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많은 웹사이트와 마찬가지로, BSA의 웹사이트는 쿠키를 사용하여 해당 웹사이트의 효율적인 기능을 보장하고 당사 사용자에게 최상의 경험을 제공합니다. 당사의 쿠키 사용법 및 귀하의 브라우저 쿠키 설정을 변경하는 법에 대한 자세한 내용은 당사의 쿠키 취급방침에서 더 알아보실 수 있습니다. 쿠키 설정을 변경하지 않고 이 사이트를 계속 이용함으로써 귀하는 당사의 쿠키 사용에 동의하시는 게 됩니다.

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JAN 31, 2024 | GLOBAL | US | INDIA | EUROPEAN UNION

BSA Leads 170 Global Business Orgs Calling for WTO E-Commerce Rule Extension

WASHINGTON – Almost 170 global business organizations joined together to urge the World Trade Organization to extend a longstanding agreement that has been a cornerstone of the digital economy.

As the WTO prepares to consider extending the 26-year-old “e-commerce moratorium” in February, signatory organizations – representing 20 industries ranging from entertainment to manufacturing to technology, and from 130 countries worldwide – sent a strong message in favor of supporting the continued agreement to prohibit customs duties on digital transmissions.

The signers wrote:

Allowing the Moratorium to expire would be a historic setback for the WTO, representing an unprecedented termination of a multilateral agreement in place nearly since the WTO’s inception – an agreement that has allowed the digital economy to take root and grow. All WTO members have a stake in the organization’s continued institutional credibility and resilience, as well as its relevance at a time of unprecedented digital transformation.

WTO member states have agreed to refrain from imposing customs duties on electronic transmissions since 1998, an agreement that must be periodically renewed. The last extension took place in 2022, and will lapse unless it is renewed or made permanent during the WTO Ministerial Conference in February.

“The WTO e-commerce moratorium is a foundation of the modern digital economy, and has empowered digitally-enabled businesses of all sizes to grow and prosper,” said Joseph Whitlock, Executive Director of the Global Data Alliance and Director, Policy at BSA | The Software Alliance. “Allowing WTO members to impose customs duties on electronic transmissions risks having a far-reaching impact on basic digital services and the many industries – ranging from manufacturers to farmers to health care innovators – that have become more digitally connected in the quarter-century since the e-commerce moratorium was first enacted.”

“Extending and making permanent the WTO e-commerce moratorium best serves the interests of India’s digital future,” said Venkatesh Krishnamoorthy, Country Manager – India, for BSA | The Software Alliance. “India has positioned its economy to take advantage of global demand for software services. Allowing the imposition of duties could endanger India’s ability to continue attracting investment in data processing activities, advanced semiconductor manufacturing, and software development. At a time when many global companies are rethinking their diverse and complex global supply chains, it would not serve India to limit its own ability to attract these investments.”

“WTO ministers face a crucial decision as avoiding customs duties on electronic transmissions is vital for global access to knowledge and economic opportunities. Maintaining the prohibition of such customs duties is not just imperative for Europe but also for our global, digitally connected markets,” said Irma Gudžiūnaitė, BSA’s Director for Policy, EMEA. “The many European and worldwide business organizations that have joined onto this statement help convey the need for a united commitment to global digital trade policies.”

As multiple industries have become more global and digitally dependent over the quarter-century since the e-commerce moratorium was first enacted, allowing the expiration of the moratorium would threaten to upend digital commerce with negative impacts for businesses of all sizes and across virtually every sector.

Signing organizations said:

As detailed by the United Nations, the World Bank, the OECD, and many other organizations, the cross-border exchange of knowledge, technical know-how, and scientific and commercial information across transnational IT networks, as well as access to digital tools and global market opportunities have helped sustain economies, expand education, and raise global living standards.

Continuation of the Moratorium is also important to supply chain resilience for manufacturing and services industries. Manufacturers – both large and small, and across a range of industrial sectors – rely on the constant flow of research, design, and process data and software to enable their production flows and supply chains for critical products.

Read the full Global: 2024 Joint Industry Letter on WTO E-Commerce Moratorium letter here.

ABOUT THE GLOBAL DATA ALLIANCE

The Global Data Alliance (globaldataalliance.org) is a cross-industry coalition of companies that are committed to high standards of data responsibility and that rely on the ability to transfer data around the world to innovate and create jobs. Alliance members are headquartered across the globe and are active in the advanced manufacturing, aerospace, automotive, consumer goods, electronics, financial services, health, media and entertainment, natural resources, supply chain, and telecommunications sectors, among others. BSA | The Software Alliance administers the Global Data Alliance.

BSA 소개

소프트웨어 연합(BSA | The Software Alliance, 이하 BSA)(www.bsa.org)은 각국 정부를 대상으로 세계 시장에서 전 세계 소프트웨어 업계를 대변하고 옹호하는 선도적 연합체입니다. 세계의 가장 혁신적 기업들이 회원사로 참여하며 경제에 활기를 불어 넣고 현대의 생활을 향상시키는 소프트웨어 솔루션을 만들어 내고 있습니다.

워싱턴 DC에 본부를 두고, 30개국이 넘는 국가들에서 운영되는 BSA는, 합법적 소프트웨어 사용을 증진시키고 기술 혁신을 촉진하며 디지털 경제의 성장을 추진하는 공공 정책을 지지하는 준법 프로그램들을 선도합니다.

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Michael O’Brien

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