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CCA Bulletin 34/06
Ottawa,
August 21, 2006
Trade
negotiations: the pressure on Canadian audio-visual policies
temporarily relieved
In
late July, Pascal Lamy, Director-General of the World Trade
Organization (WTO) announced
that the "Doha Round" of negotiations had been suspended indefinitely.
The Doha Round, launched in 2001, is the latest attempt by
the WTO to make progress on eliminating tariffs and easing
other barriers to international trade. The suspension covers
all WTO negotiating tables, including the General Agreement
on Trade in Services (GATS).
Concerns
have been expressed about the possible serious consequences
of a new GATS agreement for the treatment of cultural services,
including the audio-visual sector. Canada and other countries
received a request from seven countries, including the United
States and Japan, to open up motion picture production,
distribution and exhibition; promotion and advertising; and
sound recording services . This request stems from
the new "plurilateral request" negotiating protocol, a process
that WTO implemented to put more pressure on member states
to "improve" their services offers.
The
consequences for the Canadian audio-visual sector are evident.
The request seeks the elimination of content quotas, foreign
equity restrictions, nationality or residency requirements,
discriminatory tax treatment, local production or employment
requirements, and other policy measures. It also seeks to
limit the use of co-production treaties. In other words, foreign
firms would be free to set up in any market and to operate
without restrictions and government measures designed to promote
national culture and thence, cultural diversity.
Concerns have also been expressed about telecommunications
services negotiations, where Canada is one of those
seeking other countries to open up this sector. This plurilateral
requests asks others to remove all limits on foreign investment
in the domestic telecommunications sector, an interesting
development given that Canada currently maintain ownership
limits of domestic telecommunications firms on the grounds
that, with convergence, rules in telecomm, cable and broadcasting
must be equivalent.
The
suspension followed the collapse of a last ditch negotiating
session in Geneva at the end of July. The reason cited by
Mr. Lamy for the suspension was the impasse over agricultural
subsidies, the perennial bête noire of international
trade negotiations.
There
is divided opinion about what these developments mean. Clearly,
it is an admission by the WTO that a comprehensive trade deal
will not be concluded before the mid-2007 expiry of the "fast-track"
negotiating authority provided to the U.S. President, which
is essential for any deal to be approved by Congress. Some
believe negotiators will now "harvest" the commitments made
to this time and conclude the Doha Round, others believe negotiators
will merely re-focus on negotiations to conclude after the
next U.S. Presidential election. Some expect that certain
countries will push for the GATS negotiations to be resumed
separately from the Doha Round, since they were part of the
left-over matters from the previous negotiating round and
were mandated to continue at that time.
Regardless
of what happens over the next six months, the CCA will keep
a close eye on developments at the WTO to assess any possible
impact on the Canadian arts and culture sector. To date, the
Government of Canada continues to insist that it will not
negotiate culture during any international negotiations, including
at the WTO, and the CCA will work to continue to ensure that
this position is maintained.
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