Policy paper 292
Mapping the EU’s digital trade
A global leader hidden in plain sight?
Recommended citation
Köhler-Suzuki N. 2023. “Mapping the EU’s digital trade. A global leader hidden in plain sight?“, Policy paper, Paris: Jacques Delors Institute, July.
- Introduction
The pandemic has moved our work and life online and accelerated the European Union’s transition towards a digital economy. Surveys show that up to three quarters of European employees would like to continue teleworking in the future.[1] Digital networks deliver video to the 141 million Europeans that are subscribing to streaming services for entertainment.[2] Moreover, the volume of physical goods that businesses and consumers order online has increased by 58% in 2020 alone.[3] Such developments are deeply altering the structure of the European economy and have become important drivers for productivity.[4] At the same time, the center of the world economy is shifting east. The European Commission estimates that 85% of future economic growth will take place outside of the EU–and much of it in the digital sector.[5] It is therefore crucial that the EU connects with the markets of the future, so that Europe remains at the forefront of the digital transformation.
A widely held view is that the EU currently tries to make up for shortcomings in its digital economy with excessive regulation against foreign competition. French President Emmanuel Macron summarized this predicament, when he wrote in 2020 that the US has the GAFA (in reference to Google, Apple, Facebook, and Amazon) and China the BATX (in reference to Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent, and Xiaomi), but the EU only the GDPR (in reference to the General Data Protection Regulation).[6] Although Europe only has few large technology companies with a market capitalization that approaches the largest American and Chinese platforms, this narrative may at the same time be short selling an important strength that is hidden in plain view: the EU’s central role in the emerging digital trade regime as the world’s leading exporter and importer of digitally deliverable services and a key player in the quickly developing regulatory sphere for digital trade.
In fact, as the data in the analysis below shows, the EU exports and imports more digitally deliverable services than other leading economies, such as the United States, China, or India. On the one hand, this means that the EU must safeguard the market access interests of its firms–and perhaps do so more aggressively than it has in the recent past. On the other hand, its leading role as an importer of digitally deliverable services can help to explain the ‘Brussels effect’ in the global digital economy.[7]
With its recent privacy, platform, competition and data regulations, the EU has been responding to the functional demands that arise in a globally integrated digital economy, which grew around a largely self-regulated internet. The lack of rules allowed for rapid growth and development, but it has also raised questions about the appropriate role of government as data crossing international borders creates externalities and regulatory gaps. Consumers, for example, are worried about their privacy if personal data are stored outside of their jurisdiction. Businesses must deal with digital market access barriers when trying to sell their goods and services across borders. EU trade policy is not a new tool to address such gaps. The EU has therefore included digital trade provisions in its trade agreements as far back as 2001 and in a total of twenty-four agreements to date, continuously expanding their scope and scale over the years. The 2021 EU Trade Policy Review, which is guiding the current European trade agenda, also recognizes the role of trade policy in the digital economy:
‘the digital transformation is [a] key enabler of sustainable development, but also a space of competition and inadequate multilateral governance. As it embarks on its Digital Decade, supporting Europe’s digital transformation is a priority both in internal and external policies including trade policy and instruments.’[8]
This indicates that EU trade policy will continue to increasingly address cross-border transactions in the digital realm, which can be subsumed under the emerging ‘digital trade’ paradigm.
Discussions around digital trade developed in the early 2010s from the non-binding internet governance agenda and the long-dormant e-commerce work program of the WTO and have seen rapid advances in recent years.[9] Despite this, policymakers still have a somewhat fuzzy understanding of digital trade, both in terms of its definition and measurement. While the EU Commission is beginning to take the need for a digital trade strategy more seriously, the member states must quickly improve their understanding about Europe’s strengths in digital trade and how to use them as a leverage in promoting its regulatory model for the digital economy.
This policy paper contributes to the evolving debate by attempting to map the size and direction of the European Union’s digital trade and analyzing recent European efforts to regulate cross-border digital flows in trade agreements and a new generation of digital partnerships.
Notes
[1] Eurofound, 2021, Working during COVID-19.
[2] The Hollywood Reporter 2021, European Streaming Market Tops $14 Billion, Netflix, Amazon Dominate.
[3] Estimates by Oscar de Bok, Global chief executive officer, DHL Supply Chain, at the World Trade Symposium 2021.
[4] See in particular the work of the OECD on this topic.
[5] European Commission, 2021, Trade Policy Review – An Open, Sustainable and Assertive Trade Policy
[6] Emmanuel Macron, 2021, LinkedIn post on European technological sovereignty.
[7] Anu Bradford, 2020, The Brussels effect: How the European Union rules the world. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
[8] European Commission (2021) Trade Policy Review – An Open, Sustainable and Assertive Trade Policy.
[9] Shamel Azmeh, Christopher Foster, Jaime Echavarri, The International Trade Regime and the Quest for Free Digital Trade, International Studies Review, Volume 22, Issue 3, September 2020, pp. 671–692.
SUR LE MÊME THÈME
ON THE SAME THEME
PUBLICATIONS
EU and China between De-Risking and Cooperation: Scenarios by 2035
2023 European Year of Skills
Making migrant returns a pre-condition of trade openness
MÉDIAS
MEDIAS
L’UE doit miser sur le numérique avec ses principaux partenaires, estime l’Institut Jacques Delors
Gafam : comment l’Union européenne veut mettre fin au « far west » de l’économie numérique
L’OMC, paralysée, joue son avenir à Genève
ÉVÉNEMENTS
EVENTS
Euroquestions | EU-China relations: rivals, competitors, partners? [FR]
Euroquestions | Which European response to the US Inflation Reduction Act (IRA)?
“I see EU”: crossed views on the European Union
Académie Notre Europe – L’Europe Commerciale et de la Défense
WEBINAR | What do we need a World Trade Organization for?
WEBINAR | A European Border Carbon Adjustment proposal
LIVE STREAM | Digital sovereignty in the age of pandemics
Greening the EU trade policy
Rupture or Reorder?
AmCham Confidential
Paris, 28 October 2019 – Mutualism, compatible with AI?
Brussels, 24 May 2019 – Research and Innovation as a compass for the future we want
Paris, 21 May 2019 – Europe: which answers to the Digital economy’s social challenges?
Tunis, 3 may 2019 — Tunisia’s challenges and responses to threats to multilateralism
Madrid, 10 April 2019 – European Think Thank Summit
Paris, 25 February 2019 – Artificial intelligence, concrete challenges at European level
Paris, 10 January 2019 – The EU and the new silk roads
3 December 2018 – Is Brexit Reversible?
Brussels, 27 November 2018 – EU Trade Policy Day
Bordeaux, 23 November 2018 – EU trade policy: can we control globalization?
Brussels, 16 October 2018 – EU trade policy in 2019 and beyond
Paris, 15 October 2018 – Will the EU become a world power?
Paris, 10 October 2018 – What is Europe for? Myths and realities
Paris, 3 October 2018 – Beyond Trade Wars: From Free Trade to Fair Trade
Paris, 21 September 2018 – Trump, Brexit and the new challenges of European trade policy: is the European response adapted?
Paris, 12 September 2018 – Presentation of the book “L’économie mondiale 2019” of the CEPII
Brussels, 22 June 2018 – The multipolar world order, the EU and the multilateral system
Clichy, 19 June 2018 – How to make Europe the world economic leader?
Paris, 11 June 2018 – Round table on Brexit
Brussels, 8 June 2018 – EU Trade policy in a multilateral trading system under threat
Paris, 1st June 2018 – European Trade Policy
Strovolos, 1 June 2018 – Annual Lecture in Economics: Harnessing Globalisation
Berlin, 28 May 2018 – Global Solutions Summit
Paris, 22 May 2018 – eHealth: Cure for Europeans?
Brussels, 17 May 2018 – Where is spectrum management headed in 2025-35?
Paris, 16 May 2018 – Global Markets
Florence, 10 May 2018 – Digital Age and European Energy Transition: the launch of a Knwoledge Hub
Paris, 24 April 2018 – Trump, Brexit: Globalisation in crisis?
Paris, 12 April 2018 – France and Europe in globalisation
Beijing, 11 April 2018 – Reform of State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs)
Beijing, 11 April 2018 – The new Reform Agenda : Government vs. the Market
Paris, 4 April 2018 – Brexit : last months of negotiation
Beijing, 26 March 2018 – Will the World Fight a Trade War?
Beijing, 25 March 2018 – Pursuing Opening-up on All Fronts
Beijing, 24 March 2018 – A New Agenda for the World Economy
Paris, 15 March 2018 – A year before Brexit: What to do? How to do it?
Brussels, 23 February 2018 – CEPS Idea Lab
Geneva, 19 February 2018 – Trade: Headwinds or Maelstrom?
Paris, 15 February 2018 – Green Controversy
The Hague, 25 January 2018 – Managing Globalisation – EU Trade Policy in the Trump Era
London, 18 January 2018 – Launch of the Trade Knowledge Exchange
Brussels, 30 November 2017 – The Future of EU Trade Policy
Paris, 29 November 2017 – The new Political Economy of the European trade policy
Paris, 22 November 2017 – Between free-trade and a protectionist temptation
Budapest, 30 May 2017 – Electricity Market Integration 2.0 in Central and South East Europe
Le Chesnay, 20 May 2017 – Trump and the future of the European trade policy
Brussels, 24 January 2017 – The Future of the Trade
Paris, 14 December 2016 – What future for international trade?
Beijing, 2 Decembre 2016 – The Challenges of World Trade
Brussels, 6 September 2016 – New generation of free trade agreements: the challenges for the future?
Alpbach, 29 August 2016 – Boosting Trade and Protecting the Earth: A Catch 22 for the 21st Century?
Paris, 5th July 2016 – Will TTIP and CETA help SMEs to get into the US and Canadian Markets?
Paris, 14 June 2016 – TTIP: a dangerous project or a partnership for the future?
London, 7 June 2016 – 2016 and the politics of trade and globalisation
Paris, 19 April 2016 – Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership – TTIP : Myths and Realities














