Federal Policy
USTR Advances WTO Reform at Yaoundé Summit
March 24, 2026
The United States Trade Representative (USTR) is actively preparing to engage in the upcoming World Trade Organization (WTO) summit in Yaoundé, Cameroon, signaling a renewed U.S. commitment to multilateral trade cooperation and WTO reform. This shift marks a departure from previous administration policies that challenged the WTO's role. USTR leadership, including Deputy U.S. Trade Representative Rick Switzer, is advocating for key reforms such as a permanent moratorium on e-commerce tariffs to protect U.S. technology sector interests. Concurrently, the European Parliament urges adherence to existing EU-U.S. trade agreements to ensure stability in transatlantic trade relations.
- Why this matters: WTO reform efforts may influence international procurement policies, trade agreement enforcement, and tariff structures affecting government contractors and suppliers engaged in global markets.
- Procurement professionals should evaluate potential impacts on sourcing strategies, especially for technology products and services subject to e-commerce tariffs.
- Companies involved in international government contracts may find evolving WTO rules affecting compliance requirements and competitive dynamics.
- Organizations should consider engaging with trade policy developments to anticipate changes in procurement regulations and market access conditions.
[Greer] is going to push that through one way or another. They’re either going to agree to it or we’re going to do it on our own without them. And they better hope that they agree to it because on their own, without us, is going to be hard for a lot of them.
— Rick Switzer, Deputy U.S. Trade Representative
I gave a clear message from this side of the Parliament. We want the deal to advance and to bring stability, but we need the stability to be real.
— Brando Benifei, Chair of the European Parliament's delegation for relations with the U.S.
Agencies
United States Trade Representative, World Trade Organization, European Parliament, White House, United States Senate
Locations
Sources
- WTO Reform | United States Trade Representative · USTR · Mar 20
- US readies for WTO summit - POLITICO · Politico · Mar 24