The Cancun
meeting of the World Trade Organization (WTO) takes place
at a time when the legitimacy of the institution is under
question more than ever before.
The Cancun Ministerial Meeting of the WTO is likely to be
crucial one, both for the organization itself and for the
many developing country members who are already suffering
under the impact of various operations of the WTO. Not
since the Seattle Meeting of December 1999, which famously
collapsed amidst street protests and internal dissensions
within the WTO, has there been such discord before the
event among the member countries, or such unhappiness with
the effects of the WTO among the vast majority of people
across the world.
The ministerial meetings of the WTO are mandated to occur
every two years, and they have now become focal points for
both concern and protest as such meetings can decide on
lots of matters, including which issues can be taken up
for fresh negotiation, how existing agreements can be
changed, and so on. Since Seattle, these meetings have
also become testing ground for the international
legitimacy of the WTO and its functioning.
Before the Seattle Meeting, supporters of corporate
globalization were touting it as the beginning of a new
‘Millennium Round’ that would introduce all sorts of new
issues, like investment and competition policy, into the
trade negotiations. In the event, the Seattle Meeting
became famous as the one that failed, and failed in a
spectacular fashion.
It was not only that the entire event was disrupted by
huge demonstrations and even occasional violence on the
streets, as hundreds of thousands of people, including
people from trade unions and social movements, came from
across the world to protest against the dreadful effects
that the operations of GATT and WTO had had so far. Even
within the meeting rooms, agreement could not be reached
on most of the important issues.
Several developing countries’ negotiators (including the
Group of 24 from Africa and the Group of Caribbean and
Latin American countries) objected, saying that their
genuine complaints regarding the way the agreements have
operated must be first be addressed, before they would
agree to even consider other issues. There was a deadlock,
and finally not even an official declaration could emerge
from that meeting.
So the ‘Millenium Round’ could not take off then, and the
new century began with the imperialist establishment
becoming genuinely concerned about the future of the WTO
itself. The next meeting was chosen to be hosted in a
place which could provide maximum security and prevent the
kind of public protests that were now expected.
In consequence, the meeting was held in Doha, the capital
of Qatar – a Gulf Emirate state not known for its practice
of democracy, run by a single powerful ruler. It was held
under incredibly tight security and very strict policing.
Potential protestors were prevented from entering the
country at all, and when several hundred people did gather
outside the venue of the meeting they were quickly cleared
off the streets by the nervous authorities.
Also, an attempt was made to try and provide some crumbs
of comfort to developing countries, so that they would
feel less alienated by the process and effects of the WTO.
Mention was made of a ‘Doha Development Agenda’ and there
was a declaration on ‘TRIPs and public health’ which
addressed an important concern of the developing
countries: the very high prices of essential and
life-saving drugs that were resulting from the monopolies
created by patents as a result of the TRIPs agreement
(Agreement on Trade-Related Intellectual Property Rights).
However, these changes were mainly cosmetic and did not
really add up to much. The Doha Development Agenda
amounted to vague statements that developing countries
could be given ‘Special and Differential Treatment’ on
certain issues, which remained to be specified and
elaborated by further negotiations. There was also a
promise to consider developing countries’ problems with
respect to agriculture, which had become a serious concern
in the whole of the developing world in the ongoing
negotiations on the Agreement on Agriculture.
Even the Declaration of TRIPs and Public Health, which was
considered a great victory, was not legally binding
because it did not change the wording of the agreement
itself. It simply suggested that public health concerns
should allow for a more flexible interpretation of clauses
that were already in the TRIPs agreement. Once again, the
issue was referred to further negotiations in the TRIPs
Council of the WTO.
The chief positive feature of the Doha Meeting was that it
did not impose further pressure on developing countries.
Thus, a new Round was once again averted, or at least
postponed, by the combined pressure of developing
countries, including India. Of course, some of the more
contentious issues (known as the ‘Singapore issues’
because they first came up in the Ministerial Meeting in
Singapore in 1997) were put into ‘Working Groups’, which
means that the threat of these issues turning into
negotiation items has not gone away.
The Doha Meeting came nowhere near addressing the real
concerns of the developing countries about the harm that
had already occurred through the implementation of the
various agreements. And the Cancun Meeting is likely to be
even less successful in this regard. In fact, all the
indications so far suggest that developed country
negotiators are planning to use this meeting to push
through more damaging liberalization and opening up by
developing countries for their own large capital, while
themselves maintaining various kinds of subsidies and
protection.
At the penultimate moment, an agreement on TRIPs and
public health was pushed through in Geneva, which was
presented as a major concession to poor countries that
need to import essential drugs in cases of national
emergency, as well as a boon to generic drug manufacturers
in countries like India. In reality, it is nothing of the
sort. The US government and the multinational drug lobby,
which had succeeded in stalling these negotiations for
eight months, have now succeeded in imposing such strict
conditions on the parallel import of drugs that the
supposed agreement will make very little difference.
In fact, the compromise that has been
arrived at is still biased towards protecting the patent
rights of Northern pharmaceutical companies and preventing
generic manufacturers from encroaching on their
monopolies.
Drug prices in poor countries – even for essential
life-saving drugs such as for HIV-AIDS – are not likely to
come down; and a
poor country badly in need of medicines at affordable
prices will not be able to import them quickly or easily
from generic manufacturers. Indeed, this new statement
actually reduces the flexibilities that were already
written into the original TRIPs agreement by specifying
the conditions and limiting the extent. So if anything,
legally speaking, it is a step backward for developing
countries.
The reason it is being
presented as such a big breakthrough with large
‘humanitarian’ implications (which in reality do not
exist) is because it enables the Unites States’
negotiating team to go to Cancun without facing opprobrium
from the rest of the world, and the WTO Secretariat to
claim that it is on track by having completed the
‘unfinished agenda’ announced at Doha in this regard.
At the Cancun
Meeting itself, three important areas are to be discussed
and possibly even decided. The first relates to
agriculture, which is probably the most fraught and urgent
issue for developing countries. Developing
countries were persuaded to accept the many negative
features of the 1994 Uruguay Round of GATT which created
the WTO, because they thought they would gain in at least
two areas: agriculture, textiles and clothing. But in
fact, in both of these areas, trade has become more
difficult for developing countries, and the promises made
at that time have not materialized.
In
agriculture, especially, the problem has become so acute
that there is a real agrarian crisis being played out in
many parts of the developing world. According to the
Agreement on Agriculture, developed countries were
supposed to reduce their domestic support and subsidy
measures as well as gradually eliminate export subsidies.
In addition, they were to provide much greater access to
their own markets for exports of developing countries, by
cutting tariffs. Developing countries too had to make
similar concessions, but to a lesser extent.
At least, that was how most governments—and people—in
developing countries interpreted the agreement. At that
time, the concerns were much more about food security and
the impact of rising prices on food-importing countries
and those people in other developing countries who were
net buyers of food. Hardly anyone anticipated that
precisely the opposite trends would be experienced: that,
in fact, the prices of most agricultural commodities would
fall in international markets.
Yet, that is what has happened. Between 1996 and early
2002, the international prices of most primary commodities
– and agricultural goods in particular – fell. They have
since been increasing but not by very much. One important
reason for this is that the developed countries have not
reduced their aggregate support for their own farmers,
which are supposed to be back to the levels of before the
formation of the WTO. Also, the developing countries have
as much difficulty as before in exporting their
agricultural products to the developed countries, because
problems of high tariffs and other barriers to import
persist.
The developing countries found, to their dismay, that the
Agreement on Agriculture contained a number of loopholes
which have allowed all this to be legal within the treaty.
With regard to domestic support for agriculture, the
damage was done in the 1994 agreement when the different
kinds of farm subsidies were divided into three types. The
first, called ‘Amber Box’, consists of subsidies which are
seen as distorting trade and which have to be reduced. But
other kinds of subsidy were allowed: ‘Green Box’
subsidies, which are for production restructuring and
direct payments not linked to production, and ‘Blue Box’
subsidies, which are not linked to current production but
to past production or area.
The developed countries simply shifted their subsidies to
‘Green’ or ‘Blue’ Box categories, and did not cut them
down in the aggregate. This has meant that farmers in the
North are heavily subsidized, often to the tune of as much
as $3,000 per hectare, and therefore their products can be
sold at much lower prices in international markets. These
products then compete with crops produced by small
cultivators in developing countries, who get the benefit
of hardly any subsidies.
In fact, cultivators in most developing countries now face
quite the opposite problem. They have been confronted with
higher costs because governments have been raising user
charges on water and electricity, and cutting subsidies on
inputs like fertilizer. And, because the WTO forced the
developing countries to liberalize agricultural trade,
move from quota import controls to tariffs and reduce
tariffs on agricultural products, these cultivators have
had to compete with the threat of highly subsidized
imports even in their domestic markets.
The extent of the consequent agricultural crisis across
the world is truly mind-boggling. Across the developing
world, including in India, farmers are in distress. The
threat of import competition has sometimes even affected
the viability of subsistence cultivation. Thus, in Central
America small subsistence farmers who used to produce
beans for own consumption are finding that imported beans
from the US are selling at lower prices, such that their
own cultivation is no longer viable.
It is no wonder that developing countries have realized
that, in the present circumstances, there is a real
possibility of cultivation becoming unviable. Since
agriculture still accounts for a significant part of the
labour force (more than 60 per cent in countries like
India), this means there is a problem of livelihood
security, in addition to the problem of food security.
The attempts to resolve this extremely contentious issue
through negotiations at the WTO in Geneva have failed.
The European Union is determined to preserve ‘Blue Box’
subsidies for its agriculture, which it says is not just
about production but also about a culture, and a way of
life and of preserving the environment. The US will carry
on using and increasing ‘Green Box’ subsidies, as the Farm
Bill introduced last year by George Bush showed.
The US and the European Union have now put forward a joint
proposal which more or less allows the present level of
Northern subsidies to continue, but asks for large cuts in
tariff rates from developing countries. In response, a
group of fourteen developing countries, led by India,
China and Brazil, have put forward an alternative
proposal. This asks for large cuts in the subsidies and
tariffs of developed countries, and lower tariff cuts for
developing countries. It also has a category of ‘Special
Products’ which are important from the food or livelihood
security point of view, which will be exempt. But even
this draft does not make the necessary demand that as long
as developed countries persist with their subsidies,
developing countries should be allowed to protect their
own agriculture through more and newer import controls.
The WTO Secretariat has prepared a ‘Draft Ministerial
Declaration’ for Cancun, in which the discussion on
agriculture broadly follows the lines laid down by the US-EU
draft. This reflects the power balance in the WTO, and is
fundamentally against the interests of the developing
countries. The meeting in Cancun will decide which side
wins in this context. At stake are the material conditions
and the very lives of more than a billion small
cultivators in the developing world. Given the prevailing
conditions, a breakdown of these talks is greatly
preferable to agreeing on anything along the lines of the
draft declaration of the WTO Secretariat.
The second important area that is to be decided in Cancun
relates to industrial tariffs, or ‘Non-Agricultural Market
Access’ (NAMA), as it is now called in WTO-speak. This has
not received sufficient attention in India, but it is of
crucial importance. Already, in the NAMA negotiating group
at Geneva, it had become clear that there are deep
divisions, along North-South lines, on how to approach the
liberalization of industrial and other ‘non-agriculture’
goods.
The draft declaration proposed by the WTO Secretariat has
taken the ‘northern’ positions, with several elements that
developing countries are opposed to. This includes very
deep tariff cuts using a formula in which those with
higher tariffs (typically, developing countries who end up
to be less competitive in industrial goods) would make the
largest cuts in tariffs. There is also provision for rapid
elimination of tariffs for seven sectors, and broadening
the scope of tariff bindings to a mandatory minimum of 95
per cent.
Most developing countries objected to one, two or all
three of these elements. They complained that this set of
policies would lead to further deindustrialization of
their countries, which have already been ravaged by the
trade liberalization that has been forced upon them so
far. By contrast, developed countries felt that even these
swinging cuts were ‘not ambitious enough’. At the current
time, introducing NAMA into the negotiations at all is a
retrograde step for developing countries, and the best
that can be hoped for in this area is that no agreement is
reached so that there are no further obligations for
tariff cuts in developing countries.
The third major area to be discussed in Cancun is that of
the ‘Singapore issues’. Developed countries—more
particularly, large capital in developed countries—have
been agitating for some time to force these issues on to
the negotiating table in the WTO. Quite apart from the
negative implications of each of these issues, taken
together they imply deep erosion of whatever
decision-making autonomy still exists for the governments
of member countries.
The proposed ‘modalities for negotiation’ in the area of
the first ‘Singapore issue’, that is trade and investment,
for example, suggest a consistent framework for all
countries to adopt with respect to rules for international
capital. This may not seem to be such a bad idea: after
all, since countries that are competing for foreign
investment already make all sorts of concessions that are
potentially harmful, this would at least make everyone
conform to the same discipline. But the proposals for such
rules are heavily biased towards greater freedom for large
capital from the North, and imply much less power for home
country governments to regulate or control such capital.
A number of studies have shown that the type of investment
agreement being proposed at the WTO would seriously harm
developing countries’ interests, as their policy space to
regulate and channel investment will be severely
restricted. In any case, developing countries have been
arguing for some time that WTO is the wrong venue for an
investment agreement as the principles governing trade are
not suitable for investment. In particular, the
application of non-discrimination and national treatment
are inappropriate and can damage development.
The same holds true for the second ‘Singapore issue’,
which is competition policy. Even Northern-based
international trade unions, such as the ICFTU, have
pointed out that ‘national treatment’ amounts to simply
increasing market access for multinational companies in
developing countries. Economists have argued that the
proposed competition policy has serious negative
implications for development.
Thus, as Ajit Singh of Cambridge University has pointed
out, ‘what is required is greater policy autonomy for
developing countries and at the same time a more stringent
framework for dealing with mammoth multinational companies
and their endless appetite for overseas expansion, often
through mergers and takeovers.’ Instead, precisely the
opposite kinds of policies are being proposed.
The third ‘Singapore issue’ relates to public procurement.
This has potentially huge implications, since governments
are the largest single purchasers in every country in the
world. Once again, there are deep divisions between the
North and the South on this. Developed country governments
are trying to force the developing countries to submit to
rules that will not allow any preferential treatment to
national producers. Within the WTO at Geneva, there has
been substantial lack of agreement on such critical
elements as the definition of ‘transparency’, the scope or
what should be covered, whether there should be a
threshold value, and whether there should be a link to the
WTO's dispute settlement system. Obviously, bringing such
an agreement into the negotiations would be against
developing country interests at the moment.
Finally, the last ‘Singapore issue’ of trade facilitation
covers areas such as customs and port handling rules.
Developing countries have felt that this is an area that
is best left to the autonomous decisions of countries and
not subject to binding rules. In any case, the proposed
changes would be very expensive for developing countries
to undertake, and the Agriculture Agreement has already
shown that binding rules are not a solution to problems.
So, as far as the ‘Singapore issues’ are concerned, the
best that developing countries can hope for is that these
are once again kept out of future negotiations. Given the
way the ‘modalities for negotiation’ are being presented,
they are very strongly against developing countries’
interests.
The current situation suggests that developing countries
have almost nothing to gain from Cancun. Not only have all
the promises of the ‘Development Box’ made in Doha turned
sour, but there are new pressures for changes which would
affect developing countries in even worse ways. Another
lesson from past experience with the WTO is that the small
print matters critically, so that even agreements that may
appear at first sight to be positive in their effects,
turn out to have very different and adverse implications.
Given all this, the best option for the South is actually
a derailment of the Cancun Meeting, rather than a flawed
compromise deal. This could even be possible, for several
of the features responsible for the collapse at Seattle
are once again evident: the dispute over agriculture is
sharply in focus; developing country governments are more
resentful than ever; and internationally, civil society is
being mobilized to protest against all this.
Of course, there is always the possibility that developing
country governments will once again be persuaded and
pressurized into sacrificing the interests of their own
people at the actual meeting. The ability of the current
NDA government in India to sell out has already been shown
many times. So it may not be wise to be too optimistic in
this regard. But it remains true that a big success for
the people of the world could be, ironically, the failure
of the meeting at Cancun.
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