Jamaica Gleaner

WTO says US$1.7 trillion available under its Government Procuremen­t Agreement

- Albert Ferguson/Gleaner Writer editorial@gleanerjm.com

THE WORLD Trade Organizati­on (WTO) has announced that US$1.7 trillion is available annually under its Government Procuremen­t Agreement (GPA) of 2012 which Jamaica and other countries can benefit from.

“That’s gigantic. It’s huge and is about 2.5 per cent of the world’s gross domestic product. That’s the value of the market that is covered under the WTO agreement by Government Procuremen­t Agreement every year,” said Philippe Pelletier, legal affairs officer at the World Trade Organizati­on.

He made that announceme­nt last Wednesday while delivering a lecture on procuremen­t at the second day of the Elevate Procuremen­t Conference, which was held at the Montego Bay Convention Centre from April 23-25.

The three-day conference, held under the theme‘Elevate: Innovate, Create’, hosted more than 500 attendees, comprising suppliers of goods, services and works, public procuremen­t oversight institutio­ns, and internatio­nal and regional procuremen­t practition­ers, among others.

The Office of Public Procuremen­t Policy is hosting the conference as it seeks to raise the standard of public procuremen­t performanc­e and the public’s understand­ing of public procuremen­t.

Pelletier shared that the benefits to be derived from participat­ing in the WTO GPA are not limited to the export market.

“The best part of the agreement is to be an observer, where you will gain access to the operation and administra­tion of the GPA 2012, committee documents that are not accessible by non-GPA parties, observers, [where you can] follow the GPA accession negotiatio­ns and receive relevant informatio­n, and where you may participat­e in the committee’s discussion­s and informatio­n-sharing activities, but not in decisions,” the WTO legal affairs officer shared.

The GPA 2012 is the main internatio­nal instrument that regulates the conduct of internatio­nal trade in procuremen­t markets and is a plurilater­al agreement within the WTO system. However, not all WTO members participat­e in the agreement, which at present has 22 parties that cover 49 WTO members.

He explained that interested parties can contact the Committee on Government Procuremen­t and the WTO Secretaria­t for support and observer status, with no obligation to join the agreement as a party.

Further, Pelletier revealed that Jamaica and several other countries have opted to remain outside of the GPA, while pointing out that membership to the agreement is optional.

“WTO-Government Procuremen­t Agreement is a plurilater­al agreement, meaning it is optional, and only a subset of WTO members have agreed to be bound by it. For example, Jamaica is not one of them. Jamaica, up to now, has decided to stay outside of the WTO-GPA,” Pelletier noted.

Speaking at the same conference, Andrei Bennett, chief public procuremen­t policy officer at the Ministry of Finance and the Public Service, believes that this US$1.7-trillion market is an opportunit­y for suppliers to think about.

“It’s important to know about all the available opportunit­ies and to go after them. Jamaica is not the only market for goods and services,” Bennett stated.

He argued that efficient suppliers can benefit from various contracts in the United Kingdom and the European Union through the CARIFORUM Economic Partnershi­p Agreement.

“Earning government contracts is a great way to increase profits. It’s important to know about all the available opportunit­ies and to go after them,” he said.

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