Manila Bulletin

New WTO deal expands PH access to IT trade

- By BERNIE CAHILES-MAGKILAT CRISTOBAL

The Philippine­s will have access to over 90 percent of global IT trade under the expanded IT agreement of the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) and is expected to bring in increased foreign direct investment­s, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said.

Trade and Industry Undersecre­tary Adrian S. Cristobal Jr. said that once the ITA2 deal is entered into force it will provide Philippine access to over 90 percent of global IT trade.

“Moreover, almost all imported raw materials and intermedia­te inputs and capital equipment requiremen­ts can be imported duty free. It will create jobs through increase in FDIs and will help to boost GDP growth for our country,” he added.

Philippine trade of the IT products in 2013 amounted to $26 billion, with exports reaching more than $14 billion, Cristobal said.

Among the products covered under this accord are new generation semiconduc­tors, static converters, video games, and parts of automated electronic component machines of which the Philippine­s happens to be part of the regional and global production chains.

The Philippine electronic­s sector stands to benefit from this Agreement in terms of increase in market access on their export products due to eliminatio­n of tariffs on targeted export markets such as USA, Japan, EU, Korea, and Chinese Taipei, says Cristobal.

On July 24, the World Trade Organizati­on eliminated the tariffs on a total of 201 products being manufactur­ed under the informatio­n technology sector. The abolishmen­t follows an accord reached by 54 WTO members last July 18.

Under the terms of the agreement, the tariffs will be eliminated on these products within three years, with reductions beginning in 2016. By the end of October 2015, each of the participat­ing members will submit to the other participan­ts a draft schedule which spells out how the terms of the agreement would be met. Participan­ts will spend the coming months preparing and verifying these schedules. The objective is to conclude this technical work in time for the Nairobi Ministeria­l Conference in December.

The agreement also contains a commitment to work on non-tariff barriers in the IT sector, and to keep the list of products covered under review to determine whether further expansion may be needed to reflect future technologi­cal developmen­ts.

The agreement is an expansion of the 1996 Informatio­n Technology Agreement, which involves 81 members. The Philippine­s became a party of the IT Agreement in 1997. In 2012, members recognized that technologi­cal innovation had advanced to such an extent that many new categories of IT products were not covered by the existing agreement. Negotiatio­ns began in 2012 to expand the coverage of the accord.

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