http://www.wto.org/english/docs_e/legal_e/ursum_e.htm#kAgreement
Agreement on Subsidies and
Countervailing Measures
The Agreement on Subsidies and
Countervailing Measures is intended to build on the Agreement on Interpretation
and Application of Articles VI, XVI and XXIII which was negotiated in the Tokyo
Round.
Unlike its predecessor, the
agreement contains a definition of subsidy and introduces the concept of a “specific” subsidy —
for the most part, a subsidy available only to an enterprise or industry or
group of enterprises or industries within the jurisdiction of the authority
granting the subsidy. Only specific subsidies would be subject to the
disciplines set out in the agreement.
The agreement establishes three categories of subsidies.
First, it deems the following subsidies to be “prohibited”: those contingent, in law or in fact, whether
solely or as one of several other conditions, upon export performance;
and those contingent, whether solely or as one of several other conditions, upon the use of domestic over
imported goods. Prohibited subsidies are subject to new dispute
settlement procedures. The main features include an expedited timetable for
action by the Dispute Settlement body, and if it is found that the subsidy is
indeed prohibited, it must be immediately withdrawn. If this is not done within
the specified time period, the complaining member is authorized to take
countermeasures. (See the section on “Dispute Settlement” for details on the
procedures).
The second category is “actionable” subsidies.
The agreement stipulates that no member should cause, through the use of subsidies, adverse
effects to the interests of other signatories, i.e. injury to
domestic industry of another signatory, nullification or impairment of benefits
accruing directly or indirectly to other signatories under the General
Agreement (in particular the benefits of bound tariff concessions), and serious
prejudice to the interests of another member. “Serious prejudice” shall be
presumed to exist for certain subsidies including when the total ad valorem
subsidization of a product exceeds 5 per cent. In such a situation, the burden
of proof is on the subsidizing member to show that the subsidies in question do
not cause serious prejudice to the complaining member. Members affected by
actionable subsidies may refer the matter to the Dispute Settlement body. In
the event that it is determined that such adverse effects exist, the subsidizing
member must withdraw the subsidy or remove the adverse effects.
The third category involves non-actionable subsidies,
which could either be non-specific subsidies, or specific subsidies
involving assistance to industrial
research and pre-competitive development activity, assistance to disadvantaged
regions, or certain type of assistance for adapting existing facilities
to new environmental
requirements imposed by law and/or regulations. Where another member
believes that an otherwise non-actionable subsidy is resulting in serious
adverse effects to a domestic industry, it may seek a determination and
recommendation on the matter.
One part of the agreement
concerns the use of countervailing measures on subsidized imported goods. It
sets out disciplines on the initiation of countervailing cases, investigations
by national authorities and rules of evidence to ensure that all interested
parties can present information and argument. Certain disciplines on the
calculation of the amount of a subsidy are outlined as is the basis for the
determination of injury to the domestic industry. The agreement would require
that all relevant economic factors be taken into account in assessing the state
of the industry and that a causal link be established between the subsidized
imports and the alleged injury. Countervailing investigations
shall be terminated immediately in cases where the amount of a subsidy is de
minimis (the subsidy is less than 1 per cent ad valorem) or
where the volume of subsidized imports, actual or potential, or the injury is
negligible. Except under exceptional circumstances, investigations shall be
concluded within one year after their initiation and in no case more than 18
months. All countervailing duties have to be terminated within 5 years of their
imposition unless the authorities determine on the basis of a review that the
expiry of the duty would be likely to lead to continuation or recurrence of
subsidization and injury.
The agreement recognizes that subsidies may play an important role in
economic development programmes of developing countries, and in the
transformation of centrally-planned economies to market economies.
Least-developed countries and developing countries that have less than $1,000
per capita GNP are thus exempted from disciplines on prohibited export
subsidies, and have a time-bound exemption from other prohibited subsidies. For
other developing countries, the export subsidy prohibition would take effect 8
years after the entry into force of the agreement establishing the WTO, and
they have a time-bound (though fewer years than for poorer developing
countries) exemption from the other prohibited subsidies. Countervailing
investigation of a product originating from a developing-country member would
be terminated if the overall level of subsidies does not exceed 2 per cent (and
from certain developing countries 3 per cent) of the value of the product, or
if the volume of the subsidized imports represents less than 4 per cent of the
total imports for the like product in the importing signatory. For countries in
the process of transformation from a centrally-planned into a market economy,
prohibited subsidies shall be phased out within a period of seven years from
the date of entry into force of the agreement.
In anticipation of the
negotiation of special rules in the civil aircraft sector, under the
subsidies agreement, civil aircraft products are not subject to the presumption
that ad valorem subsidization in excess of 5 per cent causes serious
prejudice to the interests of other Members. In addition, the Agreement
provides that where repayment of financing in the civil aircraft sector is
dependent on the level of sales of a product and sales fall below expectations,
this does not in itself give rise to such presumption of serious prejudice.