America will not wait for the won't-do
countries
By Robert B Zoellick
Financial Times (London,England)
September 22, 2003, Monday London Edition 1
The final minutes of the World Trade Organization session in Cancun were symptomatic of the whole meeting: we stalled after representatives of the least developed, African, and Caribbean countries reported that their colleagues had rejected any negotiation to update the 1947 rules on customs procedures.
The breakdown occurred over measures that
would have simply facilitated trade and helped land-locked countries by
ensuring prompt release of goods, publication of procedures, and timely and
fair rulings on customs questions. These commonsense steps are in the interest
of all; their rejection was a political statement. Sadly, this decision was
emblematic of a broader culture of protest that defined victory in terms of political
acts rather than economic results.
As Luis Ernesto Derbez, Mexico's foreign
minister and chairman of the meeting, closed the session, representatives of
influential developing countries finally rushed forward to say they wanted to
keep going. They correctly recognized that the draft text offered an excellent opportunity
to press the European Union to eliminate agricultural export subsidies; to
achieve big cuts in farm subsidies in the US, EU and other countries; to impose
a ceiling on unbelievably high Japanese tariffs; and to open agricultural
markets for developed and developing countries alike. Yet they were too late.
The previous evening, country after
country had scorned the draft text, the negotiating process and other
countries. The United Nations General Assembly has its role, but it does not
offer an effective model for trade negotiations. A few ministers pointed out
that increasingly radical rhetoric would make it harder for all - especially
developing country groups with many smaller members - to consider realistic compromises.
Countries that feel victimized are unlikely to agree to anything.
Cancun could have followed a different
course. Only weeks before, we had worked together to resolve the difficult
issue of ensuring that poor developing countries could gain access to low-cost,
life-saving medicines while protecting intellectual property. But at Cancun the
naysayers' tactics thwarted those who would have cut agricultural subsidies and
tariffs, triggering reform of farm policy in the US, EU, Japan, Canada and
elsewhere. They passed up an opportunity to open developing country markets
gradually to other developing countries. They stymied global sourcing and production
networks, which integrate developed and developing country businesses to mutual
benefit. And they walked away from rules on openness and transparency that
fight favouritism and corruption.
Key mid-level developing countries
employed the rhetoric of resistance as a tactic both to put pressure on
developed countries and to divert attention from their own trade barriers.
India's average bound agricultural tariff is 112 per cent, Egypt's 62 per cent
and Brazil's 37 per cent - compared with a US average of 12 per cent. Their
average bound tariffs on manufactured goods are at least 10 times larger than the
US average of 3 per cent. We should be able to reduce these barriers while
protecting the poorest nations and providing flexibilities for special
sensitivities in the bigger countries.
After the US pressed the EU to develop an
agricultural framework that could achieve farm subsidy and tariff cuts far
beyond those achieved in the last global trade negotiation, we asked Brazil and
other agricultural powers to work with us. Brazil declined, turning instead to India,
which has never supported opening markets, so as to emphasize north-south
division not global agricultural reform.
Smaller developing countries resisted the
reduction of US and EU tariffs because they calculated that they would lose the
advantages offered by special US and EU programmes that eliminate tariffs only
for their exports. Unfortunately, these well-meaning trade preference programmes
have undermined the push for two-way openings, perpetuating dependency.
Four African countries insisted on
"compensation" of between Dollars 250m and Dollars 1bn (Pounds 153m
and Pounds 610m) annually, and unilateral elimination of cotton subsidies. Over
the course of 50 years, global trade negotiations have progressed because
countries could trade off cuts across products and even sectors to achieve a
balanced result. The US has no export
subsidies on cotton and proposed the elimination of all export subsidies. We
committed to cut domestic cotton subsidies as part of an overall package that
would also have reduced European and Chinese cotton subsidies, along with all
agricultural subsidies. Instead of making cotton a symbol, we wanted to make
development a reality through concrete results for cotton farmers, exporters
and manufacturers of cotton products, along with all farmers.
The tactics of confrontation included an
assault on one of the few devices that the WTO can use to prod its 148 members
towards consensus: presenting a chairperson's text for discussion and
negotiation. Brazil, India and others refused even to work off an agricultural
text drafted by the Uruguayan WTO chairman and forwarded by the WTO's Thai director-general.
Even after Singapore's tireless minister had worked non-stop with all parties
to prepare a new agricultural draft reflecting a balanced compromise, Brazil
and its colleagues presented a massive list of required changes. If they were
serious about negotiating a compromise for 148 countries, they overplayed their
hand by failing to signal that intention. They returned home without any cuts
in subsidies and tariffs.
As Chairman Derbez closed the Cancun
meeting, he asked countries to reassess prospects by December 15. We know well
what developing countries are demanding, but have not heard whether more
competitive developing economies will cut their high barriers. We do not know whether
other developing countries that blocked action in Cancun will now accept
packages that ask little or nothing of them. The US stands ready to work with
the draft text across the full agenda. As the Doha negotiations drift into next
year, however, we recognize that a new European Commission may reflect
different perspectives.
Many countries - developing and developed
- were dismayed by the transformation of the WTO into a forum for the politics
of protest. Some withstood pressure to join the strife from larger developing
neighbours. Of course, negotiating
positions differed. But the key division at Cancun was between the can-do and
the won't-do. For over two years, the US has pushed to open markets globally,
in our hemisphere, and with sub-regions or individual countries. As WTO members
ponder the future, the US will not wait: we will move towards free trade with
can-do countries.
The writer is US trade representative