Baiker, LauraBorchert, IngoEchandi, RobertoFernandes, Ana M.Hans, IshratMagdeleine, JoscelynMarchetti, Juan A.Colomer, Ester Rubio2025-10-302025-10-302025-10-28https://hdl.handle.net/10986/43921The economic environment for services trade has changed dramatically over the past 15 years, driven by rapid technological progress that has expanded the possibilities for exchanging services. How has trade policy responded to these changes? How do policy stances in a wide range of service sectors compare across economies? With its unprecedented global coverage, the Services Trade Policy Database and the associated Services Trade Restrictions Index, developed jointly by the World Bank and the World Trade Organization, help address these questions. This paper makes three principal contributions. First, it offers an in-depth discussion of the current state of services trade policies and their differences across 134 economies and 34 services subsectors. Second, the paper reveals how recent (2016–22) changes in policy stances have seen progressive liberalization by lower-income economies but stabilization or even slight policy reversals in high-income economies. This dynamic differs fundamentally from the trend that unfolded after the Great Recession over 2008–16. Third, the paper shows the implications of policy changes over the past six years on services trade costs, and it showcases how the Services Trade Policy Database’s regulatory information can inform trade negotiations, regulatory analysis, and policy making. Alongside these contributions, the paper documents updates to the Services Trade Policy Database’s economy and sector coverage and explains the latest methodological improvements made to the World Bank–World Trade Organization Services Trade Restrictions Index.en-USCC BY 3.0 IGOSERVICES TRADE POLICYINVESTMENTSTRITRADE RESTRICTIONSQUANTIFICATIONThe State of Global Services Trade Policies: Evidence from Recent DataWorking PaperWorld Bank