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U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement: Potential Economy-wide ... - USITC

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parties’ rights and obligations under the GPA. 73 The chapter would also affirm both parties’<br />

determination to apply the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Non-Binding<br />

Principles on Government Procurement for government procurement that falls outside the<br />

scope of the GPA and FTA chapter 17. 74 As a consequence, the FTA would follow the GPA<br />

provisions concerning most government procurement matters, including national treatment<br />

and market access for goods, cross-border trade in services, and financial services and<br />

investment. 75 For all government procurement covered in the FTA, chapter 17 would apply<br />

the GPA provisions concerning unlisted entities, contract valuation, national treatment and<br />

nondiscrimination, rules of origin, technical specifications, and many tendering procedures<br />

such as supplier qualification, participation, documentation, awards, limited tendering,<br />

offsets, and challenge procedures. 76 The FTA would incorporate the GPA articles covering<br />

such subjects, as well as the GPA notes and appendices, including GPA rules governing<br />

technical specifications to promote the conservation of natural resources or to protect the<br />

environment. 77<br />

Chapter 17 would further address the use of electronic means for conducting government<br />

procurement covered under the FTA, and clarify the GPA provisions on contract valuation<br />

to include the estimated maximum total value of the procurement over its entire duration,<br />

including all forms of fees, commissions, premiums, or other revenue streams that the<br />

procurement may generate. 78 The chapter provisions also aim to ensure that suppliers may<br />

qualify and participate in a procurement tender less on narrowly drawn criteria—such as<br />

previously awarded procurement contracts or previous work undertaken in <strong>Korea</strong>—and more<br />

on principles aimed at allowing broader participation. 79<br />

The chapter provisions would require notice of intended procurement in the appropriate<br />

electronic medium, and would require that sufficient, common periods be provided, taking<br />

into account issues such as the complexity of the procurement, the likely extent of<br />

subcontracting required, and time to transmit tenders from foreign locations when electronic<br />

means are not used. 80 A number of minimum tender periods are set out in the chapter that<br />

depend on various factors such as procurement in urgent situations or selective procurement,<br />

but in no case can the period for tendering be less than 10 days from published notice of an<br />

intended procurement to final date for tender submission, with periods usually ranging from<br />

35 to 40 days. 81<br />

The agreement would provide for consultations and possible compensatory adjustments if<br />

modifications are made to the coverage under the chapter’s annex. 82 The chapter also<br />

establishes a Working Group on Government Procurement that would meet to consider<br />

issues regarding government procurement and to exchange information. 83<br />

73 Ibid., Article 17.1.<br />

74 Ibid., Article 17.1.<br />

75 Ibid., Article 17.2.<br />

76 Ibid., Article 17.3.<br />

77 Ibid., Article 17.3 and Article 17.7.<br />

78 Ibid., Article 17.4.<br />

79 Ibid., Article 17.5.<br />

80 Ibid., Article 17.6.<br />

81 Ibid., Article 17.8.<br />

82 Ibid., Article 17.9.<br />

83 Ibid., Article 17.10.<br />

D-24

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