WTO Public Symposium - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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WTO Public Symposium

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WHAT NEEDS TO HAPPEN BEFORE CANCUN ... Preparation for Cancun so ministers have a manageable set of issues. ... SUCCESSFUL DEVELOPMENT ROUND BEYOND CANCUN ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: WTO Public Symposium


1
  • WTO Public Symposium
  • Fulfilling the Doha Development Agenda Key
    Issues for developing countries
  • 18 June 2003

2
FULFILLING THE DOHA DEVELOPMENT AGENDA WHY IT
MATTERS
  •  
  • Global trading system failing to bring benefits
    it could to developing countries and to poor
    people.
  •  
  • Africas share of world trade halved between 1980
    and 1999.
  •  
  • Share of 49 poorest countries fell from 0.8 to
    0.4 over same period.

3
WHY THE DDA MATTERS
  •   
  • DDA sets out bold agenda, putting development at
    centre of multilateral trade negotiations.
  •  
  • First step toward creating a fairer set of rules
    to govern international trade.
  •  
  • Includes commitments to
  •  
  • Reduce agricultural trade barriers
  • Improve non-agricultural market access
  • Make SDT provisions more effective
  • Improve rules on TRIPS/ public health and
    anti-dumping

4
WHY THE DDA MATTERS
  •  
  • World Bank estimates eliminating all barriers to
    trade in goods would generate extra US 250bn
    620bn in global income. Up to half to developing
    countries. This could lift 300 million out of
    poverty by 2015.
  •  
  • But trade and trade liberalisation alone not
    enough. Need pro-poor policies, investment in
    health and education, greater access by poor to
    productive assets, stronger institutions,
    infrastructure and CB to develop supply side.

5
WHY THE DDA MATTERS
  •  
  • Boost to multilateralism and global economy.
    Annual growth in world trade barely 2 in 2002
    (compared to 7 annual average in 1990s).
  •   
  • Risks of failure weakening of multilateral
    rules based system and proliferation of bilateral
    and regional agreements that could leave poorer
    countries more exposed.

6
KEY ISSUES FOR DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
  •  AGRICULTURE
  •  
  • Agricultural Market Access is the single biggest
    development issue in the DDA.
  •  
  • Agriculture accounts for about 27 of GDP and
    export earnings in developing countries as a
    whole and 50 of employment.
  •  
  • Agricultural markets are among the most heavily
    protected For OECD countries the average bound
    tariff is 60 (12 times the rate for industrial
    products).
  •  
  • OECD spend 310bn every year on agricultural
    support roughly same as sub-Saharan Africas
    GDP. Subsidies to farmers (US106bn EU, 95bn US
    and 59bn Japan in 2001) create unfair
    competition for poorer producers in domestic and
    third markets.
  •  
  • Special Safeguard Mechanism important and
    special products subject to minimal tariff
    reductions to protect food security.

7
KEY ISSUES FOR DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
  • TRIPS/Public Health
  •  
  • Agreement at Doha on need to ensure flexibility
    in implementing TRIPs, so countries without
    manufacturing capacity can use compulsory
    licensing to get access to affordable drugs.
  •  
  • Critical to meet health needs of millions
    suffering from diseases like HIV/AIDS, malaria,
    TB.
  •  

8
KEY ISSUES FOR DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
  • Special Differential Treatment
  •  
  • Making SDT provisions more effective, including
    through longer periods to implement WTO rules,
    lower tariff reductions (critical where
    government budgets heavily dependent on tariff
    income).
  • NAMA
  •  
  • Increased market access for textiles, clothing
    and footwear. Estimated there are 27 million less
    jobs in developing countries because of quotas
    tariffs.

9
KEY ISSUES FOR DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
  • Services
  • Significant interest in Mode 4 (temporary
    movement of workers).
  •  
  • Estimated that an increase in developed country
    quotas for skilled and unskilled temporary labour
    equivalent to just 3 of their labour forces
    would create increase in global economic welfare
    1.5 times greater than gains from liberalisation
    of all remaining trade restrictions.
  •  
  • Trade Related Capacity Building
  •  
  • Delivery on commitments.

10
PROGRESS SO FAR
  • Least progress on the issues that matter most to
  • developing countries
  •  
  • Agriculture Missed deadlines on modalities for
    new Agriculture agreement. Awaiting EU CAP
    reform.
  •  
  • TRIPS/public health Every member except US able
    to sign up in December to compromise text. No
    agreement yet.
  •  
  • SDT Need agreement on substantial package of
    measures.
  •  
  • NAMA another missed deadline.

11
OBSTACLES
  • Political will to take on powerful domestic
    interest groups in OECD (agricultural reform
    TRIPS/public health and in developing countries
    that stand to gain from increased South-South
    trade too.
  •  
  • More WTO members more significant players with
    divergent interests (e.g. Cairns Group versus
    those defending ACP preferences).
  •  
  • Polarised positions on extent of liberalisation
    (agriculture and NAMA).
  •  
  • Lack of progress on key issues (e.g. reduction of
    trade distorting OECD agricultural subsidies)
    slowing down progress on other issues (NAMA,
    Services, Singapore issues).

12
OBSTACLES
  •  
  • Breadth of the round and ambitious timetable.
  •  
  • Serious capacity constraints especially of poorer
    countries to participate meaningfully in the
    negotiations. Lack of analysis and input from
    capitals (e.g. on Service sectors).
  •  
  • Political events (e.g. US 2004 elections) could
    complicate achievement of DDA deadline.
  •  

13
WHAT NEEDS TO HAPPEN BEFORE CANCUN
  • Cancun less than 100 days away.
  •  
  • Political leadership difficult decisions to
    give new momentum to the DDA.
  •  
  • EU member states need to reach agreement on CAP
    reform (Fischler proposals on decoupling
    agricultural support from production).
  •  
  • Secure US support for TRIPS/public health
    December 16 text. Possibly with reassurances to
    pharmaceutical industry on recourse to DSU in
    clear cases of abuse and by developing country
    manufacturers.
  •  

14
WHAT NEEDS TO HAPPEN BEFORE CANCUN
  • SDT Willingness of advanced developing
    countries to prioritise needs of poorest WTO
    members. Progress reached on substantial package
    of measures.
  •  
  • World leaders and opinion leaders need to
    champion the DDA.
  •  
  • Engagement with business and civil society.
  •  
  • More vocal NGO support on issues of most
    importance to developing countries. Ministers
    wont take tough political decisions if only hear
    critical voices.
  •  
  • Mini-ministerial/s help move negotiations forward.

15
SUCCESS AT CANCUN
  • Members to recommit to ambition of DDA.
  •  
  • Shared ownership to make it work.
  •  
  • Realistic expectations important step.
  •  
  • Learn from what worked at Doha and didnt at
    Seattle.
  •  
  • EU/US leadership that made difference at Doha.
    Greater convergence on key issues.
  •  
  • Preparation for Cancun so ministers have a
    manageable set of issues.
  •  
  • Reach some agreements to create new momentum.

16
WORKING FOR A SUCCESSFUL DEVELOPMENT ROUND
BEYOND CANCUN
  • Chairs of negotiations put forward proposals to
    seed process and build consensus.
  •  
  • Address concerns of potential losers from loss of
    preferential market access (ACP) research extent
    of problem IFIs, multilateral and bilateral
    donors give support to ease transition/diversifica
    tion.
  •  
  • Analytical and technical assistance to developing
    countries e.g. on Services negotiations
    commitments in individual agricultural schedules.

17
WORKING FOR A SUCCESSFUL DEVELOPMENT ROUND
BEYOND CANCUN
  • Design of proposed framework agreements on new
    issues to address needs of developing countries
    (cost/benefit e.g. on trade facilitation).
  •  
  • New approach to SDT more tailored to helping
    individual countries at different stages of
    development adjust to specific rules and
    agreements.
  •  
  • Coordinated approach to Technical Assistance and
    Trade-related capacity building by donors through
    Integrated Framework.
  •  

18
WORKING FOR A SUCCESSFUL DEVELOPMENT ROUND BEYOND
CANCUN
  • Address disconnect between Geneva-based trade
    negotiations and national economic development
    policies (PRSPs etc). Integration of trade and
    development needed to identify new opportunities,
    careful sequencing of reforms.
  • Complementary pro-poor policies so trade
    contributes to Millennium Development Goals.
  •  
  • Democracies need to ratify agreements reached.
    Greater involvement of civil society and private
    sector in dialogue on trade and development.
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