Can-do at Cancun is actually can't

Duncan Green
Monday June 23, 2003
The Guardian

The world's trade bureaucrats seem gripped by acute historical amnesia as
they prepare for September's global trade summit in Cancun, Mexico.

Both short and long term memory have been affected. Just 18 months ago, at
the previous summit of the World Trade Organisation in Doha, they fell
over themselves in promising a "development agenda" that would bring real
benefits to poor countries.

They undertook to sort out global agriculture, which sees subsidised crops
from Europe and America dumped on the world market with devastating impact
for the 97% of the globe's farmers who live in developing countries; they
would ensure that the poorest countries were not forced to pay through the
nose for essential medicines; and they would deal with a long list of
developing country complaints about WTO rules.

Every deadline set in Doha has been missed, not one issue has been
resolved, and the trade negotiators at the WTO headquarters in Geneva seem
to have forgotten the "development agenda" entirely, reverting to business
as usual horse trading based on economic and political clout. Long term
memory loss seems even more acute. Blithely ignoring how they themselves
developed, the EU - and in particular the British government - is now
proposing a new WTO agreement on investment that would restrict other
countries' abilities to follow the path to development.

A survey published today* of the history of now developed countries in
North America, the EU and East Asia shows that when they were poor nations
setting out on the road to prosperity, all of them imposed regulations on
foreign investment in order to ensure that it contributed to their long
term development.

These findings are particularly important because the main "demandeurs" of
investment negotiations in the WTO - the EU and Japan - insist that the
WTO "core principle" of national treatment (that is, that treatment of
foreign investors should be no less favourable than that for domestic
firms) should be a central aspect of any agreement.

Almost all of the now developed countries once restricted foreign
investment. When it was permitted, governments placed requirements on
incoming firms, such as obliging them to form joint ventures with local
companies.

Only once domestic industry had reached a certain level of sophistication
and competitiveness did governments move towards a greater degree of
non-discrimination and deregulation. Such liberalisation is an outcome of
development, not a cause.

British and European commission officials counter that any WTO investment
agreement will be flexible, with developing countries allowed to
discriminate in favour of locally owned industries where they need to. But
since non-discrimination is a "core principle" of the WTO, however much
flexibility is initially provided, there will be an inevitable tendency to
chip away at developing countries' national policy space.

Despite the lessons of history and widespread opposition from developing
countries, the EU is trying to bludgeon them into accepting an expansion
of trade talks at Cancun to include investment and a number of other new
issues. The danger is that this will provoke a collapse of the entire Doha
round of trade talks - taking with it the crucial development gains that
were promised in Doha but never delivered.

The WTO seems incapable of reaching agreement outside the diplomatic
pressure cooker of summit meetings. The answer therefore has to be "shrink
or sink". The EU should ditch its demands for the WTO's expansion and call
for the Cancun summit to concentrate on agriculture, patents on medicines,
and special treatment for developing countries. Until those issues are
resolved, nothing else should be allowed on to the table.

A switch to this two-stage approach would stand a much better chance of
delivering on development, could introduce new momentum into the
negotiations and would be a clear signal of the commitment to making this
a genuine "development round".

* The Northern WTO Agenda on Investment: Do as we say, not as we did,
Ha-Joon Chang and Duncan Green, South Centre/Cafod, June 2003.

· Duncan Green is a public policy analyst at the Catholic aid agency,
Cafod

Reply via email to