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Home >  Books >  The Audiovisual Services Sector in the GATS Negotiations
The Audiovisual Services Sector in the GATS Negotiations
Print Mail
By Emmanuel Cocq, Patrick A. Messerlin, Stephen E. Siwek
Posted: Friday, March 26, 2004
The Audiovisual Services Sector in the GATS Negotiations
Dimensions: 6'' x 9''
74 pages
AEI Press and Groupe d'Economie Mondiale de Sciences Po
Publication Date: April 2004
Paperback
ISBN: 0844771724
Price: $ 15.00
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Download file The full text of this book is available in Adobe Acrobat PDF format. 

The audiovisual services sector covers a wide range of activities related to the production, distribution, and exhibition of audiovisual content such as motion pictures, radio and television programs, and sound recordings. This study addresses issues posed by recent trends and developments of trade in audiovisual services. Stephen E. Siwek examines options for meaningful trade liberalization for entertainment products in the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). He suggests the development of a wide-ranging negotiation strategy (led by the United States) in order to accelerate progress in the audiovisual sector of the GATS. Patrick A. Messerlin and Emmanuel Cocq focus on the profound economic and technological changes in importing countries, including the large European film market.

The Audiovisual Services Sector in the GATS Negotiations is part of a series of AEI studies on negotiations to liberalize trade in services. Each study focuses on a particular service sector, identifies the major obstacles to liberalization in that area, and presents policy options for trade negotiators and interested private-sector participants.

Patrick A. Messerlin is Director of Groupe d‘Economie Mondiale de Sciences Po in Paris. He has published extensively on trade policy, in particular on WTO matters and European commercial policy.

Stephen E. Siwek is a Principal with Economists Incorporated, an economic research and consulting firm in Washington, D.C. He writes and consults on international trade issues in motion pictures, television programs, and computer software.

Emmanuel Cocq is a Research Fellow at Groupe d’Economie Mondiale de Sciences Po. He received his PhD in economics at Sciences Po in Paris.



Table of Contents

Foreword, Claude Barfield
 
1. Introduction
  • Defining the Audiovisual Services Sector
  • Market Access Control in the Audiovisual Services Sector
    • Content regulations
    • Foreign ownership and control restrictions
    • Tax incentives and government subsidies
  • The Audiovisual Services Sector in the Uruguay Round
  • The Latest Negotiation Proposals
  • Maintaining a Restrictive Approach in the Audiovisual Services Sector?
  • The Issues Addressed in This Study
2. Changing Course: Meaningful Trade Liberalization for Entertainment Products in the GATS, Stephen E. Siwek
  • Commitments and MFN Exemptions in the GATS
  • Market Access and National Treatment Commitments in Audiovisual Services
  • MFN Exemptions in Audiovisual Services
  • Industry Growth and Non-U.S. Stakeholders in Audiovisual Products
  • Limitations on Market Access and National Treatment
  • Consultations on Audiovisual Subsidies
  • Eliminating MFN Exemptions While Improving Market Access
  • Cultural Discrimination and the Internet
3. Preparing Negotiations in Services: EC Audiovisuals in the Doha Round, Patrick A. Messerlin and Emmanuel Cocq
  • Introduction
  • Audiovisuals in the Doha Round: Mission Impossible?
  • Technological and Economic Changes: The Quantum Project
  • Audiovisual Services in the EC: Titanic
    • Quotas: A bout de souffle
    • Subsidies: Men in Black
  • Winners and Losers: Four Funerals and a Wedding
  • A System Slowly Losing Its Support: Titanic, Part II
  • Regulatory Reforms and Liberalization: Shakespeare in Love
    • Explaining Inertia: Citizen Kane
    • Three Proposals: Le fabuleux destin d’Amélie Poulain
  • Postscript: And the Kiwis Came
4. Conclusion
 
Notes
 
About the Authors
Available in Adobe Acrobat PDF format.
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