"We reiterate our opposition to protectionism on trade and investment in all its forms. We extend our commitments to standstill and rollback of protectionist measures till the end of 2018 and reaffirm our determination to deliver on it," said the G20 Leaders' communique.
The G20 nations reaffirmed to continue support the work of WTO, UNCTAD and OECD in monitoring protectionism.
"We emphasise that the benefits of trade and open markets must be communicated to the wider public more effectively and accompanied by appropriate domestic policies to ensure that benefits are widely distributed," it said.
The agreement was aimed at promoting global trade through easing Customs procedures.
"We reaffirm our determination to ensure a rule-based, transparent, non-discriminatory, open and inclusive multilateral trading system, with WTO playing the central role in today's global trade," it said.
They also reiterated advancing negotiations on remaining DDA (Doha Development Agenda) issues as a matter of priority, including all three pillars of agriculture - market access, domestic support and export competition, non-agricultural market access and services, among others.
The leaders also endorsed the strategy for global trade growth, under which the G20 will lead by example to lower trade costs, harness trade and investment policy coherence, boost trade in services, enhance trade finance, promote e-commerce development, and address trade and development.
Further, it said, they would support policies that encourage firms of all sizes, in particular women and youth entrepreneurs, women-led firms and SMEs, to take full advantage of global value chains.
It also reaffirmed its commitment to promoting investment with focus on infrastructure in terms of both quantity and quality.
"We stress importance of quality infrastructure investment, which aims to ensure economic efficiency in view of... Job creation, capacity building, and transfer of expertise and knowhow on mutually agreed terms and conditions while addressing social and environmental impacts and aligning with economic and development strategies," it said.
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