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Media > `I can't set the
timeline for conclusion of the Doha Round'
`I can't set the timeline for
conclusion of the Doha Round'
Business Line, August
15, 2008
At a time when the global economy
is set for a slowdown, particularly in the developed countries such
as the US and the European Union (EU), the call for opening up trade
is not heeded and the tendency is to erect barriers, both tariff and
non-tariff, to protect one another from the blast of competition.
But it is precisely in these
troubled times that the world needs a rule-based multilateral
trading system where the gains of liberalisation and economies of
scale would help many a nation in weathering their domestic troubles
- this is applicable to both developed and developing countries.
Yet, in an irony of sorts, the
members of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), a group of 153
countries, failed to evolve the modalities or parameters for such
liberalisation in agriculture and non-agricultural market access (NAMA)
at a crucial mini-ministerial meeting in Geneva during end-July.
It is not for the first time that
the talks among trade negotiators under the Doha Round of the WTO
have failed; the deadlines have been repeatedly missed - Cancun
(Mexico) in September 2003, Hong Kong in 2005, and subsequently in
Geneva (2006) and Potsdam (Germany) in 2007.
However, the WTO Director- General,
Mr Pascal Lamy, who was in the Capital recently to attend the silver
jubilee function of CUTS (a civil society organisation) and also to
try and pick up the thread of broken talks with the Indian
authorities and to gauge their moods, seemed unfazed by the string
of failures to arrive at a consensus on contentious issues.
Being an avid jogger and
indefatigable interlocutor in the adroit art of bringing warring
members to the negotiating table to try and succeed in the trade
opening exercise, Mr Lamy concedes that though the opening up of
markets spawns benefits to many, it also exacts adjustment costs
which cannot be ignored.
He avers that opening up of trade
works for development and removal of poverty but only "if we address
the imbalances it creates between winners and losers, imbalances
that are all the more dangerous the more fragile the economies,
societies or countries."
Not the one to ignore detractors
who upbraid the WTO as an octopus organisation, Mr Lamy contends
that WTO is "a consensus-based member-driven body, providing the
basis of a system in which each country - even the smallest -
counts. This is where its legitimacy lies. No Security Council in
the WTO and no board of directors".
In his sojourn interspersed with a
spate of meetings and interviews, Mr Lamy spared half-an-hour to
talk to Business Line.
What follows is Mr Lamy's take on
what happened in Geneva and what he is doing to make members meet so
that they all can deliver results to bolster the multilateral
trading system:
"After the talks broke down in with
the membership and they all said that what was there on the table
remains on the table, so conclusion of the Round is still in
people's minds.
"The negotiations stumbled on the
issue of the special safeguard measure (SSM) but designing a special
safeguard measure to protect developing countries against import
surges in food remains part of the "to do" list. Given the
differences in positions between India and the US over the volume of
imports which would be the trigger for the safeguard measures and on
the size of the remedy, I decided to visit India and the United
States to see how the differences could be bridged.
"My objective of the visit to
Washington is the same as my mission here. Look back at what
happened on the SSM - is it a technical problem or political
problem? Has India well understood what the US concerns were? Has
the US well understood what India's concerns were?
"We have a long history of
safeguard spanning 60 years in the GATT-WTO (GATT is a predecessor
to the WTO). The discussion has been on not whether there should be
safeguards or not but what should be the parameters so that they are
used in exceptional circumstances without disturbing normal trade.
This time, what is normal and what is exceptional is where the
differences could not be bridged.
"We have a single undertaking and
the rule is that nothing is agreed until everything is agreed.
Within this single undertaking, it happened that agriculture and
industrial tariffs (NAMA) should go together as set out in the
famous Hong Kong Declaration in Para 24. Once modalities in these
two are framed, other issues like rules, services and anti-dumping
would automatically get moving.
"At the July meeting, 17 out of 20
items in the list on the agenda were agreed. Later, the reports of
the Chairs of Agriculture and NAMA, released in August 11 and 12 in
Geneva, faithfully reflected the state of negotiations. The
ministers did not do item number 18 - whether this is a sort of
insurmountable hurdle or whether this hurdle can, with a little bit
of time, understanding, talking, research and negotiations, be
overcome remains to be seen. Now we still have issues such as cotton
subsidy in the US, and intellectual property rights.
"No doubt, there has to be an
agreement on slashing down subsidies on cotton by the US as they are
more than corn or peanuts. We did not get there because of the
linkage between productspecific caps in the amber and blue box
(permissible subsidies).
"G-7 process composing Australia,
Brazil, China, the European Communities, India, Japan and the United
States works in concentric circles within which possible compromises
are presented and these float in the G-7 and go to G-30 or G-35
(five times bigger) and if the talks float there too, they go to the
whole WTO membership numbering 153 (five times bigger).
"I am not in the betting business.
Negotiators are in the business. I am in the business trying to make
things happen from the moment members want me to help them trying to
get there. I can't set the timeline for conclusion of the Round.
"Contrary to what western and
sometime Indian media write, China is a very active participant in
the WTO negotiations. "Any WTO agreement will have to be ratified by
the US Congress like it has to be ratified by constitutional process
in India or Israel. If you look at the history of trade
negotiations, no trade treaty has been agreed by the US Congress on
a partisan basis. It has always been part-Democrats and
part-Republicans."
This news item can also be viewed
at:
http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/
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