The AITIC Non-Residents' Unit for members and observers of the WTO
The purpose of this AITIC brochure is to introduce its Non-Residents' Unit, created in October 2000 with the purpose of developing assistance targeted at members and observers of the WTO lacking the necessary means to establish and maintain permanent trade representation in Geneva.
AITIC was created in 1998 by the Swiss government in order to assist the less-advantaged countries (LACs) to benefit from the multilateral trading system, in particular by helping them to participate more actively in the work and negotiating activities of the WTO and other international trade-related organisations based in Geneva, especially UNCTAD and the ITC. The LACs are the 50 least-developed countries as defined by the United Nations, some low income developing countries and some economies in transition. These countries face structural and institutional constraints and have not been active in the multilateral trading system.
AITIC provides three main types of assistance to LACs. First it prepares Background Notes on key WTO issues. Second it organises training workshops on topics about which delegates from these countries wish to be better informed. Finally, it provides free and continuous personalised assistance to officials from LACs who are involved in WTO activities and negotiate on a day-to-day basis. The latter is probably the most original aspect of the support provided by AITIC: LACs' needs differ, sometimes markedly, and thus assistance ought to be tailored to the specific beneficiary and its particular interests.
From its inception, AITIC has been keenly aware of the fact that some delegates from LACs are peripheral to the multilateral trading system and therefore need more sustained assistance. At present, 31 of the 145 members (of which 25 are members and 9 are observers) of the WTO do not have a permanent Mission in Geneva. The officials from these countries trying to monitor WTO issues are therefore at a significant disadvantage in terms of access to information and their ability to influence the decision-making process.
After twenty months of constant work with the non-residents, AITIC became aware of their pressing needs. To contribute to enhancing their presence in Geneva, AITIC decided to establish a permanent facility to cater for their specific requirements. In consequence, and with the assistance of the Swiss authorities, it established a Non-Residents' Unit in October 2000.
The salient features of the AITIC Non-Residents' Unit are described in this brochure.
II. Functions and Activities
In the post-Doha period and in view of the new negotiations of the Doha Work Programme, the needs of the non-residents have become more acute. In this connection, AITIC's different forms of assistance to the non-residents will keep the negotiating priorities at the centre of its various functions and activities of the Non-Residents' Unit, which are as follows:
● Analytical
- to draw up a list of the specific needs of every non-resident;
- to draw up a list of assistance priorities for every non-resident;
- to institute a mechanism, an " Early Warning System", making it possible to identify swiftly the most pressing issues at stake for every non-resident;
- to institute a procedure to evaluate the assistance provided.
● Assistance
- to liaise with a "Contact Point" established with the officials handling WTO matters in the capital of each non-resident or in the accredited mission outside Geneva;
- to communicate regularly with the Contact Point (telephone, e-mail, fax, mail, personal visits, etc.) in order to keep up to date with WTO activities and to enable assistance to be reoriented quickly if necessary;
- to continue to develop the "typical" AITIC activities of personalised assistance for non-residents, particularly by means of regular visits, especially to Brussels;
- to inform non-residents on assistance provided by the trade-related agencies in Geneva or elsewhere;
- to collaborate with the trade-related agencies or regional secretariats (Commonwealth Secretariat; ACP Antenna) assisting non-residents;
- to continue supplying non-residents with Background Notes and targeted analyses of the various areas of activity of the WTO;
- to select those documents of greatest importance and topical interest to non-residents, to provide summaries and translations of the most significant papers quickly.
● Logistics
- to provide temporary offices, meeting rooms, secretarial services and Internet access, etc., to non-resident officials attending meetings in Geneva;
- to provide access to AITIC's reference centre;
- to facilitate the establishment of permanent missions in Geneva by acting as a 'transition facility'.
III. Early Warning System
The Early Warning System is one of the fundamental operational mechanisms of the Non-Residents' Unit. The concept emerged from informal discussions with the representatives of the non-residents and covers the following points:
● determining the key external trade sector(s) for each non-resident;
● monitoring from Geneva the WTO meetings relating to these sectors;
● keeping non-residents informed prior to and following each meeting;
● advising non-residents as early as possible of the orientation of WTO discussions directly related to these key sectors, to enable the former to intervene before critical decisions are taken in their absence;
● facilitating the presence of representatives from non-residents at WTO meetings of importance to them.
IV. Partners
The partners of the Non-Residents' Unit are clearly identified and of two types:
● the beneficiaries, who are the 31 Member countries and observers of the WTO without permanent Missions in Geneva and some regional trade and economic resident and non-resident organisations such as Commonwealth Secretariat, SIECA, ACP Antenna;
● the donors and financial backers who are either States or organisations. At present, the Swiss government is the largest contributor to AITIC, although organisations such as the WTO, UNCTAD, the World Bank, the World Customs Organization and the private sector, Société Générale de Surveillance, or private law firms have made a variety of contributions.
Collaboration with other organisations
In 2002, AITIC formalised its collaboration with UNCTAD and the Agence intergouvernementale de la Francophonie (AIF). A Memorandum of Understanding with UNCTAD was signed to support the trade negotiating capacity of the developing countries and economies in transition, particularly the least-developed and those that are not represented in Geneva. With the AIF a Memorandum of Agreement was concluded through which the AIF would finance a Francophone international trade expert to assist the non-resident LDCs and to finance part of AITIC's translation activities.
V.The Future
Following the signature of the AITIC Initiative on Trade Related Capacity Building and Greater Participation in the International Trading System at the WTO's Doha Ministerial Conference, alternative approaches to funding are currently being investigated. The Initiative set up a Task Force to explore the feasibility of transforming AITIC into an intergovernmental organisation.
VI. List of Non-Resident members and observers of the WTO (March 2004)