The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) was signed on October 30, 1947 by 23 countries, covering international trade in goods. It was a legal, free trade agreement or treaty designed to minimize barriers to international trade by reducing or eliminating tariffs, quotas, and subsidies while preserving other significant regulations.
For example, if the United States were to trade with one of the other members of the GATT, it would eliminate any fees that would typically have been imposed before the trade agreement.
GATT's goal was to boost the economy after World War II by liberalizing and reconstructing global trade. Along with restoring economic health, the treaty wanted to eliminate harmful trade protectionism, which ultimately contributed to the reduction of international trade during the Great Depression. The rules and regulations went into effect on January 1, 1948.
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The original GATT had 23 members:
By 1994, GATT membership had increased to 128 countries, covering 90% of global trade.
The overall goal of the GATT was to form rules to end or restrict the most expensive and unwanted elements of the pre-war protectionist period, which set trade barriers – like controls and quotas – on specific items. The agreement also aimed to provide a system to mediate the commercial disagreements occurring among nations. In the postwar years, the GATT was considered to be a significant success.
One of these triumphs was trade without discrimination. Every member or country of the GATT was to be treated as equal to any other. This became known as the most-favored-nation principle. When a country had negotiated a tariff cut with one country, the same amount would automatically apply to all other GATT countries.
From April 1947 to December 1993, the GATT held eight meetings and negotiations to focus on specific rules and regulations. Each time the GATT met, more countries joined. GATT has been refined since it first went into effect. These changes eventually led to the creation of the World Trade Organization (WTO) on January 1, 1995. The WTO absorbed GATT and extended it to other countries.
Today, the Council for Trade in Goods (Goods Council) is responsible for the GATT and consists of representatives from all WTO member countries.
The GATT had three main provisions. These were:
GATT provided many perks to the countries that took part, including:
The agreement of GATT paved the way for the WTO and is important to its success. While the WTO took over for the GATT, it still enforces many aspects that GATT was built on. Even though GATT is no longer in existence, it lives on as the foundation of the WTO.