66 WTO member countries sign Agreement for Global Digital Trade
Sixty-six member countries of the World Trade Organization agreed on a provisional pathway for the implementation of the Global Agreement on Electronic Commerce
A group of 66 member countries of the World Trade Organization (WTO) agreed on March 28 to a provisional pathway for the Global Agreement on Electronic Commerce, which is currently 70 % complete.
The decision was announced in a statement during the 14th WTO Ministerial Conference (MC14), held in Yaoundé. In this regard, the provisional agreements “will facilitate the entry into force of the Agreement on Electronic Commerce while work continues on its formal incorporation into the WTO legal framework, a process that requires the full consensus of all Members of the organization.”
The initiative was supported by Australia, Japan, Singapore, Canada, China, the United Kingdom, Switzerland, the United Arab Emirates, Costa Rica, Peru, the Philippines, Mauritius, Gambia, the European Union — which participates as a WTO Member — and Argentina, along with other participants in the plurilateral initiative.
The WTO stated that “the Agreement on Electronic Commerce establishes rules that legally recognize digital transactions, facilitate paperless electronic trade and payments, promote interoperability and digital trust, and seek to expand the participation of developing countries in the digital economy.”
The agreement will enter into force for WTO members that complete their internal procedures. After this process, and once ratified by at least 45 countries, “it will begin to be effectively implemented, benefiting businesses, consumers, and developing economies.”
M.Pino
Source: aduananews
(Reference image source: Jakub Żerdzicki on Unsplash)
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