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Kazakhstan admitted into WTO

July 27, 2015

Nearly two decades after it began negotiations to join the World Trade Organization (WTO), Kazakhstan has finally managed to overcome all stumbling blocks hindering its accession to the international trade body.

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Bildergalerie Großstädte aus dem Nichts Astana
Image: AFP/Getty Images/S. Filippov

The WTO's General Council on Monday formally approved Kazakhstan's bid to join the body, ending nearly two decades of membership talks the Geneva-based trade body had called among the most difficult in its history.

Once the formal ratification process is complete, expected by the end of the year, Kazakhstan will become the WTO's 162nd member.

Robert Azevedo, the WTO Director General, described the protracted Central Asian nation's accession process as "very challenging." However, he added that talks moved quickly once the government in Astana made it clear that it was finally serious about WTO membership.

Although Kazakhstan began WTO accession talks in 1996, negotiations encountered a host of problems owing to the country's backtracking on liberalizing its heavily resource-reliant economy and its membership of the Russia-led Eurasia Economic Union, among other issues.

The country's industrial output remains relatively weak, while agriculture accounts for less than 4 percent of its gross domestic product.

A more open economy?

But Kazakhstan's Economic Integration Minister Zhanar Aitzhanova told reporters in Geneva that Astana had agreed to "continue to undertake full liberalization reforms," including lowering import tariffs and encouraging foreign investment.

Nevertheless, the WTO's attempts to deepen global trade reforms have made very little progress since it was founded in 1995, but efforts to broaden its membership and sign more countries up to the existing rules have proceeded apace.

To join the trade body, a country has to agree terms bilaterally with every interested member, giving all existing WTO members an effective veto on any new membership.

It also has to bring its own laws into line with WTO rules, ensuring that trade partners can rely on it to enforce global trade disciplines, keep tariffs within agreed limits, and not protect domestic producers by discriminating unfairly against competing imports.

sri/hg (AFP, Reuters)