The Doha ministerial meet
of the WTO ended with a set of declarations which signal agreement among
its 144 members over a 'work programme' that amounts to a new round of
trade negotiations, irrespective of what it is actually called. While this
end result is clear, the manner in which the agreement was arrived at and
is finally phrased has raised a number of questions that still remain
unanswered. Some among these relate to the specific implications of the
opaque ways in which the declarations have been worded, as part of the
power-play and diplomacy that went into forcing out a decision from the
highly contentious negotiations. Others relate to the degree to which
developing countries, led it appears by India, were able to redress
existing inequalities and stall imposition of new burdens through a new
round of negotiations. Yet others relate to the degree to which the
promise of greater transparency made after the fiasco at Seattle had been
delivered at Doha. And, finally there is the all important question as to
why, despite its own domestic record of resorting to accelerated
liberalisation and defending the benefits of freer trade, the NDA
government, through its representative the Commerce Minister Murasoli
Maran, articulated and stuck to a hard-line position against a new round,
which it gave up only when it was clear that it had been completely
isolated by the manoeuvres of the Quad countries, particularly the US and
the EU.
The three declarations that
have come out of Doha are the 'Doha Developmental Agenda' for what is in
essence a new round of trade talks; the declaration on a set of
implementation issues raised by the developing countries; and a 'political
statement' on patents and public health. An examination of the three
declarations indicate that the developing countries have been able to
manage a partial holding operation and even register some gains at the end
of the Doha meet.
The principal gain is of
course embodied in the political statement dealing with patents and public
health. Spurred by the victories won by some African countries by way of
clearance to obtain cheap imports of AIDS drugs from countries like India
which do not as yet recognise product patents and by the expressed
willingness of sections in the US to resort to similar imports or
compulsorily licence the production of ciprofloxacin in the event of an
Anthrax emergency, developing countries and a number of NGOs have been
demanding more clearly specified and enhanced flexibility in ignoring
clauses of the TRIPs agreement and overriding patents for public health
reasons. The developed countries have wanted such flexibility to be
provided for only in the event of a public health "emergency" such as an
AIDS pandemic.
As opposed to this Brazil,
India, the sub-Saharan Africa countries and some NGOs have been demanding
greater autonomy for countries in deciding the public health grounds on
which they should be able to resort to such measures. The political
statement does go a part of the way in providing for such autonomy,
besides making special concessions to least developed countries. Though
this does not constitute a formal amendment of the Uruguay Round
Agreement, inasmuch as such ministerial level political statements are
taken account of by dispute settlement panels when deciding on complaints
of treaty violations, the developing countries have indeed won themselves
a victory vis-à-vis the developed countries and the drug multinationals
headquartered there.
The second, extremely
minimal victory for the developing countries is there ability to get the
ministerial meet to deliberate on and issue a declaration about the more
than 40 issues relating to the implementation of the Uruguay Round that
had been raised by them over time. All of these focus on the need to
modify or reinterpret specific clauses of the Uruguay Round agreement
because of its failure to deliver on its promises in terms of benefits to
developing countries. However, not much should be made of this 'victory'
since, because barring some agreement on the imposition of anti-dumping
duties by the advanced countries, most crucial implementation problems
such as those relating to domestic support for agriculture in the US and EU and to the trade in textiles have been just accepted as issues that are
in need of negotiation as part of a new enlarged round. That is, going
against the grain of demands from the developing countries, including
India, in the run up to Doha, that implementation issues need to be sorted
out before any new round of talks is initiated, almost all of those issues
have been included in the agenda of the new round.
Third, after much hard
bargaining the developing countries have managed to obtain a small
concession in the area of agricultural support in the developed countries.
The EU had, after much stonewalling, to agree to reduce, "with a view to
phasing out", of agricultural export subsidies. This is only a small
advance, since no date has been set for the phase out and since the real
issue, which is the reduction in the use of "permitted" green- and
blue-box subsidies by the developed countries to subsidise their farming
community, has been left to be for renegotiated in the course of the new
round. This despite the evidence that many of those subsidies not only
affect the volume of world production and trade, but in the final analysis
world prices as well.
Fourth, in the area of
geographical indications, which provides for example a kind of implicit
copyright to wine producers from France for use of the word Champagene,
developing countries have managed to include a provision to discuss the
extension of that privilege to commodities other than wine and spirits. If
that discussion leads to such an extension, it could, for example, help
India to file for protection regarding use of terms such as 'basmati', Kancheepuram, etc. on geographical grounds.
Finally, India has won a
symbolic victory inasmuch as the immediate agenda for the new round
includes, besides implementation issues and the already mandated
negotiations on agriculture and services, only industrial tariffs,
antidumping duties and certain aspects of trade and the environment. Core
labour standards have just been referred to and the work of the ILO in
this area taken note of. And negotiations on the so-called Singapore
issues, such as foreign investment, competition policies, public
procurement and trade felicitation, though not altogether dropped, are to
be taken up as part of the new round only after reconsidering the matter
and generating an explicit consensus on negotiations on them at the time
of the fifth ministerial meet to be held in 2003. While agreeing to
postpone final decision on these issues, the developed countries have also
put in a mandate for completion of negotiations by 2005.
Altogether, this does look
to be a long list of victories, for a group of countries that lost out
substantially at the end of the Uruguay Round, which largely proved to be
an exchange of concessions among the developed. But most of these are mere
statement of intent to discuss, and in areas such as agriculture and
textiles were early concession were needed and expected, little has come
out of Doha.
Doha also made clear the
distance developing countries as a group have to travel if they are to
make any real difference to the unequal international trading order. The
most disconcerting was the innumerable ways in which the developed
countries conspire to divide the developing countries and win major
concessions for themselves. The scenario as it evolved was indeed quite
instructive. To start with, the US set itself up as a reasonable
negotiator demanding some liberalisation of agricultural trade plus
inclusion of issues such as industrial tariffs and anti-dumping duties in
the agenda for a new round of trade negotiations. The EU on the other hand
remains intransigent on agricultural protection and subsidies, but puts on
the table a range of new issues varying from the environment to investment
and competition policies. This almost predetermines the compromise that is
to come: the EU gives in a bit on agricultural trade, the developed camp
as a whole agrees to discuss implementation, but they get in return a new
round which at the minimum has the issues raised by the US on the agenda
and at the maximum includes all the issues raised by the EU. The actual
outcome included a new round that had on its agenda a combination of
issues lying somewhere between the minimal demands of the US and the
maximal demands of the EU.
The surprise that Doha
sprang was not in this outcome, but in three other areas. First, in the
unusual unity within the developing country camp, even if for a short
period of time, and the strong resistance by the Indian delegation in
general and Minister Maran in particular, that helped keep the
implementation issues on the agenda as well as allowed developing
countries garner the limited gains listed earlier. Second, in the extent
to which the developed countries went to split the developing-country camp
and push through a version of their agenda. Despite claims of having
learnt their lessons at Seattle and promises of abjuring non-transparent
procedures, when the chips were down, the WTO leadership and
developed-country representatives returned to their earlier modes of
functioning. Through pre-Doha meetings and "green-room" consultations with
a select group of developing countries, through offers of aid to the ACP
bloc, through pressure tactics such as locking in representatives without
aides for hours together so as to badger them into agreement, through
attempts at labelling delegates as isolationist and through what amounted
to sheer verbal abuse and public admonition, the developed countries did
manage finally to break the unity of the developing as well as come
through with an agreement even if only after an unscheduled sixth day of
negotiations.
Finally, Doha was a
surprise because despite all this the developing countries went home with
little to show for themselves other than promises of going part of the way
to meet their concerns. Most important, in critical areas like the trade
in textiles and domestic support to agriculture, the developed countries
have given nothing at all.
Domestically, the issue of
interest is the reasons why unlike the last time, this time around the
Indian delegation and its leader chose to stick it out with a hardline
position till the very end, even if it didn't yield much by way of
results. While personalities do matter here, it must be realised that
Commerce Minister Murasoli Maran had obtained cabinet sanction for his
tough negotiating stance before he left for Doha. One explanation for the
stance cleared at the cabinet could be that the NDA government has
realised that its decision to opt for accelerated liberalisation was
proving counterproductive given the unequal nature of the trading system
put in place by the Uruguay Round. Redressing that inequality would then
be seen as a prerequisite for bailing out the reform strategy. But if this
was the motivation, one should expect that the failure to achieve much at
Doha should make the government cautious about proceeding with its reform
agenda. The reaction has in fact been just the opposite. Addressing a
press conference immediately after his return from Doha, Mr. Maran
emphasised the need to deepen economic reforms so that economic units
within the country restructure themselves over the next two years to face
up to the likely intensification of international competition. ``If there
is one lesson from Doha, it is (that) we should reform fast,'' he is
reported to have said.
The second explanation
could be that having faced substantial domestic criticism in the past,
including from within segments of the ruling coalition, the NDA government
decided to change tack in international negotiations and take a more
nationalist stance. But whatever benefits are likely to accrue from such a
public display of national sentiment outside the country, would be more
than neutralised by the obvious willingness of the government to offer
major economic concessions to the developed countries in the domestic
market in the wake of the Pokhran blasts.
The third likely
explanation is that the government knew that international circumstances
were such that it would finally be left little support for its hardline
stance. This, it may have surmised, would allow it to given in or
compromise in the final analysis. That would mean that while the results
from Doha would broadly be in keeping with what the developed-country camp
wanted, India would be seen as having fought hard and not caved in, but as
having, out of sheer lack of support and a need for reasonableness at an
international forum, had to let the 'majority' view prevail. The slight
friction that this generated vis-à-vis the developed countries would be a
small and temporary price to pay, in return for the benefit that strong
resistance would yield in terms of winning international NGO praise and
neutralising domestic criticism about its reform programme. The lack of
correspondence between India's domestic and international positions on the
role of markets and freer trade, as well as the fact that despite its
opposition India withdrew without gaining too much more than what had been
won by the sixth day, suggest that this is in all probability the most
plausible explanation for India's initial, unusually strong resistance.