NTMs - Non-
tariff measures such as quotas, import licensing systems,
sanitaryregulations, prohibitions, etc.
price
undertaking - Undertaking by an exporter to raise the export price of the product to avoid the possibility of an anti-dumping duty.
PSI - Pre
shipmentinspection - the practice of employing specialized private companies to check
shipment details of goods ordered
overseas - i.e. price, quantity, quality, etc.
QRs - Quantitative
restrictions -
specific limits on the quantity or value of goods that can be imported (or exported) during a
specific time period. rules of origin - Laws,
regulations and
administrative procedures which determine a product's country of origin. A decision by a customs authority on origin can determine whether a
shipment falls within a quota
limitation, qualifies for a
tariffpreference or is
affected by an anti-dumping duty. These rules can vary from country to country.
safeguard measures - Action taken to protect a
specific industry from an
unexpected build-up of imports - governed by Article XIX of the GATT 1994.
subsidy - There are two general types of subsidies: export and domestic. An export subsidy is a benefit conferred on a firm by the government that is contingent on exports. A domestic subsidy is a benefit not directly linked to exports.
tariffication - Procedures relating to the agricultural market-
access provision in which all non-
tariff measures are converted into
tariffs.
trade facilitation - Removing obstacles to the movement of goods across borders (e.g. simplification of customs procedures).
VRA, VER, OMA - Voluntary
restraint" title="n.抑制;管束;克制">
restraint arrangement,
voluntary export
restraint" title="n.抑制;管束;克制">
restraint, orderly marketing arrangement. Bilateral arrangements
whereby an exporting country (government or industry) agrees to reduce or
restrict exports without the importing country having to make use of quotas,
tariffs or other import controls.
Textiles and clothing
ATC - The WTO Agreement on Textiles and Clothing which integrates trade in this sector back to GATT rules within a ten-year period.
carry forward - When an exporting country uses part of the following year's quota during the current year.
carry over - When an exporting country utilizes the previous year's unutilized quota.
circumvention - Avoiding quotas and other
restrictions by altering the country of origin of a product.
CTG - Council for Trade in Goods - oversees WTO agreements on goods, including the ATC.
integration programme - The phasing out of MFA
restrictions in four stages starting on 1 January
1995 and
ending on 1 January 2005.
ITCB - International Textiles and Clothing Bureau - Geneva-based group of some 20 developing country exporters of
textiles and clothing.
MFA - Multifibre Arrangement (1974-94) under which countries whose markets are disrupted by increased imports of
textiles and clothing from another country were able to
negotiate quota
restrictions.
swing - When an exporting country transfers part of a quota from one product to another
restrained product.
TMB - The Textiles Monitoring Body, consisting of a chairman plus ten members acting in a personal capacity, oversees the implementation of ATC commitments.
transitional
safeguardmechanism - Allows members to impose
restrictions against individual exporting countries if the importing country can show that both overall imports of a product and imports from the individual countries are entering the country in such increased quantities as to cause - or threaten - serious damage to the
relevant domestic industry.
Agriculture/SPS
Agenda 2000 - EC's financial reform plans for 2000?06 aimed at strengthening the union with a view to receiving new members. Includes reform of the CAP (see below).
border protection - Any measure which acts to
restrain imports at point of entry.
BSE - Bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or "mad cow disease".
box - Category of domestic support. - Green box: supports considered not to
distort trade and therefore permitted with no limits. - Blue box: permitted supports linked to production, but subject to production limits and therefore minimally trade-
distorting. - Amber box: supports considered to
distort trade and therefore subject to reduction commitments.
Cairns Group - Group of agricultural exporting nations lobbying for agricultural trade liberalization. It was formed in 1986 in Cairns, Australia just before the beginning of the Uruguay Round. Current
membership: Argentina, Australia, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, Paraguay, Philippines, South Africa, Thailand and Uruguay.
CAP - Common Agricultural Policy - The EU's
comprehensive system of production
targets and marketing
mechanisms designed to manage agricultural trade within the EU and with the rest of the world.
Codex Alimentarius - FAO/WHO
commission that deals with international standards on food safety.
distortion - When prices and production are higher or lower than levels that would usually exist in a
competitive market.
deficiency payment - Paid by governments to
producers of certain commodities and based on the difference between a
target price and the domestic market price or loan rate,
whichever is the less.
EEP - Export enhancement programme - programme of US export subsidies given generally to compete with subsidized agricultural exports from the EU on certain export markets.
food security - Concept which discourages opening the domestic market to foreign agricultural products on the principle that a country must be as self-sufficient as possible for its basic dietary needs.
internal support - Encompasses any measure which acts to maintain
producer prices at levels above those
prevailing in international trade; direct payments to
producers, including
deficiency payments, and input and marketing cost reduction measures available only for agricultural production.
International Office of Epizootics - Deals with international standards
concerning animal health.
multifunctionality - Idea that agriculture has many functions in addition to producing food and fibre, e.g.
environmental protection,
landscapepreservation, rural employment, etc. See non-trade concerns.
non-trade concerns - Similar to multifunctionality. The preamble of the Agriculture Agreement specifies food security and
environmental protection as examples. Also cited by members are rural development and employment, and poverty alleviation.
peace
clause - Provision in Article 13 of the Agriculture Agreement says agricultural subsidies committed under the agreement cannot be challenged under other WTO agreements, in particular the Subsidies Agreement and GATT. Expires at the end of 2003.
reform process/program - The Uruguay Round Agriculture Agreement starts a reform process. It sets out a first step, in the process, i.e. a program for reducing subsidies and protection and other reforms. Current
negotiations launched under Article 20 are for continuing the reform process.
SPS
regulations - Sanitary and Phyto
sanitaryregulations - government standards to protect human, animal and plant life and health, to help ensure that food is safe for
consumption.
variable levy - Customs duty rate which varies in
response to domestic price criterion.
Intellectual property
Berne Convention - Treaty, administered by WIPO, for the protection of the rights of authors in their literary and
artistic works.
CBD - Convention on Biological Diversity.
compulsory licensing - For patents: when the authorities license companies or individuals other than the patent owner to use the rights of the patent - to make, use, sell or import a product under patent (i.e. a patented product or a product made by a patented process) - without the permission of the patent owner. Allowed under the TRIPS Agreement provided certain procedures and conditions are fulfilled. See also government use.
counterfeit - Unauthorized
representation of a registered trademark carried on goods
identical or similar to goods for which the trademark is registered, with a view to deceiving the
purchaser into believing that he/she is buying the original goods.
exhaustion - The principle that once a product has been sold on a market, the
intellectual property owner no longer has any rights over it. (A debate among WTO member governments is whether this applies to products put on the market under
compulsory licences.) Countries' laws vary as to whether the right continues to be exhausted if the product is imported from one market into another, which affects the owner's rights over trade in the protected product. See also parallel imports.
geographical indications - Place names (or words associated with a place) used to identify products (for example, "Champagne", "Tequila" or "Roquefort") which have a particular quality,
reputation or other
characteristic because they come from that place
government use - For patents: when the government itself uses or authorizes other persons to use the rights over a patented product or process, for government purposes, without the permission of the patent owner. See also
compulsory licensing.
intellectual property rights - Ownership of ideas, including literary and
artistic works (protected by
copyright), inventions (protected by patents), signs for distinguishing goods of an enterprise (protected by trademarks) and other elements of industrial property.
IPRs - Intellectual property rights.
Lisbon Agreement - Treaty, administered by WIPO, for the protection of
geographical indications and their international registration.
Madrid Agreement - Treaty, administered by WIPO, for the repression of false or deceptive indications of source on goods.
mailbox - Refers to the
requirement of the TRIPS Agreement applying to WTO members which do not yet provide product patent protection for pharmaceuticals and for agricultural chemicals. Since 1 January 1995, when the WTO agreements entered into force, these countries have to establish a means by which applications of patents for these products can be filed. (An additional
requirement says they must also put in place a system for granting "exclusive marketing rights" for the products whose patent applications have been filed.)
parallel imports - When a product made
legally (i.e. not pirated) abroad is imported without the permission of the
intellectual property right-holder (e.g. the trademark or patent owner). Some countries allow this, others do not.
Paris Convention - Treaty, administered by WIPO, for the protection of industrial
intellectual property, i.e. patents,
utility models, industrial designs, etc.
piracy - Unauthorized copying of materials protected by
intellectual property rights (such as
copyright, trademarks, patents,
geographical indications, etc) for commercial purposes and unauthorized commercial
dealing in copied materials.
Rome Convention - Treaty, administered by WIPO, UNESCO and ILO, for the protection of the works of performers, broadcasting organizations and
producers of phonograms.
TRIPS - Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights.
UPOV - International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants
Washington Treaty - Treaty for the protection of
intellectual property in respect of lay-out designs of integrated circuits.
WIPO - World Intellectual Property Organization.
Investment
export-performance measure - Requirement that a certain quantity of production must be exported.
FDI - Foreign direct investment.
local-content measure - Requirement that the
investor purchase a certain amount of local materials for incorporation in the
investor's product.
product-mandating - Requirement that the
investor export to certain countries or region.
trade-balancing measure - Requirement that the
investor use
earnings from exports to pay for imports.
TRIMS - Trade-related investment measures.
Dispute settlement
Appellate Body - An independent seven-person body that, upon request by one or more parties to the dispute, reviews findings in panel reports.
automaticity - The "automatic" chronological progression for settling trade disputes in regard to panel establishment, terms of reference,
composition and
adoption procedures.
DSB - Dispute Settlement Body - when the WTO General Council meets to settle trade disputes.
DSU - The Uruguay Round Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes.
nullification and impairment - Damage to a country's benefits and expectations from its WTO
membership through another country's change in its trade
regime or failure to carry out its WTO
obligations.
panel - Consisting of three experts, this independent body is established by the DSB to examine and issue recommendations on a particular dispute in the light of WTO provisions.
Services
accounting rate - In telecoms, the charge made by one country's telephone
network operator for calls originating in another country.
commercial presence - Having an office, branch, or subsidiary in a foreign country.
GATS - The WTO's General Agreement on Trade in Services.
general obligations - Obligations which should be
applied to all services sector at the entry into force of the agreement.
Initial commitments - Trade liberalizing commitments in services which members are prepared to make early on.
modes of
delivery - How international trade in services is supplied and consumed. Mode 1: cross border supply; mode 2:
consumption abroad; mode 3: foreign commercial presence; and mode 4: movement of natural persons.
multi-modal - Transportation using more than one mode. In the GATS
negotiations,
essentially door-to-door services that include international shipping.
national schedules - The
equivalent of
tariff schedules in GATT, laying down the commitments accepted - voluntarily or through
negotiation - by WTO members.
natural persons - People, as distinct from juridical persons such as companies and organizations.
offer - A country's proposal for further liberalization.
protocols - Additional agreements attached to the GATS. The Second Protocol deals with the 1995 commitments on financial services. The Third Protocol deals with movement of natural persons.
prudence, prudential - In financial services, terms used to describe an
objective of market
regulation by authorities to protect
investors and depositors, to avoid instability or crises.
schedule - "Schedule of Specific Commitments" - A WTO member's list of commitments
regarding market
access and
bindings
regarding national treatment.
specific commitments - See "schedule".
Regionalism/trade and development
ACP - African, Caribbean and Pacific countries. Group of 71 countries with preferential trading relation with the EU under the former Lom? Treaty now called the Cotonou Agreement.
Andean Community - Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela.
APEC - Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum.
ASEAN - Association of Southeast Asian Nations. The seven ASEAN members of the WTO - Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand - often speak in the WTO as one group on general issues. The other ASEAN members are Laos and Vietnam.
Caricom - The Caribbean Community and Common Market comprises 15 countries.
CTD - The WTO Committee on Trade and Development
Customs union - Members apply a common
externaltariff (e.g. the EC).
EC - European Communities (official name of the European Union in the WTO).
EFTA - European Free Trade Association.
free trade area - Trade within the group is duty free but members set own
tariffs on imports from non-members (e.g. NAFTA).
G15 - Group of 15 developing countries acting as the main political organ for the Non-Aligned Movement.
G77 - Group of developing countries set up in 1964 at the end of the first UNCTAD (
originally 77, but now more than 130 countries).
G7 - Group of seven leading industrial countries: Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, United Kingdom, United States.
GRULAC - Informal group of Latin-American members of the WTO.
GSP - Generalized System of Preferences - programmes by developed countries granting preferential
tariffs to imports from developing countries.
HLM - WTO High-Level Meeting for LDCs, held in October 1997 in Geneva.
ITC - The International Trade Centre,
originally established by the old GATT and is now operated jointly by the WTO and the UN, the latter acting through UNCTAD. Focal point for
technical cooperation on trade
promotion of developing countries.
LDCs - Least-developed countries.
MERCOSUR - Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay.
NAFTA - North American Free Trade Agreement of Canada, Mexico and the US.
Quad - Canada, EC, Japan and the United States.
SACU - Southern African Customs Union comprising Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, South Africa and Swaziland.
S&D - "Special and differential treatment" provisions for developing countries. Contained in several WTO agreements.
UNCITRAL - United Nations Centre for International Trade Law, drafts model laws such as the one on government procurement.
UNCTAD - The UN Conference on Trade and Development.
Trade and
environmentAgenda 21 - The Agenda for the 21st Century - a
declaration from the 1992 Earth Summit (UN Conference on the Environment and Development) held in Rio de Janeiro.
Article XX - GATT Article listing allowed "exceptions" to the trade rules.
Basel Convention - An MEA
dealing with
hazardous waste.
BTA - Border tax adjustment
CITES - Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species. An MEA.
CTE - The WTO Committee on Trade and Environment.
EST - Environmentally-sound technology.
EST&P - EST and products.
ex ante, ex post - Before and after a measure is
applied.
LCA - Life cycle analysis - a method of assessing whether a good or service is
environmentally friendly.
MEA - Multilateral
environmental agreement.
Montreal Protocol - An MEA
dealing with the depletion of the earth's ozone layer.
PPM - Process and production method.
TBT - The WTO Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade.
waiver - Permission granted by WTO members allowing a WTO member not to
comply with normal commitments. Waivers have time limits and extensions have to be justified.
关键字:
口译考试生词表: