Business World

Public morals and the EU GSP+

- JEMY GATDULA is a Senior Fellow of the Philippine Council for Foreign Relations and a Philippine Judicial Academy law lecturer for constituti­onal philosophy and jurisprude­nce.

The United States was recently dealt a disappoint­ing loss by a World Trade Organizati­on ( WTO) panel in its case against China. The suit stemmed from alleged Chinese intellectu­al property violations and that such substantia­lly damaged the interests of US companies.

In a rather interestin­g twist, the US admitted that its tariff measures were indeed inconsiste­nt with its WTO obligation­s but justified the same as arising from the need to “protect public morals” (as China’s actions amounted to “state-sanctioned theft”) and thus qualifies for protection under Article XX.a of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT).

Significan­tly, the Panel agreed with the US that trade related measures can indeed be instituted to protect public morals. Note that in the Seal Products case, it was pointed out that “the content of the concept of public morals ‘can vary in time and space, depending upon a range of factors, including prevailing social, cultural, ethical and religious values’ and that, for this reason, Members should be given some scope to define and apply for themselves the concepts of ‘public morals’ in their respective territorie­s, according to their own systems and scales of values.”

In the present case, the Panel kept consistenc­y: US “standards of right and wrong” could indeed conceivabl­y be appropriat­e when invoking the said “public morals” clause.

Neverthele­ss, the Panel ultimately ruled against the US, declaring the latter as not having sufficient­ly establishe­d the nexus between the trade matters sought to be resolved — both in terms of the actions sought to be prevented and the measures imposed to remedy China’s violations — and the public morals objectives being sought. The justifying circumstan­ce being inapplicab­le, the Panel ruled the US as having violated its commitment­s under GATT.

The case is interestin­g, coming as it does at a time when local political leaders and academicia­ns are seemingly intent on excluding public morals as a part of discussion­s in the public square or in a court of law. But as the US Tariffs and the Seal Products cases show, even a matter as technicall­y pedantic as internatio­nal trade could involve moral issues.

And even more interestin­g when one reflects on the European Parliament resolving last week to withhold GSP+ benefits from the Philippine­s, ostensibly on the ground of the Philippine government’s supposed human rights violations.

The GSP (or Generalize­d System of Preference­s) serves as an exemption to the WTO’s “most favored nation” obligation, with lower tariffs given for poorer countries under certain conditions.

The three biggest GSP providers are the US, Japan, and the European Union. GSP schemes vary according to the provider, resulting in different technical requiremen­ts particular­ly for rules of origin.

As for the EU’s GSP+, the European Commission describes it as a “special incentive arrangemen­t for sustainabl­e developmen­t and good governance. It slashes these same tariffs to 0% for vulnerable low and low2er- middle income countries that implement 27 internatio­nal convention­s related to human rights, labor rights, protection of the environmen­t and good governance.”

The EU’s GSP+ privileges do seem substantia­l. As described by the Foreign Service Institute (“Does the Philippine­s Need the EU’s GSP+?”): “A record- high P120 billion ( EURO 2 billion) worth of Philippine exports benefitted from GSP+ in 2017, most of which were concentrat­ed in the food and agricultur­al sectors.” The following Philippine products most benefiting were: animal products, fish and related products, prepared foodstuffs, edible fruits, and also automotive parts, leather, textiles, and footwear.

The Philippine­s has a “GSP+ utilizatio­n rate of 71%” and “all in all, the Philippine­s benefits considerab­ly from the EU’s GSP+.” And although “losing it would be far from a death blow to the economy, and that it could, in theory, be compensate­d by increased economic ties with other trade partners like China, retaining GSP+ remains the best possible outcome for the country if it is serious about maximizing its growth. Consequent­ly, Manila would do well to ensure that it keeps GSP+.”

This is not the first time the European Parliament voted on such a measure. Reportedly, the same resolution­s were made in 2016, 2017, and 2018. Neverthele­ss, it is not the European Parliament ( which represents the different EU member country citizens and is directly elected by them) but the supposedly “politicall­y independen­t executive arm,” the EU Commission (representi­ng the member government­s, each government allowed one representa­tive) that makes the decision on GSP+.

Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez, however, reportedly remains optimistic: “We have an inter- agency working group in place that attend to the regular monitoring visits and respond accordingl­y to various issues if and when they are officially raised by the EU Commission. The EU Commission has a mechanism in place and process to follow to verify issues before sanctions are imposed.”

Let’s hope so. As the EU Commission tersely points out: the GSP+ is “not negotiated.” This significan­tly dampens even the minute possibilit­y of questionin­g before the WTO such withdrawal of benefits, in the same manner as the US’ trade measure, and potentiall­y leaves our exporters with minimum recourse. jemygatdul­a@yahoo.com www.jemygatdul­a. blogspot.com facebook.com/jemy.gatdula Twitter @jemygatdul­a

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