GD/79
Greece - Preferential Tariff Quotas to the USSR
Other titles
Greece USSR Tariff Quotas (Source: GATT Analytical Index)
Products at Issue
Products at issue |
General
|
Type of product |
Not specified
|
Product sub-type |
Related disputes
GATT | |
WTO |
Key legal aspects
Legal basis |
|
Claims raised |
|
Defences raised |
|
Adjudicators
Type | Working Party |
Chairperson | Mr. B. Meere (Australia) |
Other members | Representative of Argentina, Representative of Canada, Representative of Ceylon, Representative of Chile, Representative of EEC, Representative of Greece, Representative of Japan, Representative of Nordic Countries (Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden), Representative of United Kingdom, Representative of United States, Representative of Yugoslavia |
Type | Working Party |
Legal basis at issue |
|
Claims at issue |
|
Defences at issue |
|
No of Pages (total / legal reasoning) | 4 (and 8 annex) |
|
|
|
|
|
Timeline
Request for consultations |
|
Request for establishment | |
Establishment | |
Composition | |
Report | |
Adoption of report |
Outcome
Outcome of the proceedings |
Report adopted
|
Additional Info | SCM/W/48 (11/01/1983) SCM Committee - Negotiating History of Article 18:9 and the Treatment of Reports of Working Parties and Panels under Article XXIII of the General Agreement. Dispute listed under GATT Article XXIII complaints: "Council adopted Working Party Report on 2 December 1970 and understood that Greece would seek appropriate solution." L/3406 (23/06/1970) Request by Greece for a Waiver under Article XXV:5 (18/06/1970) L/3447 (14/10/1970) Report of the Working Party on Greek Tariff Quotas: The Working Party was established to examine the request of the Government of Greece for a waiver from its obligations under GATT Article I, in order to reduce the customs duties on certain products manufactured in, and coming from, the USSR, as specified in the Special Protocol of 13 December 1969. The representative of Greece explained that the objective of the Special Protocol was to facilitate imports of industrial products from the USSR in order that balance could be restored in the Long-Term Clearing Agreement between the two countries, which at present showed a large credit balance in favour of Greece. A continuation of this surplus would make it difficult for the USSR to maintain its purchases of agricultural products of special export interest to Greece through this clearing mechanism. Greece had not been able to find adequate markets for these products, in particular, tobacco, citrus fruits and raisins, in industrialized GATT countries and consequently had accumulated significant unsold stocks. The Working Party, with the exception of one member, expressed serious concern over the action taken by Greece, were not convinced that exceptional circumstances as required under Article XXV:5 existed, and therefore were opposed to granting of a waiver. In their view Greece had to consider terminating the Special Protocol or extending the tariff concessions on a most-favoured-nation basis, at an early date. Only one delegation was of the view that exceptional circumstances, within the meaning of Article XXV:5, existed. A large majority of the members of the Working Party did not recommend that a waiver be granted as requested by the Government of Greece. |