INTERNATIONAL FORUM ON GLOBALIZATION |
|---|
Geneva
Update
1st
December 2005
THE
HONG KONG MINISTERIAL TEXT: a failure for development
By
Carin Smaller with contributions from Shefali Sharma and Alexandra Strickner,
TIP/IATP
CONTENTS
I. MANIPULATING
DEVELOPMENT
II. MEASURING
THE IMBALANCES
III. AGRICULTURE:
how to fix it
IV. SERVICES:
changing the architecture
V. COMMODITIES
VI. FROM NOW
UNTIL HONG KONG
VII. IMPORTANT DATES TO
REMEMBER
VIII. DOCUMENTS
I.
MANIPULATING DEVELOPMENT
On 1st
December 2005, WTO Director-General, Pascal Lamy, distributed a second draft
Hong Kong Ministerial text (the draft text) to WTO Members (see link below).
The draft text reflects the failure of governments at the WTO to create
multilateral trade rules that promote development. It is full of empty
rhetoric. None of the proposed commitments addresses the bottom line: the
urgent need for trade rules that promote an equitable and sustainable global
economy. This deal will leave the world's poorest countries worse off.
Pascal
Lamy attempts to mask this reality by proposing a number of technical and
financial assistance programs, particularly for least-developed countries
(LDCs), including an enhanced Integrated Framework and Aid for Trade. The
proposals are beside the point. Developing country demands are not centered on
increasing aid. Rather, developing countries want meaningful reforms to trade
rules to address the profound inequities in the existing global trade system.
Aid is not without merit but it is not a substitute for strong multilateral
trade rules that prevent dumping (the sale of products at below the cost of
production prices) and protect countries' right to design domestic policies
according to their people's needs, whilst ensuring they do not harm other
countries. In any case, aid to support the implementation of bad rules is in no
one's interests: the money would be better spent making more realistic
assessments of how trade liberalization scenarios play out, taking into account
the urgent need to create jobs, foster industrial and agricultural development,
to end dumping, and to redistribute wealth from developed to developing
countries.
When
the Doha Round was launched, developing countries demanded the imbalances in
the existing WTO agreements be redressed. Their demand focused on the so-called
"implementation issues." Developing countries also asked for stronger
special and differential treatment (SDT) measures and for the Agreement on
Agriculture (AoA) to be reformed to address structural inequities in
agricultural trade. Five years on, implementation issues have all but
disappeared from the negotiating agenda, the proposals on SDT have been reduced
to just five proposals for LDCs (see Annex F, Draft Ministerial Text), and the
current proposals to reform the AoA are set to deepen the inequities.
Worse,
in exchange for this failed development agenda, and mostly away from the public
eye, negotiations have proceeded and intensified on trade in industrial
products and services. These negotiations demand far-reaching liberalization
commitments from developing countries, commitments that are incommensurate with
their development needs. Once again, a chance to reform trade rules to meet the
public interest has been hijacked to serve the interests of exporters,
particularly transnationals and those based in developed countries. If the
current proposals prevail they will perpetuate the failures of the existing WTO
agreements. Developing countries will lose significant flexibility to use
different policy measures in their manufacturing and service sectors. Their
ability to regulate will also be severely curtailed.
Pascal
Lamy and the European Commission (E.C.) are determined to sell the Ministerial
as a development package for the poor. Their strategy is an insult. Developing
countries have the right response: on 28th November, Argentina, Brazil, India,
Indonesia, Namibia, Pakistan, Philippines, South Africa and Venezuela launched
a campaign to reclaim development in the Doha Round. They reaffirmed the Doha
Declaration and highlighted some measures needed to redress imbalances in
existing WTO agreements (see link to their statement below). In addition, at a
recent Africa, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) Ministerial meeting in Brussels,
several ACP Ministers spoke out strongly against the attempts by Pascal Lamy and
the E.C. to sell the current deal with a development package. The ACP Ministers
said the offers were full of contradictions and conditionalities and that the
E.C. commitment to the ACP countries was so far illusory. In particular, they
spoke out against the conditionalities attached to Aid for Trade and the
possible trade-offs developing countries might have to make in other areas of
the WTO negotiations.
II.
MEASURING THE IMBALANCES
The
mood in Geneva is somber. On the one hand, many developing country negotiators
say there are no surprises in the draft text and therefore outrage is not
warranted. On the other hand, many developing country negotiators say there are
significant imbalances in the three main negotiating areas: agriculture,
non-agricultural market access (NAMA) and services. Many of the demands from
developed countries in NAMA and services are clearly in the text, while the
demands from developing countries are presented as much more contested in the
annexes or have been left out altogether.
In the
main body of the draft text, for example, there is an imbalance between
agriculture and NAMA in the most controversial area of all WTO negotiations:
the formula for reducing tariffs. In the agriculture section there is no
reference to the type of formula to be used for cutting tariffs. In the NAMA
section however, there is explicit reference to the use of a Swiss formula (a
type of formula that makes steeper cuts on higher tariffs and that is commonly
known as the most aggressive formula to cut tariffs). Tariffs are the most
controversial area because they determine the degree to which a country can
control the price, speed and volume at which imports enter their domestic
markets and therefore the extent to which a country can protect its local producers.
There
are imbalances in the annexes on the draft text. Annexes on agriculture and
NAMA are in the form of reports from the Chairs while the annex on services is
more akin to draft modalities (detailed commitments). The annex on special and
differential treatment (SDT) is in brackets (which means it may or may not be
adopted) and it is limited to five proposals for LDCs, ignoring the broader
range of proposals by developing countries for strengthening SDT for developing
countries as a whole.
There
are also imbalances between the agriculture and NAMA reports. Many developing
country members feel that the chair of the NAMA negotiations, Ambassador
Johannesson from Iceland, has inadequately reflected the positions of
developing countries. Further, Ambassador Johannesson instructs Ministers to
obtain agreement on the structure of a formula for tariff cuts and the numbers
for the tiers that would be used, to resolve their differences on flexibilities
and to clarify the treatment of unbound tariffs. The chair of the agriculture
negotiations, Ambassador Falconer of New Zealand, provides no such instruction
and instead leaves it to Members to decide how to proceed.
Yet, it
is in agriculture that more developing countries want to see reform to the existing
agreement, and it is in agriculture that some movement, from developed
countries, is urgently needed. The uneven treatment of issues reflects the
power imbalances in the multilateral trading system and highlights an urgent
need for clear rules for official WTO negotiations that guarantee transparency
and effective participation of all 148 members.
III.
AGRICULTURE: how to fix it
The
draft text on agriculture reflects the areas of convergence described in the
annex on agriculture, which is a report from the Chair, Ambassador Falconer, on
the current status of the negotiations. The majority of proposals in the report
reflect the domestic politics of WTO Members, especially developed country
members and the export interests of multinational agribusinesses that trade in
commodities and processed foods. A minority of proposals offer some hope: the
elimination of export subsidies, disciplines on the sale of food aid,
reductions to domestic support spending, exemptions for Special Products for
developing countries to protect crops that contribute to food and livelihood
security and rural development, and the provision for a Special Safeguard
Mechanism to protect against import surges. However, overall the negotiations
present serious contradictions and dilemmas and highlight the need for a
radical restructuring of the Agreement on Agriculture (AoA). Before WTO Members
commit to another bad trade deal, they should consider the following proposals
as a new basis for the agricultural trading system:
1. A
BAN ON AGRICULTURAL DUMPING: WTO rules to address agricultural export dumping
are inadequate. The WTO should require timely reporting of complete cost of
production numbers for all crops that a country wants to export. WTO rules
against dumping should be strengthened and simplified.
2.
ALLOW BORDER MEASURES: The 1947 General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
allowed countries to use agricultural tariffs if they managed their production,
but they were prohibited from exporting any surpluses that might result. This
approach should be revived. No firm or country should have a legal right to
export or a legal obligation to import. Countries should have the policy space
to determine how to structure and support their basic level of national
agricultural production, so long as their national policies do not damage other
countries' ability to do likewise.
3. NEW
CRITERIA FOR SUBSIDIES: Many agricultural subsidies are problematic, but not
all subsidies result in unfairly traded exports. The subsidy classification
system in the WTO is too politicized. Developed country negotiators have
manipulated the different colored boxes to suit their domestic needs.
Negotiators need better guidelines for disciplining agricultural subsidies. If
support payments are used, for example, they must be accompanied by strictly
enforced production limitations and controls on exports (an export tax might
address the implicit export subsidy such products receive). Export subsidies
should be eliminated immediately. WTO members should conduct a frank assessment
of the boxes to re-assess how best to limit trade distortions while respecting
countries' policy space to set and implement national agriculture and food
security objectives.
4.
ALLOW STATE TRADING ENTERPRISES. The WTO should not prohibit State-Trading
Enterprises (STEs) either explicitly, or de facto, by outlawing policies
necessary to the establishment and operation of a single desk seller. Export
state-trading enterprises offer a competitive counterweight to concentrated
export markets. STEs have real costs and have sometimes proved a strong
temptation for corruption. Nonetheless, properly overseen and with provision
for farmer control under public oversight, STEs offer important benefits,
particularly in countries where the private sector is weak or under-capitalized
or where it is highly concentrated. The question of monopoly and oligopoly
power should be addressed and monitored whether the companies in question are
publicly or privately owned.
5. PUT
FOOD SECURITY FIRST: Developing countries have made proposals to allow the
protection of their agriculture through the designation of special products
(crops strongly related to the country's food security) and the creation of a
special safeguard mechanism that would create a responsive and effective system
to protect agricultural markets from import surges. These proposals alone
cannot ensure food security, but they offer important protections against
imports, whether dumped or not, that undermine national productive capacities.
The proposals from both the G-20 and G-33 to allow border measures to control
imports of any product that has been subsidized through domestic or export
support should be adopted.
6.
REFORM FOOD AID. The WTO should agree criteria for food aid that is
unquestionably vital for humanitarian purposes and effectively non-trade
distorting. Other food aid programs should be subject to more careful review.
U.S. food aid practices demand particular scrutiny because they fail to meet
appropriate standards of flexibility and targeting that help ensure the
recipients of food aid get the right food at the right time. The U.S. test to
assess potential displacement of commercial sales (the Bellmon Analysis) is not
adequate. The WTO should ban all food aid not in grant form. The WTO should
support international efforts to strengthen and expand the Food Aid Convention
to establish a forum where recipient countries have a voice and humanitarian
and development concerns are given clear priority over domestic donor needs.
7.
MANAGE GLOBAL PRODUCTION: Chronic over-production of many commodities depresses
prices and exacerbates dumping. Proper regulation and management of commodity
markets is vital to ensure supply is balanced with demand and to prevent sharp
fluctuations in prices. WTO rules must allow governments to reopen discussions
on international commodity agreements to curtail global oversupply and ensure
fair prices.
IV.
SERVICES: changing the architecture
Since
the beginning, the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) has been
controversial. As a matter of fact, developing countries strongly opposed the
establishment of the GATS in the Uruguay Round. Yet, developed countries
managed to get their way. Immense
energy and significant tradeoffs also went into the GATS negotiating guidelines
of March 2001. It is in these
guidelines [document S/L/93] that developing country members rightly fought for
paragraph 14 and 15, requiring an assessment and review of the GATS. Until now the WTO and its members have
failed to implement any adequate procedures or output for such an assessment
and review - something that is also consistently demanded by a large number of
civil society groups.
The
current draft text has the potential to limit the flexibilities developing
countries won in the GATS during the Uruguay Round. The GATS has thus far been known for its "bottom-up
approach" meaning that countries can pick and choose which sectors to liberalize
and at the pace of their liking through a bilateral request and offer
process. Countries can also choose
what limitations they want to place on market access for foreign service
providers into their domestic markets.
Proposals leading up to the current draft, especially those tabled by
the E.C. have sought a more aggressive approach towards liberalization under
the GATS. They have asked for
numerical targets for liberalizing services sectors and "qualitative
objectives" where countries would remove restrictions in certain modes of
services (such as mode 1, which is cross border trade in services) and grant
additional market access. The E.C.
has also asked members to consider sectoral negotiations, similar to those
already completed on financial services and telecommunications during the
Uruguay Round. These were
plurilateral negotiations that demanded extensive liberalization from the
members that were party to the negotiations. Some sectors of interest are environmental services,
education and energy. Moreover,
the E.C. has insisted on language in the draft text that would introduce
plurilateral requests and offers as a way to negotiate the GATS. The proposed
language could force countries to negotiate, a radical departure from the
current GATS structure which allows countries to ignore requests if they wish
to do so. Many developing country
governments have spoken out against numerical targets and benchmarks, as well
as on plurilateral approaches and qualitative parameters. In Annex C of the draft text, the
language on numerical benchmarks has been taken out, however, qualitative
parameters and requests for plurilateral negotiations remain dominant. If
accepted, they will increase the complexities of an already controversial
agreement.
On 24th
November, African Ministers in their Arusha Declaration entitled Development
Benchmarks for the WTO Sixth Ministerial Conference in Hong Kong, China
rejected the complementary approaches proposed in Annex C ("complementary
approaches include qualitative parameters, numerical benchmarks, sectoral and
modal negotiations and the plurilateral approach). The African Ministers said,
"...the establishment of any qualitative individual or collective targets
would undermine the flexibilities provided for developing countries in the GATS
provisions and the existing negotiating guidelines and procedures. We are therefore opposed to qualitative
and quantitative targets, modal targets as well as sectoral negotiations, or
any language on the plurilateral request/offer approach that goes beyond the
negotiating guidelines."
As a
response to the existing draft text on services, five members of the
Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN), Brunei Darussalam, Indonesia,
Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand, tabled an alternative proposal,
reflecting the concerns of developing countries that do not want to reduce the
level of flexibility now accorded under the GATS. It is rumored that the Africa
Group does not even want to submit an alternative text on services because they
are so unhappy with the language in the current draft.
The
current text is an unacceptable as basis for moving the services talks,
particularly, since most developing countries have defensive interest in
services. The current language
pushes the door open for developing countries to liberalize faster with little
attention to development concerns.
Developing
countries requests for a comprehensive, assessment of the developmental,
environmental, social and gender impacts of services liberalization before
continuing with the GATS negotiations, are repeatedly ignored. This is despite
the fact that an increasing number of studies, including from the UN Conference
on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), question the benefits of services
liberalization. These studies demonstrate how developing countries will lose
flexibility in public policymaking under the GATS. Also the recent WTO Panel
rulings on services, such as the Telmex Case and the U.S. Gambling Case,
highlight the dangers of making commitments to open-up service sectors without
knowing the full implications.
V.
COMMODITIES
In June
2005, C™te d'Ivoire, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda and Zimbabwe resubmitted a
long-standing proposal calling for action to address the commodity crisis
arising from the decline in prices of primary commodities (see link below). The
proposal has achieved scarce attention in the negotiations but reference to the
commodity crisis is included in the draft text.
Solving
the problems that contribute to a nearly 40-year decline in agricultural
commodity prices is beyond the capacity of any one multilateral organization.
Still, WTO members could try harder. Instruments to reverse the price decline
and attenuate price volatility are not on the negotiating agenda either in the
agriculture talks or the NAMA talks. The Committee on Trade and Development has
no mandate to propose binding disciplines in this area. The general nature of
the language in the paragraph on commodities in the draft text and the way the
proposal on commodity issues continues to be sidelined, underlines the gap
between proposals that could really promote development and the
"development package" now on the table. Resolving the crisis in
commodity prices is extremely urgent and would be far more supportive of
development than any amount of Aid For Trade funding.
VII.
FROM NOW UNTIL HONG KONG
The
General Council meeting will take place 1-2 December and is expected to approve
the draft text, before it is send back to capitals for final examination before
the Ministerial Conference. The new Quad (U.S., E.C., Brazil and India) plus
Japan will meet 2-3 December to try thrash out further areas of convergence and
to lay out a post-Hong Kong roadmap.
The WTO
Director-General and many WTO members are determined to get as many commitments
as possible at the Hong Kong Ministerial. The second draft Ministerial text
reflects this ambition and contains more detailed language on agriculture and
NAMA than the previous draft text. Pascal Lamy told WTO members that the Hong
Kong Ministerial will be a "negotiating ministerial" and not simply a
stock-taking exercise. He has requested members to pay extra attention to
agriculture, NAMA and SDT for LDCs. The negotiating is far from over and the
Hong Kong Ministerial could turn out to be a lot more than many are
anticipating.
VIII.
IMPORTANT DATES TO REMEMBER
General
Council, 1-2 December
U.S.,
E.C., Brazil, India and Japan Ministerial Meeting, 2-3 December
Hong
Kong Ministerial Conference, 13-18 December
IX.
DOCUMENTS
Second
Draft Hong Kong Ministerial Text, 1st December 2005:
http://www.tradeobservatory.org/library.cfm?refid=77703
Draft
Hong Kong Ministerial Text, 26th November 2005:
http://www.tradeobservatory.org/library.cfm?refid=77635
Reclaiming
Development in the WTO Doha Development Round:
http://www.tradeobservatory.org/library.cfm?refid=77656
EU
Proposal for a development package in Hong Kong:
http://www.tradeobservatory.org/library.cfm?refid=77671
Questions
on Agriculture for Ministerial:
http://www.tradeobservatory.org/library.cfm?refid=77665
Questions
on NAMA for Ministerial:
http://www.tradeobservatory.org/library.cfm?refid=77666
Questions
on Services for Ministerial:
http://www.tradeobservatory.org/library.cfm?refid=77667
Commodity
Proposal by a Group of African Countries:
http://www.tradeobservatory.org/library.cfm?refid=73146