Washington, DC: The heads of the IMF, OECD,
World Bank, and WTO today announced the launch of a Joint Subsidy Platform
(JSP) at www.subsidydata.org to
enhance transparency on the use of subsidies. The JSP is intended to
facilitate access to information on the nature, size, and economic impact
of subsidies, with a view to facilitating dialogue on their appropriate use
and design.
Following the launch of the Platform, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala (WTO), Mathias
Cormann (OECD), David Malpass (World Bank), and Kristalina Georgieva (IMF)
issued the following joint statement:
“Since we launched the joint report on
Subsidies, Trade, and International Cooperation
in April 2022,the magnitude of costly subsidies has grown
and so have tensions around their use. At the same time, a succession of
international emergencies and the growing urgency of the climate crisis
underscore that in some circumstances well-designed subsidies can have a
legitimate, albeit often only temporary, role.
“Governments that decide to use subsidies to address market failures need
to ensure that these measures are transparent, respect trade commitments,
and do not undermine policy predictability. They should not use subsidies
to provide a competitive advantage to domestic industry and should seek to
minimize the cost and distorting effects on trading partners. Doing this
effectively, however, will require building a more common understanding
across governments on the appropriate uses and design of subsidies.
“The Joint Subsidy Platform can help governments to develop such an
understanding. The first step is to improve transparency, and that is the
initial contribution of the Platform. This will be a sustained effort. We
intend to continue to develop and extend the Platform, to deepen our own
analysis, and to identify critical shortcomings in data availability and to
support high-quality analysis by others.
“By leveraging and encouraging development and disclosure of more data and
analysis, our hope is to promote stronger dialogue on subsidies among
governments, based on a more comprehensive set of subsidies data, leading to
better policies and de-escalating trade tensions.”