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The multilateral trade system has secured worldwide
economic growth and opportunities for Americans that
have contributed to our own economic success.
The multilateral trading system historically has been
one of the most significant catalysts for worldwide
economic growth.
- In the half century following the creation of the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), global
trade has expanded more than 14-fold, fueling a six-fold
rise in world gross domestic product.
- Since 1950, countries that have liberalized their
trade rules have experi-enced annual growth rates
that were, on average, 1.5 percent higher than the
preliberalization growth rate in each country.
- Exports, which accounted for only 8 percent of
worldwide production in 1950, garner a 26 percent
share today.
The World Trade Organization (WTO) agreements, established
by the Uruguay Round of trade negotia-tions, have generated
new opportunities for American workers, farmers and
businesses.
- The Uruguay Round, the eighth and most recent round
of world trade negotiations, was completed in 1994
and required a one-third reduction in foreign tariffs
on manufactured products, bringing manufactured good
tariffs to their lowest rates in history.
- WTO rules expanded export opportunities for U.S.
agricultural products by reducing tariffs, quotas,
subsidies and a variety of other government restrictions
that acted as barriers to foreign markets.
- The Uruguay Round widened foreign market access
for U.S. service providers. As the world’s leader
in trade in several services, the United States especially
has benefited from increased openness in sectors such
as computer services, telecommunications and finance.
In 2003, the United States enjoyed a surplus of services
exports (over imports) of $59.4 billion.
- The WTO’s new rules established protections to
safeguard one of America’s most indispensable assets
— our new ideas. Intellectual property rights protections
ensure U.S. drug producers are able to profitably
research new lifesaving drugs, U.S. artists are fairly
compensated for their work and U.S. software developers
are rewarded for producing new innovations.
- The Uruguay Round also established an effective
set of rules for the prompt settlement of disputes
among WTO members, which hold countries accountable
for meeting their obligations.
The new trade rules developed in the Uruguay Round
have contributed to U.S. economic success.
- The U.S. Trade Representative estimates that since
the conclusion of the Uruguay Round of international
trade negotiations in 1994, American exports of goods
and services have grown by more than $300 billion
as a result of lowered trade barriers.
- The resulting gains from trade of the Uruguay Round
and the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
have increased the annual income of an average American
family by $1,000 to $1,300.
Congress and the president must build upon this remark-able
history of success and improve U.S. prosperity in the
worldwide economy by reaffirming America’s participation
and leadership in WTO.

Robert B. Zoellick, “Committed in Cancun,” Wall
Street Journal, September 8, 2003.
Romain Wacziarg and Karen Horn Welch, “Trade Liberalization
and Growth: New Evidence,” Stanford Research Paper
No. 1826, 28, November 2003.
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis,
“U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services,”
Exhibit 1, March 10, 2004.
Ibid, Office of the United States Trade Representative,
“America and the
World Trade Organization.” World Trade Organization,
“The Multilateral Trading System: 50 Years of Achievement,”
1998.
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