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How
the WTO Can Recover from the Seattle Fiasco
‘Seattle
was a mess. If the WTO is to recover, it will need to bring the
developing countries much more securely into the trading system’,
argue Zhen Kun Wang of the Royal Institute of International Affairs,
London and L Alan Winters of the University of Sussex in the latest CEPR
Policy Paper. To be successful, a new WTO Round requires the
enthusiastic support of the developing countries.
They
felt ignored in Seattle because their views went unheard by the rich and
the procedures excluded them. Yet developing countries comprise the
majority in the WTO and account for an increasing share of world trade
and the bulk of its growth. Restoring the legitimacy of the world
trading system in the eyes of the majority of its members is a matter of
self-interest for developed countries. They will gain from further
liberalisation and the disciplines that an effective WTO imposes on
domestic policy.
Wang
and Winters present an eight-point programme to give the developing
countries a greater stake in an open multilateral trading system. The
key elements are:
-
developed
countries – particularly the EU and Japan – must liberalise
their agriculture.
They should
reduce their bound tariffs from 50-150% to the 0-15% range, ban farm
export subsidies, and cut domestic support;
-
developing
countries must reduce their tariffs on manufactured imports, which
currently average over 10%. This
liberalisation will give them a bargaining counter for concessions
from developed countries, aiming at ending tariff escalation;
-
developing
countries should support the liberalisation of trade in services,
where their potential gains are huge.
Liberalising the
temporary movement of workers, for example, would help the
construction, distribution, health and transport sectors in
developing countries to become significant exporters;
-
developing
countries should refuse to conclude the next Round if the MFA
agreement negotiated in the Uruguay Round is not implemented.
Quotas must be
removed and not replaced by, say, anti-dumping duties. The
developing countries have a clear interest in postponing the end of
a new Round well into 2005, when MFA quotas have all been off for
some time;
-
developed
countries should match developing countries’ recent unilateral
liberalisations.
This would
reassure developing countries, who say that they often must ‘pay
twice’ for developed-country liberalisation.
Old-style
special treatment should be junked. It should be replaced by agreements
that recognise the developing countries’ need for easy institutional
routes to liberalisation. Developed countries’ promises of technical
assistance to implement WTO obligations must become legally binding.
Labour
and environmental standards, investment and competition policy must be
kept off the agenda or there will be no new Round. Adding labour and
environmental clauses into the WTO would foster protectionism.
Negotiating issues such as investment and competition policy will divert
political and bureaucratic attention from trade liberalisation.
Comprehensive trade rounds increase the opportunities for bargaining.
Developing country administrations do not need the external imposition
of more institutions they cannot operate effectively.
The
WTO must help developing countries to deal with trade issues and with
the WTO itself. And it should be more streamlined to facilitate
pre-negotiation discussions, but not create binding agreements. These
must emerge from consensus.
Developing
country policy-makers will have to tackle fundamental institutional
problems and confront domestic protectionist interests. Developed
country leaders must not insist that only their models of policy and
institutions are valid. They will also have to confront domestic
interest groups to make the concessions necessary to ensure that the
trading system survives.
There
must be an effective coalition in favour of the trading system before
starting another serious round of talks. This requires greater attention
to the needs of developing countries and procedural reform of the WTO.
And that means real concessions from the developed world.
Notes
for Editors:
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is a network of over 500 Research Fellows based throughout Europe, who
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helps its Research Fellows to develop projects, obtain their funding,
administer them and disseminate their results. The Centre’s research
ranges from open economy macroeconomics to trade policy, from the
economic transformation of Central and Eastern Europe to regionalism in
the world economy. For further information about CEPR, please contact
Rita Gilbert, Tel: (44 20) 7878 2917 or email: rgilbert@cepr.org,
or contact James Morgan, Tel: (44 20) 8225 7262. Visit our website for a
copy of this document or for additional services: http://www.cepr.org
The
Authors:
Zhen
Kun Wang is from the
International Economics Programme at the Royal Institute of
International Affairs. L Alan
Winters is Professor of Economics at the University of Sussex and is
also a Research Fellow in CEPR’s International Trade research
programme.
PUTTING
‘HUMPTY’ TOGETHER AGAIN:
INCLUDING DEVELOPING COUNTRIES IN A CONSENSUS FOR THE WTO
CEPR
POLICY PAPER NO 4
Zhen
Kun Wang and L Alan Winters
ISBN
1 898128 485 – £10/$15.00/€15.00
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