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Newsletter:
November 2004 The
New EU GSP for 2006-2008
The European Commission has adopted a proposal setting out the details of the EU system of trade preferences (Generalised System of Preferences – GSP) for the period 2006-2008. This proposal builds on the guidelines issued by the Commission in July. The GSP is a key instrument to help developing countries reduce poverty by stimulating their exports to the EU. The Commission proposes to improve the current system in a number of areas: simplification; expanding the product coverage; focusing the benefits on those developing countries most in need; and setting up an additional GSP benefits ("GSP+") to encourage sustainable development. The text will now be sent to the EU Member States, European Parliament and Economic and Social Committee so that it can be adopted in time for entry into force on 1 July 2005. The Commission's proposal in detail: A Simpler GSP: the
current five GSP arrangements are reduced to three: · a general arrangement (reduction of 3.5% over the normal customs duty for sensitive products, reduction of duties to zero for non-sensitive products), · "Everything but Arms", giving duty-free and quota free access for all products for the world's 50 poorest countries; · a new "GSP+" giving tariff preferences to vulnerable countries who meet the new objective criteria for sustainable development and good governance (reduction to zero duty for a total of 7200 products) ; Countries with preferential access
to the EU market under a bilateral agreement (e.g., a free trade area) will
be removed from the list of GSP beneficiaries since they already better
access to the EU market. A new GSP incentive to
encourage sustainable development and good governance: it
is proposed to replace the three former incentive schemes by a new single
scheme– the "GSP+" - providing special benefits for vulnerable
countries (representing less than 1% of EU imports under GSP) that accept
the main international conventions on social, human rights, environmental
protection and governance, including fight against drugs. Stabilise the GSP: the
GSP will apply during three years without any changes, including graduation;
under the previous GSP system, graduation took place every year, creating
difficulties for both developing countries and EU importers. A GSP with larger
product coverage: the new basic GSP incorporates nearly 300 additional products.
A clearer, simpler,
fairer graduation process: GSP will only be withdrawn for
certain product groups for one or several countries – when these products
are competitive on the Community market and no longer need the GSP.
Graduation will be based on a simple criteria: when a group of products
("section" of the custom code) from a particular country exceed
15% of total EU imports of the same products under GSP over the last three
consecutive years. For textiles, the threshold would be 12.5%. Graduation is
not a penalty but a sign that the GSP has successfully performed its
function of triggering exports flows; and thus the GSP will better benefit
to the weakest and the most vulnerable countries; Greater flexibility on rules of origin: Regional cumulation should be enhanced to allow members of a regional group (ie ASEAN, SAARC…) to make better use of the preferences, thus promoting regional cooperation. In particular, regional cumulation should be relaxed through the elimination of the value added rule criterion. In addition, cumulation across regions will be introduced if interested countries request it (so countries from SAARC could cumulate origin from ASEAN, for example). |