WTO โ World Trade Organisation
WTO formation (1995), functions, key agreements (TRIPS, TRIMS, GATS), India’s role, and trade disputes.
๐ What is WTO?
The World Trade Organisation (WTO) is the only global international organisation dealing with the rules of trade between nations. It replaced GATT (General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade) on January 1, 1995.
- Headquarters: Geneva, Switzerland
- Members: 164 countries (as of 2023)
- India joined: January 1, 1995 (founding member)
- Director General: Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala (Nigeria) โ first woman and first African DG
๐ฏ Functions of WTO
- Trade negotiations: Forum for negotiating trade agreements to reduce tariffs and barriers
- Dispute settlement: Binding mechanism to resolve trade disputes between countries
- Monitoring: Reviews members’ trade policies through Trade Policy Review Mechanism
- Technical assistance: Helps developing countries build trade capacity
- Cooperation: Works with IMF and World Bank on global economic policy
๐ Key WTO Agreements
| Agreement | Full Name | What it Covers |
|---|---|---|
| GATT | General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade | Trade in goods โ reduce tariffs, eliminate quotas |
| GATS | General Agreement on Trade in Services | Trade in services โ banking, IT, education, healthcare |
| TRIPS | Trade-Related Intellectual Property Rights | Patents, copyrights, trademarks โ minimum standards |
| TRIMS | Trade-Related Investment Measures | Restricts investment measures that distort trade |
| AoA | Agreement on Agriculture | Reduce agricultural subsidies and trade barriers |
| SPS | Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures | Food safety and animal/plant health standards |
TRIPS requires countries to grant 20-year patents on medicines. India initially resisted because it would make medicines expensive. India negotiated a “compulsory licensing” provision โ allowing India to produce generic medicines for public health emergencies. This is why India is the “pharmacy of the world” โ producing affordable generic medicines for 150+ countries.
๐ฎ๐ณ India’s Role in WTO
- Founding member: India was a founding member of WTO (1995)
- Developing country voice: India leads developing country coalitions (G33, G20 in WTO)
- Food security: India fought for the right to maintain food subsidies (Public Stockholding for Food Security)
- Agriculture: India opposes reduction of agricultural subsidies that protect small farmers
- Services: India pushes for liberalisation of Mode 4 (movement of natural persons) โ benefits Indian IT professionals
โ๏ธ WTO Dispute Settlement
WTO’s Dispute Settlement Body (DSB) is the world’s most active international trade court. Key features:
- Binding decisions โ countries must comply or face trade sanctions
- India has been both complainant and respondent in WTO disputes
- India vs USA: Solar panels dispute (India lost โ had to remove local content requirements)
- India vs EU: Pharmaceutical patents dispute
๐ Key Terms
- WTO: World Trade Organisation โ replaced GATT in 1995
- MFN: Most Favoured Nation โ treat all WTO members equally
- National Treatment: Treat foreign goods same as domestic goods
- Tariff: Tax on imports โ WTO aims to reduce tariffs
- Non-tariff barriers: Quotas, standards, licensing โ harder to eliminate
- Doha Round: WTO negotiations launched in 2001 โ still incomplete