- home
- wto news
- 1996 press releases
- press release
PRESS/48
1 May 1996
WTO'S Basic Telecommunications Negotiations result in substantial offers : re-examination in early 1997
Governments participating in the Negotiations Group on Basic Telecommunications (NGBT) agreed on Tuesday to a proposition made by the WTO's Director-General to preserve the substantial offers they made for liberalizing trade in the sector and to re-examine them during a 30-day period beginning 15 January 1997.
Offers to liberalize domestic telecommunications regimes were made by 34 governments, counting the European Communities and its member states as one, during two years of talks which began in the spring of 1994. Another five governments participated in the talks but did not table offers. The talks, which focused on liberalizing a sector worth $513 billion in revenue in 1994, were initially set to conclude on 30 April 1996. They were held under the Chairmanship of Mr Neil McMillan of the United Kingdom.
Participants in the negotiations also adopted a standstill measure on Tuesday which states that up until the entry into force of the new agreement, participants shall not take measures which would be inconsistent with their undertakings resulting from these negotiations. Many participants decided to include regulatory principles in their offers. Finally it was agreed that a group on basic telecommunications reporting to the WTO's Council for Trade in Services would hold consultations on the implementation of this decision. It was decided that such a group would start work before the end of July this year.
*Governments which made offers during the negotiation include: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, C魌e d'Ivoire, Czech Republic, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, European Communities and its member states, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, India, Israel, Japan, Korea, Mauritius, Mexico, Morocco, New Zealand, Norway, Pakistan, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Singapore, Switzerland, Slovak Republic, Thailand, Turkey, United States and Venezuela. Barbados, Cuba, Cyprus, Egypt and Tunisia were participants in the talks.