E-commerce
This
page deals with international trade policy related
aspects of electronic commerce, in particular the WTO
Electronic Commerce Work Programme.
The
WTO Work Programme on Electronic Commerce
The
WTO began considering the implications of electronic commerce
in 1998 with the launch of the Electronic Commerce Work
Programme. This followed a decision by the Second
Ministerial Conference in Geneva in May 1998 "to examine
all trade-related issues relating to global electronic
commerce" and "the economic, financial and development
needs of developing countries". The Fourth Session of
the Ministerial Conference in Doha in 2001, noting the
progress made by the Work Programme and the importance
of creating an environment favourable to the future development
of e-commerce, agreed to its continuation.
In
consequence the General Council agreed, following Doha,
to maintain the earlier institutional arrangements for
handling the Work Programme, namely that the Councils
for Trade in Services, Trade in Goods and TRIPS, and the
Committee on Trade and Development would examine and report
on aspects of electronic commerce relevant to their respective
areas of competence with the General Council consenting
to keep this process under constant review and to consider
any cross-cutting trade related issue.
The
key cross-cutting issue has been the disagreement over
the classification, for WTO purposes, of certain products,
that is digitised products with a physical equivalent
- should they be classified as a service as the EU believes
and hence under the GATS, or as a good as the US asserts
and so under the GATT? Other cross-cutting issues include
jurisdiction and applicable law, fiscal and revenue implications,
provision of technical assistance to developing countries
and issues relating to the development of e-commerce in
general.
A
complementary decision at the 1998 Ministerial and subsequently
renewed in parallel with the work programme has been the
Customs Duty moratorium on electronic transmissions.
There
are two other relevant WTO work areas. The first is the
host of relevant negotiations on
liberalising trade in services, which are germane
to several aspects of e-commerce, in terms of services
which allow e-commerce to function better and those which
will benefit most from its application. Negotiations on
this opened in Geneva on 25 February 2000.
The
second is the question of developing the Information
Technology Agreement (ITA) under which signatories
(currently 60 accounting for over 90% of world trade in
IT products) accord duty free treatment to an agreed range
of IT products. The UK is anxious for progress to be made
on this too, in terms of widening the range of goods and
tackling non-tariff barriers.
Why
is electronic commerce important?
Electronic
commerce offers the prospect of rapid growth, especially
through the expansion of Internet services and digital
television. Growth in cross-border transaction volume
is expected to be just under 10% annually over the decade
from 1997, to a total of 4.6 billion transactions worldwide
in 2007. In 2002 the size of the total UK e-commerce
market is estimated to be £57 billion, of which £47 billion
is business to business and £ 10 billion is business to
consumers.
Electronic
commerce is revolutionising trade in many services, as
well as providing many new opportunities for trade in
conventional goods. Electronic commerce is also an important
tool for Trade Facilitation,
as well as providing substantial opportunities for public
procurement to be more transparent and efficient.
Electronic
commerce is a valuable means for all companies trading
internationally but it offers particular benefits to Small
and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs) and developing countries
by facilitating direct access to the global market.
The
UK position
The
UK has contributed substantially to the EU position on
the WTO Work Programme on Electronic Commerce.
The UK is also working closely with the EU on further
liberalisation of Trade
in Services. It is important that service sectors
necessary for e-commerce to flourish, and services which
can benefit most from the application of e-commerce, are
given priority during the negotiations. The UK believes
that e-commerce must be integrated into the multilateral
trading system as soon as possible. E-Commerce must fit
within the wider framework of multilateral trade policy
which has been developed over the last fifty years to
secure open markets - while, for example, ensuring proper
protection for Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) – and
that those rules must also be developed as necessary to
ensure that the benefits e-commerce has to offer, such
as global prosperity, can be fully realized.
The
UK believes that electronic commerce should continue to
be free of customs duties. The UK will continue to engage
in the debate as to whether all electronic commerce,
including on-line delivered products, should be classified
as services for WTO purposes. Meanwhile it should be noted
that goods delivered physically even if ordered and paid
for electronically, still remain subject to normal Customs
controls and payment of duties and taxes, as goods, governed
by the Information Technology Agreement.
Further
Information
On
19/20 June 2000, the European Council in Santa Maria da
Feira, Portugal, agreed to implement the objective set
out by the Lisbon Council of 23/24 March 2000 to draw
up a comprehensive E-Europe Action Plan. Copies of the
Action Plan "e-Europe 2002 – An information society for
all" and consequent developments are available from the
European Commission’s website.
Apart
from the WTO, the Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has
produced detailed recommendations on a number of issues
related to e-commerce such as taxation and enhancing access.
The
contribution that e-commerce can make to UK competitiveness
is fully set out in the December
1998 White Paper "Our Competitive Future – Building the
Knowledge Driven Economy" The Government’s wider strategy
on e-commerce is set out in the Performance
and Innovation Unit’s Report "E-Commerce@its.best.uk".
A strategy for delivering Government services electronically
is set out in the report "Electronic
Government Services for the 21st Century published in
September 2000". On 11 October 2001, the government
published a report "Business in the Information Age/ International
Benchmarking Study" which benchmarks the extent to which
UK businesses are using Information and Communication
Technologies (ICTs) against those in France, Germany,
Sweden, the US, Canada and Japan. It is available from
UK
online for business
For
information on security aspects, on the EU Electronic
Commerce Directive, on the EU Signatures Directive and
on the UK Electronic Commerce Act, consult the site for
the Communications
and Information Industries Directorate. For consumer
protection related aspects, consult the Departmental site
for the Consumer
Affairs Directorate. For information on the EU Data
Protection Directive see the Home
Office site or the Office
of the Data Protection Registrar.
The
first phase of the World
Summit on the Information Society took place
in Geneva 12 - 14 December 2003, in which the representatives
outlined their common desire to build a people-centered,
development-oriented Information Society and created an
action plan to achieve this objective.
For
more information about the government's overall approach
to e-commerce and e-government visit the Office
of the E-Envoy.
Contact:
John Forrest
Tel: 020 7215 4409
Fax: 020 7215 4512
Email: john.forrest@dti.gsi.gov.uk