• Then come extra agreements and annexes dealing with the special requirements
of specific sectors or issues.
• Finally, there are the detailed and lengthy schedules (or lists) of commitments
made by individual countries allowing specific foreign products or serviceproviders
access to their markets. For GATT, these take the form of binding
commitments on tariffs for goods in general, and combinations of tariffs and
quotas for some agricultural goods. For GATS, the commitments state how
much access foreign service providers are allowed for specific sectors, and
they include lists of types of services where individual countries say they are
not applying the “most-favoured-nation” principle of non-discrimination.