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- Role of Tourism in Development
- Characteristics of Tourism
- Multilateral Approach: the WTO Agreement on Trade in Services
- WTO Negotiations on Tourism
- Bilateral and Regional Approach EPAs
- Conclusions
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- Services are the fastest growing sector of the global economy, growing
faster in services than in goods.
- In the last decade, developing countries as a group have experienced a
four-fold increase in their services exports
- Efficient services play a critical role in achieving long term
development and sustained growth
- It is often the intangible nature of services industries that results in
an underestimation of their role in development.
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- Tourism contributes an average of 50 per cent of GDP of the CARICOM
countries, in Antigua and Barbuda above 80 per cent or as little as in
Haiti below 10 per cent
- Figures on tourism are not well reflected in national statistics perhaps due to the
“intangible" nature of tourism and the wide variety of services it
covers
- Performance of the services sectors can represent the difference between
sluggish growth and rapid
growth
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- Tourism is the most important earner of
- foreign exchange in ten of the fifteen
- countries that make up CARICOM and a
- significant contributor to employment
- Over 25% of jobs is generated by tourism
- Tourism is therefore one of the most important driver of growth and
development
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- Services provide the infrastructure for all economic activities
including health, education, finance, cultural and entertainment
activities, tourism among many others
- The lack of development of an efficient services sector often results in
an inefficient utilization or an inability to exploit the natural
resources that a country may have.
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- Tourism is characterised by:
- cross-border movement of consumers (the consumer coming to the supplier)
- a highly “perishable” commodity – and
- highly dependent on
- infrastructure
- various transport services
- immigration and entry/exit control regulations
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- Tourism as a service sector under the GATS is very limited in scope
- It has four sub-sectors:
- Hotels and restaurants
- Travel agencies and tour operators’ services
- Tourist guide services
- other
- World tourism organisation SICTA* –70 specific services + 70 other
activities related
- * Standard International Classification of Tourism Activities.
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- Innovations
- Events
- Transportation
- Airports
- Hotels and accommodation
- Security
- Accessibility
- Tour Operators
- Infrastructure
- Skills
- Visas
- Shopping
- Public services
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- Transportation services
- Accommodation services
- Food and beverage services
- Travel agency services
- Recreation and entertainment services
- Tourist guide services
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- The General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) establishes a
- “multilateral framework of rules and principles for trade in services
with a view to the expansion of such trade under conditions of
transparency and progressive
liberalization, and as a means of promoting economic growth of
all trading partners and the development of developing countries”
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- Concluded as part of the Uruguay Round Agreements in 1994
- • Services sectors covered under the GATS
- • Business and Professional Services
- • Communication Services
- • Construction and related engineering services
- • Distribution
- • Education
- • Environmental Services
- • Financial Services
- • Health related and social services
- • Tourism and Travel related services
- • Recreational, cultural and sporting services
- • Transport services
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- GATS is composed of three pillars
- Framework Agreement – general obligations
- Annexes - eight
- Schedules of Specific Commitments on Market Access and National
Treatment
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- Permanent validity :
- Movement of natural persons
- Air transport
- MFN / NPF
- Telecommunications
- Financial services
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- Temporary validity :
- Financial services
- Maritime transport
- Basic telecom
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- Does not take into account other services activities such as transport,
business, distribution, and recreational services that are directly
linked to tourism services
- Proposal to expand coverage in proposed Annex on Tourism services
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- As part of preparatory process for Seattle a proposal was presented
- In 1999 Dominican Republic, Honduras and El Salvador tabled proposal
for Annex on Tourism
- The arguments for such an Annex:
- GATS definition too narrow
- GATS Article IV requirements not met
- Request-offer approach would not achieve liberalization
- New provisions for anti-competitive conduct
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- Several Members Also proposed a “tourism cluster”
- The use of clusters would allow economic linkages to be more clearly
recognised by providing a "checklist" outlining the economic
interrelations between sub-sectors and thus, contribute to increasing
the efficiency and coherence of services negotiations
- Revised Annex proposed with new cosponsors in 2001and discussed before
the Hong Kong Ministerial
- Difficulties with Annex proposal for several reasons:
- Cluster approach – pressure and possibility of negative list approach
- Too comprehensive – difficult to negotiate on a sector by sector basis
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- Commitments by Mode of Supply
- vary widely:
- Consumption abroad is most liberal
- Movement of natural persons the most restrictive
- Commercial presence and movement of natural persons are key areas for
future liberalization
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- Negotiations between the CARIFORUM and the EU started in 2004, and were
divided into four main areas:
- (i) market access (goods);
- (ii) services and investment;
- (iii) trade-related aspects and;
- (iv) legal and institutional issues.
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- The EC listed more sectors than the Caribbean countries.
- Probably the most noticeable outcome of the negotiations was:
- the inclusion of several commitments on mode 4 (movement of natural
persons), especially with respect to contractual service providers and
independent professionals.
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- The Agreement provides for development assistance in the following
areas:
- The upgrading of national accounting systems to facilitate the
introduction of Tourism Satellite Accounts;
- Capacity building for environmental management in tourism areas;
- The development of internet marketing strategies for SMEs in the tourism
sector;
- Mechanisms to ensure the effective participation of CARIFORUM States in
international sustainable tourism standard setting bodies, programmes to
achieve and ensure equivalency between national, regional and
international standards for sustainable tourism; and programmes aimed at
increasing the level of compliance with sustainable tourism standards;
- Tourism exchange programs and training, including language training for
tourism service providers.
- In addition Governments have a duty to facilitate the transfer of
technology on a commercial basis to commercial presences in the
CARIFORUM States; and facilitate the participation of SMEs in the
tourism sector.
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- Negotiations are ongoing but given the present state of the Doha
Negotiations the outcome may take on different shape
- Caribbean countries will need to define its
- negotiating interest – multilateral or regional – and act to ensure
that trade in tourism services is addressed to play a role in
sustainable development
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