Another
deadline has been missed in the perpetually "ongoing"
negotiations to further liberalise world trade. The
149 members of the World Trade Organisation were to
arrive at agreement on the "modalities"
for reducing various forms of support to agriculture
and increasing market access for non-agricultural
commodities by the 30th of April. An end-April mini-ministerial
had been announced by Pascal Lamy, the organisation's
Director General, which was expected to clinch an
agreement. But as deadline day neared, all that came
to nought. With no hope of agreement between the US
and the EU and the "leading" developing
countries like Brazil and India unsatisfied, everybody
agreed that the deadline was best left unmet. But
the process continues. Director General Lamy has declared
that, "from now on, the process to reach modalities
will be continuous, Geneva-based, and focused on texts,"
with the aim of finishing this work in a matter of
weeks rather than months.
But the disappointment expressed is more symbolic
than heartfelt. Nor is there any deadline fatigue
visible. Many deadlines have been set and missed in
the many rounds of trade negotiations that have contributed
to making global trade as liberal as it is today.
And in many countries the extent of liberalisation
of trade is far more than that mandated by the WTO.
Not surprisingly global trade grew in real terms at
9.5 and 6.0 per cent respectively in 2004 and 2005,
even while global GDP at constant prices grew by just
3.9 and 3.3 per cent respectively.
The process continues because those pushing for a
more open multilateral trade regime have four broad
objectives. The first is to use the multilateral trade-liberalisation
lever to deliver significant marginal gains in commodities,
regions and countries considered unduly protectionist:
agriculture in the EU and industry in some of the
larger developing countries with a long history of
import-substituting industrialisation, for example.
This is seen by many governments as necessary to legitimise
their support for a multilateral agreement at home.
The second is to extend multilaterally agreed liberalisation
to relatively new areas, like services, intellectual
property rights (IPRs) and investment, not all of
which are directly in the realm of international trade.
The third is to legally bind countries to an agreed
level of liberalisation so as to foreclose any reversal
of the liberalisation process. And the fourth, is
to use the WTO as an excuse to defend unilaterlal
liberalisation at home, on the grounds that it was
inevitable within the emerging multilateral regime.
These are medium or long-term goals and nothing would
crack if agreement is not reached today, as many advocates
tend to argue. Why then are deadlines constantly set,
only to be revised? In the world of trade diplomacy
these deadlines are clearly seen as catalysts for
movement. These catalysts matter for those who are
the key players in defining the pace of liberalisation.
If, in the view of those key players, initial expectations
of the extent of liberalisation are excessive, then
"ambitions" must be lowered for the sake
of progress, however slow. But once lowered, deadlines
must be used to pressure countries into submission.
In the case of the Doha Round, the erosion of ambition
started early: the acceptance of the continuation
of Blue Box (or moderately trade-distorting) support
to agriculture, the silence on Green Box (or ostensibly
non-trade-distorting) support, the implicit endorsement
of the practice of Box shifting and the restriction
of dialogue to more trivial issues like export subsidies,
import tariffs and so-called trade distorting support.
But the erosion of ambition is asymmetric across areas.
Nothing illustrates this more than the "unbracketing"
of the whole of the controversial Annex C (dealing
with services) at Hong Kong and the acceptance of
plurilateral negotiations in services, which many
developing countries had resisted to the very end.
From the point of view of the developed countries,
this amounted to upping the stakes.
Seen in these terms, there are elements of continuity
and change between the Uruguay Round and the current
Doha Round. Victory in the race to clinch an agreement
that would bring the Uruguay Round to a close was
predicated solely on agreement on issues of controversy
within the Quad, especially between the US and EU.
This was achieved through secretive deals like the
infamous Blair House Accord that limited the extent
of liberalisation of agriculture. This tendency continues.
Failure this time was principally because of lack
of agreement on agricultural trade liberalisation
between the EU and the US, with EU intransigence presented
as the major obstacle by the US and the EU trade commissioner
declaring the US the biggest stumbling block to progress
because of its unrealisitic demands. But there is
an element of change this time. This is widening of
the elite club to include some developing countries
like Brazil and India, reflected in the role of the
group of five (the US, EU, Australia, Brazil and India,
named the "five interested parties", as
if none other was interested) in arriving at the mid-2004
agreement called the July framework. Their unwillingness
to give more on NAMA without further concessions from
the EU, strengthened the US hand.
The implications of this new alliance at the top are
clear from the sequencing argument Lamy used in his
effort to meet the April 30 deadline. An end-April
mini-Ministerial he held would be confined to resolving
"key modalities" which he had defined as
those relating to agricultural subsidies, agricultural
tariffs and the number of sensitive products, and
the NAMA tariff reduction formula. This amounted to
a postponement of discussions on issues of interest
to poorer countries such as special products and special
safeguards in agriculture, special modalities for
"Paragraph 6" countries (those with less
than 35 per cent tariff bindings) in NAMA, and the
problem of preference erosion in both agriculture
and NAMA. Not surprisingly poorer countries, those
in Africa in particular, objected to the sequencing
approach. But they may not have really mattered.
The expansion of the decision-makers club is obviously
part of a strategy being adopted by the Quad, partly
in response to the failures at Seattle and Cancun
and the growing loss of credibility of the UR. That
strategy has many components, including: (i) making
governments like those of Brazil and India believe
that they can get away with more in agriculture or
services, if they join the group of five, and would
lose out if they are not there; (ii) making special
proposals like global duty and quota free market access
and introducing ambiguous issues like the aid-for-trade
programme to "buy out" the low income countries,
as economist Jagdish Bhagwati has put it; (iii) relying
more on Regional Trade Agreements and Bilateral Trade
Agreements with Doha-plus and minus elements, especially
with regard to Non-Tariff Barriers, investment rules
and IPRs; and (iv) declaring and sending out signals
that negotiations would collapse or be postponed threatening
uncertainty and chaos, if agreement is not in sight.
The last minute replacement of Rob Portman with Susan
Schwab as US trade representative, making it impossible
for the US to make any further adjustments in its
negotiating stance, was a clear statement from the
US that it did not care what happened in Geneva this
April.
All this transpires because of a belief among wealthholders
(and those who represent them) in both the developed
and developing countries that the only strategy which
could ensure wealth expansion in the current global
conjuncture is one that involves a substantial increase
in integration into the world system. So the further
integration goes the better. One factor reflecting
this new alliance of the rich is the growing exposure
of the world’s wealthholders to dollar denominated
assets, making them as concerned as the US government
with ensuring the persistence of buoyancy in the US
economy. This concern has been compounded by the fact
that the US economy is the world’s locomotive, with
growth elsewhere in the world increasingly based on
US-market dependence. In their view, if greater openness
elsewhere, even at the expense of the majority in
those countries, serves the cause of a tenuous stability
in US growth, then so be it.
From the point of view of the majority in the developing
world, however, current trends in global trade and
global growth are patently inequalising, both internationally
and domestically. Their stake in integration is small
and declining. They are, therefore, bound to be happy
that the deadline has been missed. But when and how
they would be able to reverse trends that are not
in their favour is unclear. Till then, division at
the top, however temporary, is small solace.
May 1, 2006. |