Developed
country negotiators and officials at the World Trade
Organisation, the powerbrokers in global trade, are
striving hard to impose a limited "consensus"
on members of the organisation. Holding out the threat
of the breakdown of the multilateral trading system
and the emergence of damaging bilateralism, they are
seeking an agreement on the framework for the next
round of global trade talks before a self-imposed
"drop-dead deadline" of July 31. For the
last few days WTO director general Supachai Panitchpakdi
has been warning the organisation's 147 member countries
that a "failure this month means the continuation
of an unsatisfactory status quo, certainly for the
remainder of this year and next and possibly for years
to come." Trade negotiations are known to extend
way beyond the deadlines that members set for themselves.
This makes the alarmist statements of the dangers
of dissent from interested parties like the director
general difficult to understand.
The Doha round sought to be launched in November 2001,
was expected to go on stream soon after, so that details
of an agreement could be reached by January 1, 2005.
But, half way through 2004 even the framework for
the talks has not been agreed upon. This makes the
original deadline impossible to meet, even if consensus
on a framework could be forged by the end of July.
So why failure to reach a framework agreement by that
date implies the end of the road is not immediately
clear.
The real concern of those pushing for an immediate
agreement on the framework is that unless such an
agreement is struck the new round is not even launched,
given the partial agreement at Doha and the failure
at Cancun. As Peter Sutherland, former Director General
of the WTO put it: "failure this month would
mean we had not moved one jot from the Doha Declaration.
The Doha round would, in effect, be dead. When meaningful
negotiation is again possible in the WTO - say, in
a year from now - we will be looking at a complete
relaunch. It might take several years to achieve consensus
on a new agenda."
What is more, if negotiations are not formally launched
in July delays driven by politics in the developed
countries is inevitable. First, the impending American
elections rule out any deal being struck by US negotiators
after this General Council meeting on July 27 till
late into next year. Second, the impending appointment
of a new European Commission in November would introduce
new uncertainties about the European position and
render consensus on the framework and modalities of
a new round elusive.
Thus the "consensus" being sought just now
is limited to one which declares that the Doha round
is on. It requires countries to commit themselves
to reviving the aborted negotiations and agree to
a framework of rules that would govern the conduct
of those talks. Once the framework is in place, the
modalities can be worked out and a new multilateral
consensus negotiated. That would take time, but global
trade barons could at least be certain that they are
still in the game of shaping a new, more liberal regime.
The problem is that the developed countries are willing
to give very little while demanding too much of the
developing countries as the price for their endorsement
of a framework agreement. This is not surprising,
since they want to load the agenda from the very beginning
with rules and caveats that ensure that their interests
are protected and advanced, if and when the final
agreement for the Doha Round is arrived at. Given
the influence which the developed countries wield
in global trade in general and over the WTO in particular,
the framework agreement, drafted through a quasi-formal
process that was by no means transparent and released
barely 10 days before the General Council meeting
on July 27, reflects in large measure the bias in
favour of the developed countries. Not surprisingly,
controversy surrounds the draft – released on July
16 - of even this preliminary agreement.
The lack of transparency reflects the many hurdles
that those pushing for a limited agreement have to
manoeuvre in a divided world. The stumbling blocks
to consensus include: the unwillingness of the developed
countries to accept substantial trade liberalisation
in areas crucial to each one of them; the consequent
divisions within the developed-country camp; the disappointment
in the developing world with the actual implementation
and the results (that have fallen far short of promises)
of the Uruguay round as well as the position being
adopted by the developed countries on old and new
issues; and the unwillingness of the developed world
to prioritise redressing of the existing equities
in the multilateral trading system rather than seek
new advances on the liberalisation front.
Given these constraints, the only way an agreement
can be pushed through is to appease the powerful and
pressure the weak into quiescence. This precisely
what the General Council chair Shotaro Oshima, WTO
director general Supachai Panitchpakdi and EC trade
commissioner Pascal Lamy, have been attempting to
do in recent months. Their problem, however, was that
obtaining endorsement from the major trading powers
itself has proved extremely difficult. As in the Uruguay
Round, the main bone of contention within the developed
country camp was the $600 billion global market for
agricultural commodities.
During the Uruguay Round, besides the device of defining
certain measures of support to agriculture as "non-trade-distorting"
and including them in a permissible Green Box, European
endorsement of the Agreement on Agriculture (AoA)
was won through the Blair House Accord, which was
an in-house deal struck at an informal meeting between
the developed countries. The accord involved the creation
of the Blue Box, into which a set of support measures
that were officially defined as trade-distorting could
be incorporated and exempted from reduction commitments,
allowing the developed countries, especially the EU,
to provide substantial protection for their farming
community. Further, while provision was made for the
phasing out of the Blue Box at then end of implementation
period of the Uruguay Round, it was agreed at Blair
House that the AoA would explicitly specify a Peace
Clause that prevented countries from challenging those
measures during the implementation period. In the
event, the focus of agricultural reform in the developed
countries, especially the US and the EU, has been
the transformation of the nature of agricultural support
into measures that fall in the Green and Blue Boxes,
so that the support that would be subject to reduction
commitments would shrink. By pressurising developing
countries into accepting these patently protectionist
instruments, a global consensus that yielded the AoA
and the WTO was forged.
This time around too, an important step to progress
on a framework agreement remains a consensus between
the developed countries on agriculture. If at all
the developed countries were to be seen as making
new concessions towards freeing trade in agriculture,
they had to agree to do away with export subsidies
on agricultural products, accepted larger market access
commitments than required of developing countries,
and substantially reduce overall support provided
to their agriculture through various Blue and Green
Box measures. However, with the EU relying heavily
on Blue Box support, it was unwilling to consider
any framework agreement which did not retract the
Uruguay Round commitment to phase out such measures.
So the negotiations have focused on what the EU would
give in areas like overall support reduction and reduced
export subsidies in return for the retention of the
Blue Box.
The first signs of a partial consensus within the
developed-country camp came when the EU trade commissioner,
Pascal Lamy, offered to end EU export subsidies if
the US eliminates subsidised food aid and export credits,
and Australia, Canada and New Zealand curb state trading
monopolies in agriculture. Lamy also confirmed that
the EU had softened its position on US farm export
credits and might be willing to accept less than their
total elimination.
Annex A of the draft agreement, dealing with agriculture,
makes clear how much the EU has got in return, creating
an extremely imbalanced framework for establishing
modalities in agriculture and damaging in the process
the interests of developing countries and agricultural
exporters. The draft declares that the Annex details
the elements that "offer the additional precision
required at this stage of the negotiations" in
pursuit of the objective of establishing "a fair
and market-oriented trading system through a process
of fundamental reform". But it is quick to correct
itself and states that "the final balance will
be found only at the conclusion of these subsequent
negotiations and within the Single Undertaking."
This formulation clearly uses the Single Undertaking
notion to provide for the possibility of a compromise.
In the language of the draft, too much precision is
not possible in the current stage, especially given
the need for a quick consensus. Since the single undertaking
idea requires countries to take all or nothing, they
are expected to make compromises, accepting less in
some areas and gaining more in others. Countries are
expected to give and take in the agricultural area,
for example, in lieu of offers and demands in other
spheres, so that the final balance remains tentative.
The underlying assumption is that special interests
of individual countries vary enough to allow for a
consensus to emerge through the Single Undertaking
route.
It should be obvious that a framework of this kind
should be relatively flexible in all areas, and equally
so, in order to provide space for compromise. This,
however, is not the case. In agriculture the minimum
bounds of a possible compromise in terms of reduced
support by the developed countries has been fixed
at a relatively high level, reducing the space for
negotiation. In other areas, however, the floor to
which countries can be expected to proceed has either
been made flexible (as in the case of non-agricultural
market access or special and differential treatment
for developing countries) or rendered non-existent.
This bias becomes clear in the discussions on the
'three pillars' of domestic support, export competition
and market access. The massive domestic support for
agriculture in the US, EU and Japan that adversely
affects global prices of agricultural commodities
as well as the access of developing country exporters
to developed country markets is now well known. According
to the OECD Secretariat, the level of support provided
to agricultural producers expressed as the monetary
value of transfers from consumers and budgetary payments
to producers (the Producer Support Estimate or PSE)
amounted to $230 billion in 2002 and $257 billion
in 2003. This was equal to a third of the current
OECD gross farm receipts. Reacting to these (or even
higher) levels of support, countries have been demanding
substantial reductions overall domestic support.
What the draft framework does is to divert attention
from the need to do adopt such policies as part of
the effort to move towards a fair trading system and
focus on the quantum of support which is being provided
under heads other than the Green Box. The issue in
focus is not the principle or the nature but the quantum
of support. As a result there are three different
measures of support that are recognised as acceptable
and discussed. These are the aggregate measure of
support (AMS), which covers only those payments made
through means that are expressly considered trade-distorting;
the de minimis level of support, which permits all
countries to retain some degree of support through
trade-distorting measures independent of their level
of AMS in the benchmark year; and third the total
trade-distorting support, which includes support being
provided through these means as well as through the
adoption of Blue Box measures.
This leads up to a set of recommendations. The first
is the need for substantial and effective reduction
in the overall level of trade distorting support,
defined as the sum total of these three.
The second is the adoption of a tiered formula for
reduction in domestic support: countries with higher
levels of allowed support will be expected to make
deeper cuts. This tiered reduction approach will also
be followed for reduction of the final bound level
of aggregate support or total possible AMS, and product
specific caps would be specified at their average
levels during an agreed historical period, to prevent
transfer of unchanged domestic support between categories.
The third is the reduction of the permissible de minimis
level.
The fourth is a cap on the level of Blue Box support
as a percentage of the average value of agricultural
production. This implies the retention of the Blue
Box which was to be phased out by 2004, as a viable
means of agricultural reform. There is no talk of
phasing out these measures even by the end of the
Doha Round, if such a Round were to begin. What is
more, the draft calls for some flexibility to ensure
that members providing a high share of trade distorting
support through Blue Box measures would not have to
make disproportionate cuts.
Finally, even though there is mention of the need
to review Green Box measures to ensure that they have
no, "or at most minimal", trade distorting
effects, it has been made clear that the basic concepts,
principles and effectiveness of the Green Box should
remain.
The concessions offered in return for the right to
protect are in the area of export subsidies for agriculture
that are to be phased out. Since this affects the
EU disproportionately, given the its current use of
such measures, an effort is made to elicit parallel
commitments form other countries. There is to be a
parallel elimination of trade distorting elements
of export credits and export credit guarantees (that
are to be on commercial terms), of practices adopted
by State Trading Enterprises in export sales, and
of food aid that can used as a mechanism of surplus
disposal. But even here, the schedule for implementing
new obligations, commitments and disciplines "will
take into account the need for coherence with internal
reform steps of Members". While concerns of the
developed are consistently thus addressed, the only
special concession being provided to developing countries
in this area is a longer implementation period.
Even in the area of market access there is to be single
approach for developed and developing countries, with
differentiation based only on the current level of
tariffs using a tiered tariff reduction formula in
which there would be deeper cuts in the case of higher
tariffs. While LDCs are to be exempted from a contribution,
special and differential treatment for developing
countries is recognised as "an integral part
of all elements" but left unspecified.
Finally, a reference to "flexibilities"
for sensitive products, which has pleased Japan, have
been made, but concessions to developing countries
for Special Products impinging on issues of rural
development, livelihood security and food security
is mentioned but left undefined and their accommodation
left to the "post-Framework stage"
In sum, the concern in the agricultural area during
the framework stage has been to take on board the
sensitivities of the developed countries, particularly
the European Union, while postponing any special specification
relating to the developing countries. But even this
does not seem to ensure full support from within the
developed country camp. French President Jacques Chirac
has declared that the draft framework is "unacceptable",
and Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin has warned
the European Commission that "France cannot give
its agreement to a negotiation concluded on this basis."
Resentment about the role played by French Commissioner
Lamy runs high, and he is unlikely to get official
backing either for continuing in the Commission or
finding a slot in other international institutions.
But the European Union as a group has implicitly endorsed
the draft, which is being pushed because France does
not have a veto.
Having partially cleared the developed-country stumbling
block, the effort of the developed countries seems
to be to split the developing country camp so as to
prevent any attempt by them to unite and stall the
Doha round. Interestingly, on July 13, before the
release of the draft framework, trade officials from
the US, the European Union, Brazil and India, issued
a statement urging ministers of the Group of 90 (G90)
developing countries meeting in Mauritius, to back
the effort to arrive at a framework agreement by the
end of July. The ability to win support from India
and Brazil can be attributed to efforts by these countries
to use a new round to win concessions in areas relevant
to them, such as cross-border supply of services in
the case of India. This combined plea of two leading
developing countries, in collaboration with the developed
countries, put pressure on the G90 to dilute some
of its demands including the demand to separately
negotiate, independent of the overall negotiations
on agriculture, American subsidies on cotton that
affect the livelihoods of their peasantry extremely
adversely. The draft framework states that the cotton
question "will be addressed ambitiously and expeditiously
as an integral part of the negotiations". It
deserves a mention, in the WTO's view, but not special
treatment.
Earlier in May, Pascal Lamy made a controversial effort
to drive a wedge into the developing country camp,
by proposing that weak and vulnerable countries, which
are part of G90, should be offered the benefits of
a new round "for free", by exempting them
from making any liberalisation commitments. A similar
proposal has come from the EU, which calls for channelling
the benefits of its preferential trade scheme more
to the poorest countries, giving them advantages relative
to larger developing countries like China and India
that are now the major beneficiaries of the preferential
trading scheme. The intention is clearly to divide
sections of developing countries and weaken their
opposition to the specific form in which the developed
country camp wants to push ahead with the Doha Round.
Whether such tactics would work and we would see a
replay of the Uruguay Round drama remains to be seen.
But as of now the only hope that remains is that the
patently unequal and biased framework draft makes
it impossible for developing countries to succumb
to a strategy that relies on power rather than reason
to realise imperial ambitions dressed in the rhetoric
of economic rationality.
July 27, 2004.
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