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Africa: Countries Should Bolster
Efforts to Reform Their Trade Regimes
www.AllAfrica.com,
August 04, 2008
Ways to strengthen cooperation
amongst world economies so that the poorest and most vulnerable
countries can take part effectively in global trade will be a key
matter of discussion at a forthcoming conference in New Delhi,
India.
Trade and finance ministers, trade
negotiators, academics and representatives from businesses and civil
society organisations across the world will meet 11-13 August 2008
at an event which is being co-hosted by the Commonwealth Secretariat
in partnership with, amongst others, CUTS-International, a leading
civil society organisation based in South Asia.
Pascal Lamy, Director-General of
the World Trade Organization (WTO), Supachai Panitchpakdi,
Secretary-General of the UN's Conference on Trade and Development,
Isabel Guerrero, Country Director for the World Bank's India office,
and Ransford Smith Commonwealth Deputy-Secretary General are among
those taking part in discussions.
The conference's main focus is the
need to 'develop a global partnership for development' which is the
eighth Millennium Development Goal (MDG).
"If this MDG is to be achieved then
wealthy countries must reform their trade regimes and facilitate the
participation of poor and small vulnerable countries in the
international trading system to improve their development
prospects," says Commonwealth Deputy Secretary-General, Ransford
Smith.
"By bringing together a broad cross
section of stakeholders at an open dialogue and free-frank exchange
of views, we hope to re-energise the global debate."
This conference has been organised
in the backdrop of a stalled WTO Doha Round of multilateral trade
negotiations as well as slow progress in the Economic Partnership
Agreement (EPA) negotiations involving African, Caribbean and
Pacific countries and the European Union.
"Developed countries had committed
to helping poorer developing countries fulfil the MDGs, which went
beyond Doha and EPA negotiations. We should also remember that MDG 8
on partnership for development goes beyond trade negotiations," Mr
Smith added.
At the meeting, which will be
attended more than 150 international participants, the challenges
faced by least developed countries and small vulnerable economies in
the international trading system and their implications for their
development objectives will be given special emphasis and the
conference is expected to come up with useful recommendations.
The International Trade and
Regional Cooperation Section of the Commonwealth Secretariat earlier
commissioned a comprehensive study in this regard, which will be
presented as the theme paper of the conference.
The conference will also review
issues related to aid for trade, services trade, development
cooperation, and mainstreaming development in multilateral trade
negotiations.
"It is vital," says Pradeep Mehta,
Secretary General of CUTS International, "to find out alternative
means for forging a better partnership for development between the
rich and poor nations on trade and regulatory issues given the
recent collapse of WTO talks in Geneva and to get the importance of
international trade for a country's growth back into the radar
screens of the international policy community."
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