http://www.financialexpress.com/fe_full_story.php?content_id=39934
Examining The Political Case For An Investment Agreement At The WTO

Pradeep S Mehta

As the D-Day for the Cancun Ministerial approaches, trade policy
bureaucrats are very busy in formulating their respective negotiating
positions. Even the traditional one month's summer holidays in Geneva have
been cut down to a fortnight, as the time is very short.

But, the honchos are busy in their home capitals working out possible
trade-offs, so that even if Cancun is not successful, it does not become
another Seattle.

As I have written earlier, in the current Doha Round of trade
negotiations, so far, agriculture, Trade Related Intellectual Property
Rights (TRIPs) and Singapore issues have remained the most contentious
subjects of negotiations. Some efforts have been made to bring convergence
on views over agriculture and TRIPs, but the jury is still out. Of the two
contentious Singapore issues, in my last column (In Search Of A Dealmaker
at Cancun, August 4) I dealt with competition. In this column I deal with
the more difficult nut: investment.

On this either the demanding or the opposing World Trade Organisation
(WTO) members are not willing to budge an inch from their respective
positions.

The European Union (EU) is consistent in its demand, while India, in
association with China, leads the like minded group (LMG) of vocal
opponents of an investment agreement at the WTO.

All the Singapore working groups, including the one on investment, have
finished their pre-Cancun meetings and submitted their reports to the WTO'
s General Council last month. This means that any further formal
talks/progress on this issue will take place only at Cancun. What will
happen on investment at Cancun? It is very difficult to predict the same
now. However, seeing the hardline stance of protagonists and antagonists,
this issue has the potential of playing the role of a spoilsport.

In the WTO, including any issue for negotiation depends either on its
economic merit or political support. And it is the business lobbies of
each country which drive the agenda. As regards an investment pact, the
economic argument may be very weak but there could be a political support
behind it. After all, the main demandeurs (EU, Japan, Korea) of an
investment agreement in the WTO are big economic powers. A recent
interesting debate on this in the Financial Times throws light. While
Kavaljit Singh from India has been able to get a piece published in the
pro-establishment the Financial Times opposing the possible investment
pact, others have argued for it. In a letter to the editor, US
International Business Council's President Thomas M.T. Niles writes, "What
business need in order to promote foreign investment are market access and
high standards of investor protection." It is these very two demands,
which are strongly opposed by India, China et al.

If we look at the numbers game in the WTO, there is a 15-member EU,
supported by Japan and Korea, and some non-EU members such as Norway and
Switzerland, who are the main demandeurs of an investment agreement. In
all probability they will get support from the USA, Canada and Latin
America.

Most of the Latin American countries feel that as investment (and
competition) provisions will be inserted in the proposed Free Trade Areas
of America Agreement (FTAA), there maybe no harm in a multilateral
agreement on investment in the WTO. As it is, a multilateral setting may
be better than regional and bilateral agreements. The number of supporters
crosses 50 and if the EU manages to rope in all the least developed
countries (LDCs) by giving some concessions to them -as it often happens-
then they will sail through in the game of numbers.

In the past also, the TRIPs agreement was signed without having any strong
economic arguments in favour.

On the contrary, even free trade economists have criticised it most
stridently. However, the pact got into the WTO mainly under pressure from
big US and European pharmaceutical companies.

Had economic arguments prevailed, the TRIPs pact would not have been there
at all. It perpetuates monopoly and rent-seeking behaviour, which are
against the principles of free trade.

Similarly, a debate is sill going on, whether WTO is the right forum for
handling investment. The trade-investment link, other than what is covered
under Trade Related Investment Measures (TRIMs) agreement or the General
Agreement on Trade and Services (GATS), is by no means straightforward.

The bulk of foreign direct investment (FDI) flows continue to be
market-seeking and actually substitute trade. Therefore, possible trade
distorting investment policies have been taken care of under the TRIMs
agreement, while service-related investment will be taken care of under
the GATS pact.

Hence, there is very little justification of including a full-fledged
investment agreement under WTO. The other arguments, often cited against
an investment agreement are: lack of empirical evidence supporting
increased flow of FDI to developing countries. Secondly, a multilateral
investment pact's one-size-fits-all approach may be good for
capital-exporting Japan but may not be beneficial for capital-importing
poor countries.

Further, the WTO's coverage of balance of payment issues is at present
confined to current account transactions but an investment pact would
necessitate capital account liberalisation etc. Like in any civilised
debate, protagonists of investment agreement may have counterarguments for
all the above facts but they do not have any compelling arguments in
favour of the investment deal in the WTO.

Therefore, if at all negotiations on investment are launched at Cancun, it
would be mainly due to the strong political clout of demandeurs. This won'
t be surprising because at Doha, the EU managed to get mainstream
environment into the work programme of the current trade round in spite of
the fact that majority of the members, in principle, were against linking
trade with environment.

If such a situation emerges and EU manages to get negotiation on
investment launched at Cancun, what should be the negotiating strategy of
developing countries?

The first obvious demand is to seek a balance between mobility of capital
and mobility of labour. Both are mobile factors of production and in my
view the economic arguments for free movement of labour are stronger than
those for free movement of capital. This is already mandated in a sense
under mode 4 of GATS, which seeks to ease the restrictions on movement of
natural persons.

Secondly, the developing countries will need to ask for much more
enforceable policy flexibility than what is being proposed. Their
experience with the existing special and differential treatment provisions
in the WTO have been rather dismal, to say the least.

The writer is the Secretary General of the Jaipur-based CUTS Centre for
International Trade, Economics and Environment, a leading research and
advocacy NGO working on trade and economic issues at national and
international levels and can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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