GATT 1994 means the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994. It is one of the core agreements of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and governs international trade in goods.
It should not be confused with GATT 1947, which was the older trade agreement before the creation of the WTO. GATT 1994 includes the original GATT 1947 rules, along with later amendments, legal instruments and understandings that became part of the WTO framework in 1995.
Background and Evolution
The original GATT 1947 was created after World War II to reduce tariffs and prevent protectionist trade policies. It was not a full international organisation, but it became the main framework for regulating trade in goods for several decades.
After the Uruguay Round negotiations, the WTO was established in 1995 through the Marrakesh Agreement. At this stage, GATT was updated and incorporated into the WTO system as GATT 1994.
The basic shift was:
| GATT 1947 | GATT 1994 |
| Pre-WTO trade agreement | WTO agreement on trade in goods |
| Mainly focused on tariffs and goods | Broader legal framework under WTO |
| Weaker institutional structure | Backed by WTO dispute settlement system |
| Applied provisionally for decades | Part of binding WTO package |
Core Principles
GATT 1994 is based on non-discrimination and tariff discipline.
The most important principle is Most-Favoured Nation treatment under Article I. It means if a country gives a trade advantage to one WTO member, the same advantage should generally be extended to all WTO members.
Another important principle is National Treatment under Article III. It means imported goods should not be treated less favourably than similar domestic goods after they enter the domestic market.
GATT also promotes tariff bindings. When a country commits to a maximum tariff rate at the WTO, it should not normally raise tariffs above that bound rate.
Important principles include:
- non-discrimination
- tariff reduction
- tariff binding
- transparency
- fair treatment of imported goods
- restriction on arbitrary trade barriers
Main Provisions
GATT 1994 deals mainly with trade in goods.
Its important provisions cover:
- customs duties
- import and export rules
- internal taxes on imported goods
- quantitative restrictions
- subsidies and countervailing duties
- anti-dumping measures
- safeguards
- freedom of transit
- publication of trade regulations
Some important GATT articles are:
| Article | Subject |
| Article I | Most-Favoured Nation treatment |
| Article II | Tariff bindings |
| Article III | National Treatment |
| Article V | Freedom of transit |
| Article XI | General elimination of quantitative restrictions |
| Article XX | General exceptions |
| Article XXI | Security exceptions |
Article XX is especially important because it allows trade restrictions for reasons such as public morals, human/animal/plant life, conservation of exhaustible natural resources and other public policy grounds, provided they are not used arbitrarily.
Relationship with WTO
GATT 1994 is one part of the WTO legal system. It applies specifically to goods trade.
The WTO framework also includes:
- GATS for services
- TRIPS for intellectual property
- Agreement on Agriculture
- SPS Agreement
- TBT Agreement
- SCM Agreement
- Anti-Dumping Agreement
- Safeguards Agreement
GATT 1994 provides the broad principles for goods trade, while these specialised agreements deal with specific areas.
For example, if a dispute concerns tariffs or discrimination in goods, GATT provisions may apply. If it concerns food safety standards, the SPS Agreement may also apply. If it concerns technical standards, the TBT Agreement may apply.
Importance for India
GATT 1994 is important for India because India is a major goods-trading country and a WTO member.
It affects India’s policies on:
- tariffs
- export restrictions
- import licensing
- food and agricultural trade
- industrial policy
- trade remedies
- public procurement-related issues
- market access
India uses GATT principles to defend its trade interests but also faces challenges when domestic policy measures are questioned by other WTO members.
For example, India’s import restrictions, export controls, tariff changes or support measures may be examined under WTO rules if they affect trade in goods.
At the same time, GATT’s exceptions are important for India because they allow policy space for health, environment, conservation, public order and national security under specific conditions.
Conclusion
GATT 1994 is the WTO’s core agreement governing trade in goods. It carries forward the older GATT 1947 system but places it within the stronger WTO legal framework.
Its importance lies in tariff discipline, non-discrimination, national treatment and rules-based trade in goods. For India, GATT 1994 is important because it shapes the legal space within which the country manages imports, exports, tariffs, industrial policy and trade disputes.



