The
WTO is a negotiating forum, a set of trade rules, and a mechanism for
dispute resolution that is made up of, as of February 2005, 148 member countries
and more than 30 observer countries.
The WTO is often described as a system based on rules. These rules are actually
agreements negotiated by governments.
Countries meet periodically at the WTO to negotiate reductions in tariffs and
discuss other regulations that inhibit the free flow of trade. Negotiations
rounds often take many years to conclude as they tackle a large number of
complex and far-reaching issues such as trade in goods, services, intellectual
property, and other issues including as dispute settlement and transparency
mechanisms.
The Uruguay Round Agreemen
ts,
the basis of the present WTO system,
concluded with agreements that incorporate new sets of rules and obligations
(see box on the right).
The WTO Agreements set procedures for settling disputes.
When a member country understands that other members are failing to respect
their WTO obligations it can present the case to the WTO dispute settlement
mechanism. Typically, a panel of judges from various countries studies the case
and arguments of each country and decides on whether any party should change its
behaviour.
Additional work is also underway in the WTO. This is the
result of decisions taken at Ministerial Conferences, in particular the meeting
in Doha, November 2001, when new negotiations and other initiatives were
launched. Caribbean countries are actively engaged in this forum to ensure that
their rights and interests are protected and recognised. For example, the WTO
agreements continue to include numerous provisions giving Caribbean countries
and other developing and least-developed countries special rights or extra
leniency —“special and differential treatment.”