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The WTO has agreed that 19 countries, including the US, will not impose any duties on electronic commerce

A document revealed that the U.S. and more than a dozen countries, including Japan, South Korea Singapore, and Australia, launched their own pact on Thursday to 'not impose duty' on e-commerce, after Brazil failed to reach an agreement to resolve the deadlock.

Brazil opposed an extension to a global agreement at World Trade Organization discussions.

The WTO's role in setting global trade regulations suffered another blow when it failed to renew a long-standing moratorium on duties for streaming and downloading across borders at a WTO high-level meeting in Yaounde (Cameroon) in March.

The moratorium was agreed in 1998, and has been renewed every year since. It bars the?duties for cross-border electronic transmissions, such as streaming music or films, and?downloading of software.

WTO members with large economies, including the U.S. and the European Union as well as Canada and Japan, argue that it predictability global digital trade, and wants it to be permanent.

The pact was announced on Thursday by 19 countries including the U.S.A, Japan, South Korea?, Australia, Norway, and Argentina. They agreed to not impose any duties on electronic transmissions for an unknown period.

The final text confirms that it will come into force on 8 May, while expressing disappointment over the failure of the multilateral moratorium.

The document, dated May 7, stated that "this group of members remains 'committed to doing what we can to give businesses and consumers an?amount of predictability and certainty" in the absence of a?multilateral E-Commerce moratorium.

The document invited the other parties to sign on. Reporting by Olivia Le Poidevin, Editing by Alex Richardson

(source: Reuters)