TWN
Info Service on WTO and Trade Issues (Nov17/28)
30 November 2017
Third World Network
No convergence on MC11 issues or outcome
Published in SUNS #8586 dated 30 November 2017
Geneva, 29 Nov (D. Ravi Kanth) - An overwhelming majority of least
developed and developing countries, including India and South Africa,
on Tuesday (28 November) categorically rejected new issues to be addressed
at the World Trade Organization's eleventh ministerial meeting (MC11)
beginning in Buenos Aires within the next ten days, trade envoys told
the SUNS.
Among the new issues that are sought to be promoted for negotiations
at WTO after MC11 are: a mandate for establishing a working group
for electronic commerce, disciplines for micro, small, and medium
enterprises (MSMEs), and investment facilitation.
(See separate article by Parminder Jeet Singh on e-com in this issue
of SUNS).
Rwanda on behalf of the African Group, Guyana on behalf of the ACP
(Africa, Caribbean, and Pacific) group of countries, Cambodia on behalf
of the least-developed countries, India, South Africa, Uganda, Bolivia,
Cuba, and Venezuela joined in warning that there will be grave consequences
if new issues are considered without completing the work on the unresolved
issues in the Doha Development Agenda (DDA) negotiations.
Many of them remain alarmed at the manner in which the WTO director-general
Roberto Azevedo, who is also the chair for the Trade Negotiations
Committee (TNC), sought to open a window for new issues - disciplines
for MSMEs and investment facilitation - to be discussed at Buenos
Aires - knowing full well that there is no consensus on these two
issues, said several trade envoys who asked not to be quoted.
At the final formal TNC meeting before the Buenos Aires ministerial
meeting beginning on 10 December, the director-general said "I
know some members have also been developing work in limited group
formats" on "MSMEs, investment facilitation, and any other
issue."
He said the proponents for these issues can "appoint their own
chairs or facilitators at the Ministerial, that is for them to take
forward."
Even though there is no consensus on new issues and these were never
discussed at the TNC after investment facilitation was blocked by
India at the General Council early this year on grounds that it is
not part of the WTO's Marrakesh mandate, Azevedo is asking some members
at the WTO to start plurilateral negotiations on MSMEs and investment
facilitation, said a trade envoy who asked not to be quoted.
"The director-general who has not sincerely conducted trade negotiations
as the TNC chair on the unresolved Doha Development Agenda (DDA) issues
is creating a dangerous minefield at Buenos Aires by shifting the
entire burden to the Argentinean minister Ms. Susana Malcorra who
is going to chair the conference," said an authoritative source,
who asked not to be quoted.
"Azevedo's game plan is not to take any blame for the manner
in which he crowded the Buenos Aires agenda with old and new issues
and leave everything to the Argentinean government, as the host, to
resolve," the source said.
In short, there are 29 draft ministerial decisions to be decided in
20 areas by trade ministers during the four-day Buenos Aires meeting.
"This is clearly a mischievous game plan of the director-general
who ought to have told members about which issues can be taken and
which issues can't be taken on the basis of the existing Doha mandate,"
the source said.
[The July 2004 framework accord of the General Council, that enabled
the re-launch of the Doha negotiations after the failure of the 2003
Cancun Ministerial Conference, has unequivocally stipulated that no
new issues are to be taken up or considered until the negotiations
on the Doha Work Programme are concluded at a Ministerial Conference.
SUNS.]
China adopted a two-leg policy in which it remained with the large
majority of developing and poorest countries on issues concerning
the permanent solution for public stockholding programs for food security,
reduction commitments for domestic support in agriculture, and development
issues such as improvements in the special and differential flexibilities.
The African Group, led by Rwanda, issued a draft ministerial decision
on the improvements needed in ten agreement-specific special and differential
flexibilities at Buenos Aires.
China's second leg positions include a proposal on investment facilitation,
and disciplines for MSMEs. On electronic commerce, China more or less
stayed with the large majority of developing and poorest countries
who are opposing a new mandate instead of the 1998 work program.
However, a group of major industrialized countries, and some developing
countries, led by the European Union, Australia, Japan, Korea, Chile,
and Argentina among others, pushed hard for an outcome on domestic
support for agriculture, establishing a Working Party for e-commerce,
disciplines for MSMEs, and investment facilitation among others.
The US, which stands largely isolated with its unilateral stance of
no outcomes on the unresolved Doha issues as well as the new issues,
said the Buenos Aires ministerial must discuss issues concerning trade
and development with a new perspective.
Rwanda, which coordinates the African Group, said the outcome document
must reflect four elements such as "the importance of a rules-based,
fair and equitable Multilateral Trading System as enshrined in the
Marrakesh Agreement", "the centrality of development in
the work of the WTO," "the need to conclude the remaining
elements of the Doha Development Agenda," and "the critical
importance of implementing all decisions adopted by Ministers and
the General Council."
The African Group said categorically that issues on which positions
remain diametrically opposed should not be submitted to the ministerial
conference. It emphasized "development" as the central element
that needs to be resolved at Buenos Aires.
South Africa delivered the strongest statement warning about the dire
consequences, saying that "members' divergent positions on issues
have not been bridged and the chances for any outcome on any issues
at MC11 are bleak - if at all."
South Africa argued that "Impediments to progress are rooted
in our differing views on mandates and the lack of agreement on which
issues to pursue, and how where we have engaged, divergent negotiating
positions have been evident."
Even on fishery subsidies, members have markedly different positions,
South Africa underscored.
"A combination of wide differences and linkages in Agriculture
tell us that outcomes here are out of reach," it argued.
South Africa said that it "will not agree to an outcome on export
restrictions that we see as an attempt to begin to close off important
space for legitimate, WTO-consistent policy."
It warned "there is no consensus on non-DDA issues such as e-commerce,
MSMEs or investment facilitation," suggesting that there are
irreconcilable differences on these two issues.
"By leaving the "moment of truth" to the Conference
itself means we have lost the chance to construct a more manageable
agenda on the few issues that may have had some minimal prospect for
outcomes," South Africa said, arguing that ministers will have
to "contend with around 29 draft Ministerial decisions, contained
in Job Documents that cover more than 20 topics."
South Africa said trade ministers must address all these issues in
three days, arguing that "the inconclusive discussions we have
had in Geneva on each of these are likely to be replicated at MC11
- also inconclusively."
Further, there is "the open question of a possible Ministerial
Declaration" and managing it in "a process that must be
fully transparent and inclusive will be an enormous challenge,"
South Africa argued.
South Africa urged members "to consider carefully whether Ministers
will be required to pronounce on separate Decisions to carry work
forward in all the areas or whether that would be accomplished by
a Decision akin to the Nairobi Ministerial Declaration paragraph 31
- a "catch-all" approach."
"More importantly, members need to consider whether this will
be done through a possible Declaration or an agreed Statement - alternatively,
we could agree to being silent on all these matters," South Africa
said.
"The key point, however, is that we will need symmetrical treatment
for all the remaining Doha issues: either silence on all issues or
a catch all phrase that is applied to all," South Africa said,
arguing that "this would be essential for a smooth conference."
On behalf of the G33, Indonesia said that "the establishment
of a permanent solution on PSH for all developing members and accessible,
simple and effective SSM remain priority."
Indonesia said these two issues were supported by some developing
countries and LDCs, and they shall be part of any Buenos Aires outcomes.
"Any efforts that link PSH and SSM with other negotiation issues
is not acceptable," Indonesia said. It rejected the "proposal
for reducing developing country's flexibility by requesting them to
constrain their de-minimis and at the same time not addressing in
sufficient manner of AMS entitlements, blue box and green box."
"Such approach will perpetuate or even exacerbate current structural
imbalance inherited from the Uruguay Round," Indonesia warned.
Indonesia said it sees the centrality of development in all horizontal
discussions within the WTO.
In a hard-hitting statement, India cautioned that "the permanent
solution for public stockholding programs (PSH) is a gateway issue
and we would like to caution that inability to deliver a permanent
solution at MC XI, may lead us to a spectacular failure at Buenos
Aires and irreparable harm to the credibility of the WTO."
On domestic support for eliminating aggregate measurement of support,
a large number of developing countries including the G33 and the ACP
group supported India's joint proposal with China, India said.
India emphasized the importance of outcomes on Special Safeguard Mechanism,
cotton, and development.
"Special and differential treatment for developing countries
is a very important part of the WTO mandate which needs to be carefully
preserved without differentiating among developing countries,"
India argued.
On fisheries subsidies, India stressed the importance of an instrument
that takes the concerns of the artisanal fish workers into account.
It asked for excluding "the Exclusive Economic Zone from the
purview of the disciplines for unregulated, unreported fishing and
prohibition of subsidies for overfished stocks."
As regards an outcome on domestic regulation for trade in services,
India said the issue cannot be discussed in isolation without addressing
"the numerous difficulties which service suppliers, particularly,
those of developing countries face in complying with complex regulatory
regimes of developed countries related to recognition of qualifications."
India said members must continue with the existing mandate on e-commerce
of the 1998 work program. India firmly rejected issues "like
investment facilitation, MSMEs, and Gender which do not have mandates
or place in the WTO."
"This is not the opportune time to enter into contentious and
divisive debates by seeking ambitious outcomes in E-commerce,"
India cautioned.
Uganda urged members "not to impose the views of one member on
the rest of the membership or to drop all issues of specific interest
and concern of the rest to accommodate one member."
"Any outcome document shall highlight the centrality of development
and special and differential treatment in the work of this Organization,"
Uganda said, arguing "the need to conclude the remaining elements
of the Doha Development Agenda and the critical importance of implementing
all decisions adopted by Ministers and the General Council."
In sharp contrast, the industrialized countries, except the United
States, and several developing countries, including Brazil, pressed
for an outcome in domestic support on agriculture along with the permanent
solution.
The European Union, Japan, Australia, Norway, Switzerland, Korea,
Hong Kong (China), Chinese Taipei, Chile, Peru, Argentina, Colombia,
Nigeria, China, and Russia among others called for addressing new
issues such as disciplines for micro, small, and medium (MSMEs) enterprises.
Chile, which is the coordinator for the informal group on MSMEs, informed
members that there are 39 proponents for addressing the issue after
the Buenos Aires meeting.
The European Union, Japan, Australia, Norway, Switzerland, Chile,
Peru, Argentina, Colombia, Nigeria, and Russia also pressed for a
new mandate for electronic commerce.
In sum, the Buenos Aires meeting is going to test the nerve of the
developing and poorest countries and whether they can stand united
in the face of dangerous games being played by the director-general
to impose new issues without resolving the Doha issues, several trade
envoys said.