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> About the WTO —
‘Understanding the WTO’
> The WTO in
Brief |

The WTO provides a forum for negotiating agreements aimed at reducing
obstacles to international trade and ensuring a level playing field for all,
thus contributing to economic growth and development. The WTO also provides
a legal and institutional framework for the implementation and monitoring of
these agreements, as well as for settling disputes arising from their
interpretation and application. The current body of trade agreements
comprising the WTO consists of 16 different multilateral agreements (to
which all WTO members are parties) and two different plurilateral agreements
(to which only some WTO members are parties).
Over the past 60 years, the WTO, which was established in 1995, and its
predecessor organization the GATT have helped to create a strong and
prosperous international trading system, thereby contributing to
unprecedented global economic growth. The WTO currently has
members, of which 117 are developing countries or separate customs territories. WTO
activities are supported by a Secretariat of some 700 staff, led by the WTO
Director-General. The Secretariat is located in Geneva, Switzerland, and has
an annual budget of approximately CHF 200 million ($180 million,
€130 million). The three official languages of the WTO are English, French
and Spanish.
Decisions in the WTO are generally taken by consensus of the entire
membership. The highest institutional body is the
Ministerial Conference,
which meets roughly every two years. A
General Council conducts the
organization's business in the intervals between Ministerial Conferences.
Both of these bodies comprise all members. Specialised subsidiary bodies
(Councils, Committees, Sub-committees), also comprising all members,
administer and monitor the implementation by members of the various WTO
agreements.
More specifically, the WTO's main activities are:
— negotiating the reduction or elimination of obstacles to trade (import
tariffs, other barriers to trade) and agreeing on rules governing the
conduct of international trade (e.g. antidumping, subsidies, product
standards, etc.)
— administering and monitoring the application of the WTO's agreed rules for
trade in goods, trade in services, and trade-related intellectual property
rights
— monitoring and reviewing the trade policies of our members, as well as
ensuring transparency of regional and bilateral trade agreements
— settling disputes among our members regarding the interpretation and
application of the agreements
— building capacity of developing country government officials in
international trade matters
— assisting the process of accession of some 30 countries who are not yet
members of the organization
— conducting economic research and collecting and disseminating trade data
in support of the WTO's other main activities
— explaining to and educating the public about the WTO, its mission and its
activities.
The WTO's founding and guiding principles remain the pursuit of open
borders, the guarantee of most-favoured-nation principle and
non-discriminatory treatment by and among members, and a commitment to
transparency in the conduct of its activities. The opening of national
markets to international trade, with justifiable exceptions or with adequate
flexibilities, will encourage and contribute to sustainable development,
raise people's welfare, reduce poverty, and foster peace and stability. At
the same time, such market opening must be accompanied by sound domestic and
international policies that contribute to economic growth and development
according to each member's needs and aspirations.
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