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- Special treatment regarding obligations and flexibilities under WTO rules
Special treatment regarding obligations and flexibilities under WTO rules
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Thirty-five of the 45 LDCs are WTO members. Two (Comoros and Timor-Leste) have signed accession protocols and will become members of the WTO following the deposit of their respective instruments of acceptance of the protocol. Five other LDCs were in the process of acceding.
LDCs that are members of WTO benefit from special considerations in the implementation of WTO agreements. Special and differential provisions for LDCs provide flexibility in the implementation of WTO rules and respond to technical assistance needs. The table below contains a brief overview of LDC-specific provisions contained in different WTO Agreements. It excludes provisions that have already expired. Every effort has been made to ensure accuracy. The information contained herein does not replace legal texts or official policy documents. For more details, kindly refer to the WTO legal texts.
LDCs that are not members of WTO benefit from support for the accession process.
Agreement |
Provisions, related decisions and instruments |
Understanding on the Balance-of-Payments Provisions of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) |
|
Agreement on Agriculture and Decisions: |
Related:
|
Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) Measures
|
Related:
|
Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT) |
|
Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures |
|
Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) |
|
Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) |
|
Dispute settlement |
|
Trade Policy Review Mechanism |
|
In addition to special and differential treatment provisions under the WTO agreements and related decisions, there are measures to support LDCs within WTO. Discussions in the Sub-Committee on the LDCs follow the work programme for the LDCs, which covers systemic issues of interest to LDCs in the multilateral trading system. The China Programme provides support to an internship programme, annual round tables on accession-related themes, the participation of LDC coordinators in selected meetings and a South-South dialogue on LDCs and development, among other forms of support. The LDC Group benefits from the support of a dedicated resource person in the LDC Unit of the Development Division at WTO.
What happens when countries graduate?
There are few smooth transition periods for the special and differential treatment provisions under WTO agreements and related decisions. Because WTO is a member-driven organization, any new decision on transition periods to phase out flexibilities or phase in obligations require agreement among WTO members. Since 2020, the LDC Group at WTO has submitted proposals for a smooth transition mechanism for graduating LDCs under the WTO system. In February 2024, the WTO Ministerial Decision on Smooth Transition Support Measures in Favour of Countries Graduated from the LDC Category (WT/MIN(24)/34 - WT/L/1189) established that countries that graduate continue to benefit from the application of the Special Procedures Involving LDCs set out in Article 24 of the Dispute Settlement Understanding and from LDC-specific technical assistance and capacity building under WTO's Technical Assistance and Training Plan for three years after graduation. The Sub-Committee on LDCs, under the guidance of the General Council, would continue to work on the remaining provisions of the proposals. Specific attention can be sought in WTO committees regarding difficulties encountered in the implementation of any agreement. Graduated LDCs still benefit from a range of special and differential treatment provisions that apply to all developing members.
See also the
Trade-related support for LDCs
For more information
- Ex ante assessments of impacts of graduation (UNDESA) (assess impacts of no longer benefitting from LDC-specific special and differential treatment under WTO agreements)
- LDC Graduation and the WTO - Informal Note (2018)