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ROUNDUP
97 NOVEMBER 2002
Key
Challenges on Global Trade Agenda Adressed at UNCTAD
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Introduction
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The United Nations Conference on Trade
and Development (UNCTAD) held
the 49th session of its Trade and Development Board from 7-18 October
2002 in Geneva. The two-week meeting examined some critical issues
on the global trade agenda, notably:
Ongoing multilateral trade negotiations at the
World Trade Organization (WTO) in the context of the work programme
adopted at the Fourth WTO Ministerial Conference in Doha (Qatar)
in late 2001; and
Declining terms of trade for developing countries' growing
share of manufacturing exports, based on analysis produced by the
UNCTAD secretariat's Trade and Development Report, 2002.
Among other issues on the agenda was a review of a new report
by UNCTAD, entitled From Adjustment to Poverty Reduction:What is
New?, which calls for a major overhaul of the mainstream international
policy approach to African development (Go
Between 94).
As in previous years, UNCTAD's Trade and Development Board acted
as a forum for discussion on the interrelated components of globalization,
particularly from the perspective of developing countries. As UNCTAD
Secretary-General Rubens Ricupero reminded delegates during the
Board's High-Level Segment on 7 October, it provided conditions
for more relaxed discussions and for consensus-building in a manner
that was not constrained by immediate negotiating positions. He
also emphasized the special nature of UNCTAD,
which is not a specialized agency, but a product and integral part
of the UN General Assemblyand, in this connection, is an important
vehicle for promoting the necessary coherence of negotiations
and implementation across the spectrum of interrelated multilateral
agendas, including trade, finance, technology, and sustainable development.
How can the post-Doha process work best for development?
provided the focus for the Board's High-Level Segment, which was
conducted through a dialogue with the new WTO Director-General,
Supachai Panitchpakdi, who took office on 1 September 2002. Among
his functions, Dr. Supachai is also Chairperson of the WTO's Trade
Negotiations Committee (TNC) that oversees the negotiating agenda
set out in Doha. The discussion during the High-Level Segmentmuch
of which focused on the widely shared objective of improving coherence
across different parts of the multilateral systemalso included
representatives of the UN General Assembly through a video linkup
with UN headquarters in New York.
A dominant recurring theme running through the discussions on
current trade negotiations was how to overcome the current deadlock
on Special and Differential Treatment (S&D) for developing countries.
S&D, widely recognized as one of the key development issues
on the post-Doha agenda, is linked to the question of how to ensure
that multilateral trade disciplines do not stifle the policy space
that may be required to pursue national development and poverty
reduction objectives, but on the contrary, how they can be supportive
of such objectives.
The disconcerting evidence produced in this year's Trade and Development
Report on declining terms of trade in developing countries' manufacturing
exports (analyzed in relation to international production networks
of transnational corporations) led to frank and insightful discussions
on the possible extension of the WTO into new areas such as investment
and competition policy.
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The Dangers
of a "New Cold War"
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The Board's discussions took place in
the context of a worsening global geo-political climate. In his opening
remarks to the Board, Mr. Ricupero noted with concern that the so-called
post-cold-war period had now come to an end. The new period,
he said, seemed to be ushering in a new kind of cold war, but in contrast
with the former period, actual war was no longer improbable. This
meant that yesterday's subjects were losing their importance, practically
by the day. For example, globalization was not going to go away, but
the debate about globalization was fast losing its importance for
the simple reason that geo-political considerations were again reasserting
their primacy over the economic sphere. A war against Iraq would certainly
have an impact on the world economy, but this was not regarded as
the central issue in the debate, because other considerations, closely
related to security and political matters were receiving more attention.
Mr. Ricupero suggested that the best image of the new phase of
history now starting was the building of new walls (in contrast
to the tearing down of walls at the end the cold war)physical
walls designed to prevent the infiltration of terrorists; legal
and political walls against immigrants or economic refugees; trade
and economic barriers against specific products, particularly sensitive
agriculture products from developing countries; and walls against
anti-globalization demonstrators, as seen every time there was a
major conference. In many cases, he added, walls might be necessary,
but they were usually the expression of a failure to solve problems.
Of course, real threats had to be taken seriously, he said, but
the problem went far beyond terrorism, and was the expression of
something much larger, namely insecurity. The roots of today's insecurity
were multiple and the solidarity required to face up to it must
be indivisible if it was to exist at all, he stressed.
In this context, Mr. Ricupero insisted that the economy should
not be seen as indifferent to moral and ethical values. One of the
excesses of the period of illusion about globalization, he said,
had been precisely the idea that the economy was like astronomy
or physics, that is, completely neutral in terms of moral or ethical
values. However, corruption was there to disprove that, and it affected
not only governments but also markets. Markets could not operate
when they were dominated by opportunist inside traders and players,
while governments could not operate as they ought to when dominated
by the behaviour of the corrupt and the greedy. Many aspects of
the so-called failure of development during the past fifty years,
he argued, could be readily explained if that precept was borne
in mind.
The one comforting fact, he said, was that in international trade,
it had been possible so far to preserve multilateral structures,
and it would be important to ensure that the multilateral approach
concentrated on removing barriers and not erecting new ones.
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Taking Stock of the Post-Doha Negotiations
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In addressing the Board, Dr. Supachai
stressed his intention to consolidate working relations between the
WTO and UNCTAD.
He noted that UNCTAD had much better capacity than the WTO to carry
out research and technical cooperation activities aimed at enhancing
the understanding of trade-related development issues of interest
to developing countries. Such a cooperative effort, he said, was part
of a wider strategy to involve all relevant stakeholders (multilateral
and specialized institutions) committed to fulfilling the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs, see NGLS Roundup
98). The WTO's contribution in this regard was to increase
the predictability of the global economy in a time of great economic
uncertainty, through its combined focus on strengthening multilateral
rules, dispute settlement and opening economic opportunities for developing
countries.
Dr. Supachai flagged the
WTO's Trade Negotiations Committee (TNC), which had met the
preceding week, as a landmark discussion on the content of the Doha
agenda. Agriculture had been widely perceived as the prominent
core of the negotiations. However, there was a pressing need
to know as early as possible member countries' positions on the
highly diverse issues falling under what is known as the single
undertaking, adopted at Doha. He said that under such an undertaking
(whereby nothing is agreed until everything is agreed),
delaying tactics would not work. The fifth WTO Ministerial
Conference, to be held in Cancun (Mexico) in September 2003, could
be seen as mid-term review of the Doha negotiations.
By then, he said, members should have succeeded in meeting all the
agreed deadlines. If we leave too many issues for Cancun,
he warned, we will not finish the negotiations in time.
The Doha round of negotiations is supposed to be completed by 1
January 2005.
In this context, Dr. Supachai said that the more advanced countries
have to take the lead in ensuring that development issues on the
Doha agenda are dealt with early in the process if the Doha programme
of work is really to be considered a development agenda.
He grouped these development priorities into four main clusters,
namely:
Agriculture (in particular commitments
by developed countries to reduce all forms of export subsidies, with
a view to phasing [them] out and to substantially reduce domestic
support measures, as well as addressing the food security and rural
development concerns of developing countries);
Special and Differential Treatment (S&D) for developing
countries (reflecting their need for flexibility and political space
for development policies);
Implementation issues (referring to some 50 unresolved
issues pertaining to implementation of the earlier Uruguay Round,
ranging from difficulties by developing countries to fulfil their
existing WTO obligationswhich are linked to S&D questionsto
lack of progress on developed countries' commitments, such as liberalization
of their textiles and clothing sector); and
TRIPs and public health (referring to the separate ministerial
declaration adopted in Doha aimed at ensuring that implementation
of the WTO agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property
(TRIPs) is supportive of WTO members' right to protect public health
and promote access to medicine for all, such as through granting compulsory
licenses to produce pharmaceuticals locally and authorizing parallel
imports of medicines).
Dr. Supachai said that developing countries must know where they
stand on these priority concerns for them before considering so-called
new issues. The new issues refer to the most controversial
aspect of the Doha programme of work. At Doha, ministers agreed
to ambiguous language postponing the decision to the fifth WTO Ministerial
Conference in 2003, as to whether and/or how they should extend
the WTO negotiating agenda to include four new issues:
Investment;
Trade facilitation;
Competition policy; and
Transparency in government procurement.
Most developing countries have resisted extension of the WTO mandate
in these areas, either because of a lack of capacity to cope with
the extension of what they see as an already overburdened trade
agenda, or because they question the necessity of developing multilateral
rules in these areas in the WTO (see Go Between 89). For a number
of years, many NGOs from developed and developing countries have
been campaigning against the inclusion of such new issues in the
WTO.
It is worth noting that the Doha agenda explicitly mentions the
role of UNCTAD in providing enhanced technical assistance and capacity
building to developing countries in the areas of investment and
competition policy.
During the ensuing discussion at the Board's High-Level Segment,
the representative of the European Commission (which leads the WTO
negotiations on behalf of member countries of the European Union)
said he agreed fully with most of what Dr. Supachai
had said. He acknowledged that there were important development-related
deadlines to be met and underlined the importance of S&D, implementation
issues, and TRIPs and public health. He noted that the WTO is based
on the assumption that progressive liberalization is inherently
good for development and poverty alleviation. He placed emphasis
on the word progressive, which he said related to increasing
capacity to compete in the global marketplace. He added that he
acknowledged that the European Union must open up its markets, but
stressed that, while it does not expect full reciprocity from developing
countries in this regard, it does expect progress on developing
rules in new areas such as investment, competition and trade facilitation.
Many developing countries expressed their appreciation for Dr.
Supachai's support for emphasizing so openly the need for early
progress on developing countries' priority concerns, although some
raised questions as to what he meant when stating that S&D should
not become an escape clause for developing countries
to undertake their own reforms. In this regard, the Indian representative
expressed the view that there was less than serious engagement
on S&D by developing countries' trading partners (see detailed
discussion on S&D below).
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Building "Coherence" Across the Multilateral System
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Much of the interactive debate during
the High-Level Segment focused on ways to strengthen coherence across
the multilateral system, between trade, finance and sustainable development.
In particular, a number of speakers stressed the need for coherence
in implementing three major intergovernmental conference outcomes,
namely: the Doha trade agenda; the Monterrey Consensus resulting from
the March 2002 UN Conference on Financing for Development (see
NGLS Roundup 91); and the Plan of Implementation adopted at
the August-September 2002 Johannesburg World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD, see NGLS Roundup 96).
Such a debate was viewed as taking place at an opportune time,
since the UN General Assembly was about to address follow-up to
Monterrey and WSSD. A Latin American representative to the General
Assembly in New York argued that the credibility of the multilateral
system was at stake in this regard, and that the United Nations,
the Bretton Woods institutions and the WTO must be linked in a holistic
way.
Dr. Supachai said his commitment is not just to talk of coherence
but to bring practical substance through what he called a systemic
global governance approach. By way of example he cited his
intention to make progress on the Integrated Framework (IF) for
least developed countries (LDCs). The IF was initiated in late 1997
as a joint programme between UNCTAD, WTO, the International Trade
Centre (ITC), the UN Development Programme (UNDP)
and the Bretton Woods institutions to strengthen LDCs' trade capacitiesbut
which has not made much progress thus far by way of implementation.
He said that trade must be better integrated into the Poverty Reduction
Strategy Papers (PRSPs) promoted by the Bretton Woods institutions,
and the IF would be the appropriate vehicle for this. In outlining
his vision of how the multilateral system can support development
through trade, Dr. Supachai suggested that the WTO can play its
part through improving market access opportunities, while the UN
system (in the wider sense) can support the building of trading
capacities in poor countries. In this regard, he noted that the
World Bank is setting up a new department on trade and development.
He saw a role for multilateral cooperative efforts on technical
cooperation in three overlapping stages:
supporting the negotiating capacity
of developing countries in the current trade talks (in particular
helping them to fully understand the implications of a possible agreement
they may sign up to);
supporting the ability of countries to implement the outcomes
of the Doha talks (for instance how to make up for the shortfall of
fiscal revenue resulting from further tariff cuts); and
building trade potentials/capacities by integrating
trade in the development process (for example how to market products
or overcome supply bottlenecks).
Regarding the promotion of coherence between implementation of
the Johannesburg outcome and the Doha agenda, Dr. Supachai stressed
his commitment to seek harmonization between WTO rules and multilateral
environmental agreements (MEAs) to avoid possible conflicts between
the two bodies of law, and said he was in favour of more information
exchange and policy coordination with the MEA secretariats. He noted
that the Doha agreement to clarify and improve WTO rules that apply
to fisheries subsidies could contribute to fulfilling the Johannesburg
target on restoring ocean fish stocks.
Another dimension of the quest for coherence was voiced by one
developed country delegate who suggested that representatives of
development-related ministries should actively participate in the
WTO talks.
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Special and Differential Treatment |
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Throughout the Board's discussions, in formal and informal
sessions, the issue of Special and Differential Treatment (S&D)
was the subject of vigorous debate by Member States and invited
panellists. In Paragraph 12 of the Doha Decision on Implementation,
ministers had mandated the WTO Committee on Trade and Development
to make recommendations to the WTO General Council on the operationalization
of S&D provisions. Among the host of S&D proposals, a prominent
example is the proposed introduction of a Development Box
in the WTO Agreement on Agriculture. Such a provision would enable
developing countries to take a range of potentially WTO-inconsistent
measures (such as introducing new subsidies or re-adjusting tariff
levels) in order to: protect small farmers from the possible surge
of (often heavily subsidized) cheap food imports from developed
countries; improve agricultural productivity; and meet national
food security and rural employment objectives.
Due to important divergences among WTO members and difficulties
in reconciling the very large number of S&D-related proposals
on the table, the original deadline of 31 July 2002 for submission
of recommendations was extended to 31 December 2002. Dr. Supachai
expressed concern that progress remained extremely slow, warning
that one cannot miss the second deadline with impunity if
Doha is really to be a development agenda.
In a background note by the UNCTAD secretariat (TD/B/49/12), the
main technical and political complexities of the debate are summarized
in the following terms:
Some developed countries argue that the S&D provisions
have to be treated by the relevant WTO bodies, while many developing
countries attach intrinsic importance to the fact that one single
negotiating body (namely the Special Session of the Committee on
Trade and Development) is in charge of the cross-cutting
implementation issue.
Identification of the S&D provisions that are mandatory
and those that are non-binding is complicated by a lack
of agreement regarding the criteria for classifying them as provided
by the WTO secretariat. Therefore, no real progress was made in
identifying the S&D provisions whose mandatory nature was debatable
or in operationalizing the existing S&D provisions.
Some developed countries introduced into the debate the notion
of graduation among developing countries and LDCs in
the implementation of these provisions.
Some developing countries proposed a monitoring mechanism
to assess the utilization and development impact of these provisions,
but no specific development benchmarks have been discussed to date.
The proposal to adopt a Framework Agreement on Special
and Differential Treatment has not been discussed so far.
Such difficulties and divergences of views were also manifest
in the UNCTAD Board's discussions,
where the debates raised a number of questions. Could S&D become
an escape clause for developing countries to avoid undertaking
trade-related reforms, or should the discussion move away from simply
extending transition periods to addressing underlying development
objectives, and ensuring that multilateral trade disciplines do
not become an obstacle to fulfilling these objectives? Do the different
stages of development among developing countries mean that there
should be a system of graduation from S&D, or would such a move
lead to further divergences among developing country members' negotiating
positions? Where would a large middle-income developing economy
with large pockets of poverty and very important economically vulnerable
sectors fit under such a graduation scheme? Can S&D become the
basis for a coherent paradigm to address key trade-related development
issues?
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Assessment of
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In one of the informal panel sessions,
former Indian Secretary of State and Ambassador to the (pre-WTO) General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), Mr. S.P. Shukla, made a passionate
plea for the WTO's weaker members to reassert S&D rights in a
manner that goes further than most mainstream discussions on the subject.
He noted how the international trading system had changed from focusing
solely on cross-border exchange transactions in the pre-Uruguay Round
period to extending its remit into the domestic sphere through the
harmonization of norms and standards for many domestic policies and
regulations. He argued that the system is subverting the economic
sovereignty of its weaker members.
At best, it offers a few years'
time for member countries to come to terms with the subversion, to
digest it....In the expanded and transformed multilateral trading
system, for the weaker members, S&D virtually stands for Subversion
and Domination.' To confront such a contingency, the weaker members
may well define the optimal S&D for themselves as: Selective
Delinking.'
Mr. Shukla called for the WTO, through a renewed collective lead
by developing countries, to declare a standstill on
the ongoing process of deeper integration. All new issues, such
as a possible global investment regime, should be placed under
an embargo for the time being, and further strengthening of
TRIPs and the WTO agreement on Trade-Related Investment Measures
(TRIMs) should be postponed. Such a standstill, he said, would provide
an interval for the collective assessment of how the integration
efforts to date have affected member countries, particularly those
of the South and, among them, the poor and the LDCs. He said that
it is possible that such an assessment may produce sufficient
material evidence and rationale for initiating a rollback of the
integration process, where necessary.
A standstill on new issues in order to undertake an assessment
of existing WTO agreements has been a campaigning priority for a
very large number of NGOs and social movements since the 1999 Seattle
Ministerial Conference, and has at times been openly voiced by some
developing country governments.
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Developing Countries: Trading more, Earning Less
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Part
of the Board's agenda was informed by the UNCTAD secretariat's Trade
and Development Report, 2002 (TDR 2002) published in April (see
Go Between 91). In essence, the report warns that despite
rising trade volumes and shares in manufacturing exports, developing
countries have not been rewarded by comparative increases in export
revenue.
The phenomenon has been widely documented in relation to declining
terms of trade in non-oil primary commodities, which is regarded
as one of the most persistent and pressing trade-related development
problems, and yet is absent from the WTO trade agenda. As with primary
commodities, declining terms of trade in manufactures could be partly
attributed to what economists refer to as the fallacy of composition
problem (when the oversupply of a commodity on the global market
resulting from a simultaneous boost of exports by several countries
leads to declining prices per unit of exports).
In addition, the developing countries exhibiting a growing share
of manufacturing exports arewith the exceptions of a few countries
from East Asiainvolved in the low-skill, labour-intensive,
extractive or assembly stages of the international production networks
of transnational corporations. Thus, unless national governments
enjoy great flexibility and bargaining power vis-à-vis foreign direct
investors, the productive assets of such international networks
(including know how, design and technology) remain locked inside
the firm along with most of the value-added of production.
Linked to this is the increasing competition among developing
countries to attract foreign investments as locations for labour-intensive
processes of otherwise high-tech activities. Such competitive pressures,
the report notes, are further compounded by the way labour markets
in developing countries accommodate the additional supply of labour-intensive
goods through flexible wages, allowing firms to compete on the basis
of price without undermining profitability. Competition among
firms, including international firms, in developing countries becomes
competition among labour located in different countries, the
report says.
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Implications for Trade Policy and Post-Doha Negotiations
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During the Board's formal discussions
related to this year's TDR, the representative of Egypt, speaking
on behalf of the Group of 77 and China, noted that export-oriented
development strategies had led to a rise in developing countries'
share of world trade in manufactures, but in many cases (unilateral)
trade liberalization had also led to an increase in the import content
of consumption, production, and of manufactured exports. Trade should
not be considered an end in itself, the representative said, and successful
participation in international trade (in terms of rising export volumes)
was not necessarily equivalent to faster income growth.
The terms-of-trade movement against Southern manufactures, as evidenced
in this year's TDR, was a reason for serious concern, especially as
a growing number of developing countries with large reserves of unskilled
labour were adopting export-oriented strategies. TDR 2002 raised awareness
among developing country policy makers of the need for measures to
ensure that increasing manufactured exports was translated into domestic
income growth and poverty reduction.
The representative of Indonesia, speaking on behalf of the Asian
Group and China, expressed similar concerns at the evidence produced
by TDR 2002, and suggested that past policies for industrialization
had to be carefully reviewed, and where necessary, revised or complemented
by new innovative measures securing a greater share in manufacturing
value-added. It might be necessary to look more to domestic markets,
and to strengthen regional and international cooperation among developing
countries in order to reduce the risk of oversupply and falling
prices, especially in the present phase of weak growth and high
unemployment in the advanced industrial countries.
The representative of Trinidad and Tobago, speaking on behalf
of the Latin American and Caribbean Group, said that the report
raised very important questions concerning the dangers of excessive
reliance on foreign direct investment (FDI), including more
export-oriented FDI. Such arguments were familiar from an older
development debate concerning the constraints on the export of primary
commodities, a debate that had very much centred on the Latin American
experience.
The representative of Bangladesh said that the report's recommendation
to developing countries to seek wider policy space to nurture their
domestic industries was important but difficult to realize in the
present system. While the WTO championed the virtues of free
trade, he said that trade flows were governed by protectionist
trade policies of the major industrial countries and the global
strategies of transnational corporations.
The analyses in the report indicate quite clearly that getting
the most out of the international trading system is no longer just
a matter of shifting away from commodity exports. Nor is it
enough, in terms of the post-Doha negotiations, for developing countries
to simply bargain for more market access in the protected markets
of industrialized countries. It notes that the outcome of the new
round of trade negotiations will be judged by the extent to
which developing counties achieve greater market access without
their policy options being restricted.
The report stresses this point particularly in relation to possible
negotiations on the new issues. These issues, it says,
move the WTO negotiations further into domestic policy, and
it is reasonable to believe that a successful outcome will be conditional
on establishing the development content of these issues from the
outset, and ensuring appropriate policy space for national development
strategies. On investment specifically, the report stresses
that a key question will be the extent to which developing countries
will be allowed to continue to impose conditions on foreign investors
and to provide support to domestic firms.
In one of the informal sessions, the representative of a large
developing country said that, as one decides whether to continue
proceeding with issues that go beyond cross-border flows, it is
important to pre-empt a situation like TRIPs from occurring
againthat is, to avoid dealing with the undesired consequences
of an agreement after the fact. Let us have an honest discussion
now rather than later, he said. The Trade and Development
Board offers space for discussing how costly mistakes in the past
can be avoided in the future.
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