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EU Unveils New Generalized System of Preferences

EU Unveils New Generalized System of Preferences

Write: Cecily [2011-05-20]

EU Member States have this afternoon backed EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson? reform of the EU? Generalised System of Preferences (GSP). Agreement by Member States, led by the Luxembourg Presidency, breaks a three month deadlock in Council that has delayed the adoption of the new preferential access system.

The reform of the GSP will make the EU? system of preferential market access for developing countries both simpler and fairer. While the new GSP system as a whole will apply from 1 January 2006, application of the GSP Plus incentive system, which grants additional preferences to vulnerable developing countries that pursue good governance and sustainable development policies, will be fast tracked to apply from 1 July 2005.

EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson said: "I am delighted with this agreement. This is our single most important trade tool for development. It will focus EU trade preferences on the countries most in need, including those hit hard by the Asian tsunami last December. The agreement reached with China on their textile exports has unlocked the previous blockage. It shows that the EU retains its economic strength and ability to project its values internationally, even amidst the most difficult internal political debates."

Through its Generalised System of Preferences the European Union extends preferential access to its markets to developing countries. The EU GSP is the most generous of all developed-country GSP systems.In 2003 EU imports under GSP totalled ?2 billion. Under the EU GSP between 1999-2003 developing countries share in total EU imports grew from 33% to 40%.

The current GSP, in place since 1995, applies to imports from developing countries that pay duty on entering the EU market and that are not already duty-free under Most Favoured Nation agreements.

The reform proposed by Commissioner Mandelson simplifies the EU GSP scheme by reducing the number of GSP arrangements from five to three. The coverage of the general GSP scheme will be extended to 300 additional products mostly in the agriculture and fishery sectors.

A new "GSP Plus" incentive scheme will be targeted at especially vulnerable countries that have ratified and effectively implemented key international conventions on sustainable development, labour rights and good governance.

It will cover around 7200 products which will enter the EU duty free. The GSP Plus incentive scheme will be fast-tracked to enter into force on a provisional basis on 1 July 2005.

The eligibility of countries placed in the GSP Plus incentive scheme will be confirmed by an assessment of their effective implementation of core human and labour rights, good governance and environmental conventions before the beginning of 2006.

The "Everything but Arms" arrangement which grants duty and quota free access for all imports except arms from least developed countries will remain unchanged.

The new system is made fairer by focusing preferential access on countries that have a lower share of EU imports. Groups of products from beneficiary cou> The new system is made fairer by focusing preferential access on countries that have a lower share of EU imports. Groups of products from beneficiary countries which in a given sector account for more than 15% of EU imports from GSP countries are "graduated" and cease to benefit from preferential access. In the case of textiles the "graduation threshold" is set at 12.5%, as it is for clothing.