Peru, Switzerland, Turkey and the United States.