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AFTER
THE DOHA ROUND FRACAS BY MEHRI MADARSHAHI AND ANOUSH d'ORVILLE: 05/08/2008
(MaximsNews Network)
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UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / 05
August 2008 --
For
the first time since World War II, the world turned its back on the process of
liberalization; the engine of the huge increase of trade in goods and services
during the years of globalization.
All eyes were on
Geneva
. Almost seven years after its
launch in
Doha
,
Qatar
, and many other false starts and dashed hopes, the final week of negotiations
was ushered in on 21 July 2008 at the headquarters of the World Trade
Organization (WTO) in
Geneva
. Over 100 ministers were in attendance intent on striking a deal and thus
concluding the Doha Round, They promised to strive towards bridging their
differences on blueprint agreements in agriculture and industrial products and
provide for balanced “modalities”. The European Commissioner and EU chief
negotiator, Peter Mandelson set out his opening gambit stating that:
“We
are bringing to these negotiations a groundbreaking reform of agricultural
support; one that would slash our overall subsidy ceiling by almost 100bn
euros. In our initial offer we tabled a 36% reduction in our average
agricultural tariffs; we are now offering to cut them by a minimum of 54%!
There is now full transparency on the volumes of new access that we will
extend through TRQs [tariff-rate quotas] for any potential sensitive products.
We have front-loaded commitments on farm export subsidies and are ready as
part of a deal to eliminate them completely
and for good. In short, the potential deal is of huge economic value and
is directly tailored to the interests of farm exporters in the developing
world."
This
optimistic tone gradually evaporated over the weekend. Shirking direct
responsibility, fingers were being pointed in all directions to single out a
culprit for the failed talks. Peter Mandelson, described the disappointing
outcome as "heartbreaking" and a "collective failure". He
warned that the "consequences would not be equal", and predicted
that countries most in need of help would be hit hardest. He also added that
the consequences of the failed negotiations “will fall disproportionately on
those who are most vulnerable in the global economy, those who needed the
chances and the opportunities most from a successful trade round."
China
considered the collapse “as a serious setback for the world economy and
blamed the selfish and short-sighted behavior of wealthy nations for the
failure of the trade talks”. Others blamed it on the
United States
and
France
who were considered unwilling to scrap the huge subsidies they pay to their
farmers and could not reach any agreement with
China
and
India
on import rules.
This
was all despite the optimism that in the current period of global economic
uncertainty and crisis there could be more impetus to free up global trade.
Yet, unfortunately, protectionist mindsets seemed to have prevailed over
better judgment.
The
rich industrialized nations insisted on large agricultural subsidies partly to
keep the politically powerful farm lobbies in their countries placated.
OECD countries currently pay about US$330 billion in subsidies, far
more than their global development assistance by a factor of three and larger
than the GNP of many of the poorest countries. American farmers receive on
average US$18,000 each year in production support while each Japanese farmer
collects approximately US$30,000 per year.
The Director–General of WTO, Pascal
Lamy, told a press conference last week that out of a “to-do list” of 20
topics, 18 had seen positions converge but that the gaps could not narrow on
the 19th — the special safeguard mechanism for developing countries
established after the successful 1994 Uruguay Round allowing them to impose
special safeguard duties meant to temporarily defend against import surges and
price fluctuations.
Mr. Lamy said that “after more than
36 hours trying to find bridges between (the) two positions, today it became
clear that the differences were irreconcilable. The remaining issues,
including cotton, were not even negotiated.”
The
“19th topic” or the “gap” as Mr. Lamy labeled the main
stumbling block related to farm import rules. This rule would have allowed
countries to protect poor farmers by imposing a tariff on certain goods in the
event of a drop in prices or a surge in imports. In the Round of Negotiations,
India
,
China
and the
US
could not agree on the tariff threshold for such an event. The
US
considered the "safeguard clause" for protecting developing nations
from unrestricted import as too low.
The
talks in
Geneva
were also complicated by recent increases in the price of food and fuel which
had prompted protests in both developed and developing nations, making it
harder for negotiators to reach a compromise on opening up their markets to
greater competition. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO),
global food stocks this year hit a 25 years low.
These low levels have pushed up prices and dozens of countries are
being rocked by food riots. In
March 2008 alone, riots were reported in
Burkina Faso
,
Cameroon
,
Cote d’Ivoire
,
Egypt
,
Ethiopia
,
Haiti
,
Indonesia
,
Madagascar
,
Morocco
, the
Philippines
, and
Senegal
. In
Pakistan
and
Thailand
, army troops were deployed to prevent people from seizing food from fields
and warehouses. In
Haiti
, unrest forced the resignation of the Prime Minister.
Robert
Zoellick, the President of the World Bank, recently pointed out that the
current food crisis has pushed 100 million people back into poverty. In the
last nine months, prices of staple commodities have surged dramatically, with
the prices of rice and corn rising 64% and 130% respectively. In
the face of the acute global food price crisis, it may be ironic that the
debate at the WTO came down to how much and how fast nations could raise their
barriers towards imports of food.
Two
conclusions may be drawn from the Geneva failure: a) it was the first time a
new balance of power shaping the global economy was displayed, pitting the
emerging powerhouses of India, China and Brazil against the United States and
the European Union; b) despite higher food prices, the nations of the world
would rather continue to rely on trade distorting self-interest and
protectionism than reform global trade rules to ameliorate the current
situation and strengthen the time-tested rules-based trading regime that had
become a hallmark of multilateralism.
Why
Doha
?
Convened in November 2001 by the World
Trade Organization, the Doha Round of Negotiations sought to lift
millions out of poverty
by easing trade restrictions, reducing large farm subsidies, and liberalizing
trade in services. Many countries were committed to multilateral trading
pacts, heeding the lessons that between the two world wars bilateral bargains
and resort to unilateral action had contributed to the breakdown of the world
economy and led to the outbreak of a global war. Multilateralism therefore
became the norm in post-war agreements pertaining to the economy, trade and
development. Among others, it saw the creation of the Bretton Woods
institutions (World Bank and IMF), the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT), the predecessor of WTO, and the United Nations. Many other, smaller
multilateral entities were also established, including more recently,
conventions and treaties on the ozone layer or global warming. The failure of
the Doha Round is thus the first major multilateral setback in the economic
sphere in more than 60 years. To be sure, in the political field, the UN also
experienced various constraints and failures tarnishing the success of
multilateral diplomacy, but these have also been balanced by notable success
stories, such as peacekeeping operations.
Whither
multilateralism?
Multilateral agreements often depend on
and thrive if underpinned by great-power agreements. For example, the
conclusion of the WTO Uruguay Round in December 1993 depended on prior EU-US
agreements. But the powerful can equally destroy as easily as they can give
rise to multilateral agreements. In 2001, President George W. Bush’s
administration called many aspects and main planks of multilateral cooperation
into serious doubt, including nuclear arms control treaties and environmental
protocols to which the
US
was a signatory.
Challenges
to multilateral agreements, particularly with respect to trade, have been
widespread in the past decades. The
Doha Round provided a rare opportunity for the developing world to reverse the
undesirable results of the Uruguay Rounds as the poorest nations tried to
extract specific benefits from the global trading system.
Was this one of many reasons why the developed world became less
inclined to make concessions at the negotiation table? This translated into an
increasing attraction of bilateral trading deals which by their very nature
are exclusive, e.g. NAFTA for the
US
,
Mexico
and
Canada
.
In
a zero-sum environment, it is the poorest nations who have to bear the brunt
of fracas or echoes. They are the ones suffering the most. Food prices,
already at record levels, are poised to continue their voracious advance. They
undermine sorely needed investment into the agricultural sector of developing
countries. It is estimated that in
Africa
alone, US$1.7 billion will be needed during 2008-9 to help revive the
continent’s agriculture industry. At a time when demand is high and supply
is low, a comprehensive multilateral agreement could have made a significant
impact on the high prices of commodities by putting small and medium farmers
back to work, increase the supply of food at lower prices, and allow the large
food producers such as
Brazil
to export to new markets.
In
reviving any major trade agreement, the role of the
US
as the world’s largest economy is paramount. Hence, it should be incumbent
upon the next President to take initiatives towards fostering and
strengthening multilateralism rather than one that perpetuates
individualism.
High
on the agenda should be the re-launch of a comprehensive deal where developed
nations commit to reduce trade-distorting subsidies and support the economic
and social development of the world’s poorest countries. Without active
US
support and willingness to conduct and conclude productive negotiations
together with the major emerging economies, the very future of multilateral
cooperation, including that of the WTO, may be uncertain and shaky.
The present shifts in the global political and economic landscapes
are unprecedented in history. The emerging economies have become some of the
biggest beneficiaries of globalization and today inward-looking policies
threaten this prospect for others. A deal at
Doha
would have injected much needed optimism into the global marketplace knowing
that despite the global economic slowdown, countries are still committed to
cooperation, poverty reduction, trade, sustainable development and stability.
By allowing negotiations to falter and succumbing to short-term interests of a
few, the foundations may be laid for long-term inequality and injustice. There
is no alternative: the problems that face the world today can and will only be
solved through a concerted return to international cooperation and
multilateralism.
Labels:
Mehri
Madarshahi Anoush
d’Orville, Doha
Round, tariff-rate
quotas, World
Trade Organization (WTO), Pascal
Lamy,
United
Nations, U.N.,
MaximsNews
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