30 March 1998
Date: Mon, 30 Mar 98 16:46:51 -0500 From: "Marc Kron"<kron_m@ns1.halny.hitachi.com> To: <jya@pipeline.com> Subject: WTO Electronic Commerce Report You may want to post on your crypto site the following web site: http://www.wto.org/wto/new/press96.htm [copy below] This site is a press release on how to order a new WTO publication on electronic commerce and the Internet: "A new study, "Electronic Commerce and the Role of the WTO", from the WTO Secretariat examines the potential trade gains from the rapidly increasing use of the Internet for commercial purposes. The report, authored by a team of economists from the WTO secretariat, outlines the complexities as well as the potential benefits of trade via the Internet."
PRESS/96
13 March 1998
A new study, "Electronic Commerce and the Role of the WTO", from the WTO Secretariat examines the potential trade gains from the rapidly increasing use of the Internet for commercial purposes. The report, authored by a team of economists from the WTO secretariat, outlines the complexities as well as the potential benefits of trade via the Internet.
Electronic commerce - the production, advertising, sale and distribution of products via telecommunication networks - can be divided into three broad categories for the purpose of policy discussion: i) the searching stage where producers and consumers, or buyers and sellers, first interact; ii) the ordering and payment stage once a transaction has been agreed upon; and iii) the delivery stage. Much of the discussion in the study relates to products that can be delivered electronically through the Internet (stage iii) transactions), as this is where the most significant policy questions arise.
The study was written as a means of providing background information for the 132 WTO Members who are now engaged in the process of developing policy responses to this new form of commerce, which is growing at a staggering rate. In 1991, there were less than 5 million Internet users. By the turn of the century, there are likely to be more than 300 million users. And the value of electronic commerce is predicted to reach US$300 billion by that time.
The study emphasizes the extraordinary expansion of opportunities that electronic
commerce offers, including for developing countries. But it notes that
much remains to be done by way of improving access to the necessary
infrastructure and user skills if these opportunities are to be realized.
WTO members have begun to explore how the World Trade Organization should
deal with the question of electronic commerce. Given the unique nature of
this emerging mode of delivering products (goods and services), the authors
say that many questions remain to be answered. Products which are bought
and paid for over the Internet but are delivered physically would be
subject to existing WTO rules on trade in goods. But the situation
is more complicated for products that are delivered as digitalized information
over the Internet, as a variety of issues arise relating to the appropriate
policy regime. The authors say that both the supply of Internet access
services and many of the products delivered over the Internet fall within
the ambit of the General Agreement on Trade in Services, but they also
acknowledge the need for clarification of how far particular activities are
covered by the market access commitments of Members.
Among the policy issues identified in the study are the legal and regulatory
framework for Internet transactions, security and privacy questions, taxation,
access to the Internet, market access for suppliers over the Internet, trade
facilitation, public procurement, intellectual property questions, and regulation
of content. The study attempts to lay out the issues without
pre-judging which of them should be taken up in the WTO, nor how they should
be dealt with substantively.
Last updated 20 March 1998