The poor folk can play hardball too

Larry Elliott
Monday February 17, 2003
The Guardian

The French hate the Americans. The Americans loathe the French. Developing
countries wonder what on earth is going on. The spat within Nato over what to
do about Saddam Hussein? No, this is an issue that it would take more than one
Hans Blix to sort out - the Doha round of trade talks.

It was not supposed to be like this, of course. As the planes dropped their
payloads on Afghanistan, the talk was not just of being tough on terrorism,
tough on the causes of terrorism. The trade ministers who gathered in Qatar in
November 2001 were under serious pressure to repair the damage from the
disastrous Seattle meeting two years earlier by committing themselves to
opening up markets. Failure was too tough to contemplate: it would represent
victory for the terrorists.

As the events of the weekend highlighted, the US and Britain are still keen on
prosecuting the war against terrorism. The carriers are moving to the Gulf.
The planes are being armed with their hi-tech weaponry. The ground troops are
preparing for an invasion. We can see every night on TV how the US is
preparing to deal with Saddam. Much less, however, is heard about the other
side of the equation, how breaking down protectionist barriers will lead to
faster development. Terrorism breeds in conditions of poverty, so making
countries richer makes us all safer.

That, at least, was the theory. But it is now 15 months since the launch of
the Doha round and progress has been painfully slow. Should it come to war
against Saddam, the hope in both the White House and Downing Street is that it
will be short and decisive.

No such optimism is to be found in the corridors of the WTO on the shore of
Lac Léman on the outskirts of Geneva. There, last week, it was abundantly
clear that the talks are going nowhere fast. Negotiations are like a game of
three-dimensional chess conducted by more than 140 players paying only
lip-service to deadlines.

The stalemate in Geneva exposes one of the myths about the WTO; that it is
really Spectre in disguise, a body bent on world domination led by an evil
mastermind from his lair in a hollowed-out volcano. In reality, the WTO is no
different from any other international bureaucracy in that it takes orders
from its member governments. If there are any Dr Evil characters bent on the
immiseration of developing countries through dastardly trade policies they are
the ones responsible for the common agricultural policy or those in Washington
who kowtow to the US drugs industry. There are three big problems with the
talks. The first is that progress requires policymakers to be fully engaged in
the process and to demonstrate, through a willingness to cut deals, a shared
interest in pushing ahead with the agenda. Even before the recent falling out
between the US on one side and Germany and France on the other over Iraq and
Nato, it was clear that no such willingness is apparent. George Bush has other
things on his plate; likewise Tony Blair, who in other circumstances would be
expected to urge faster progress on the Doha round, and Gerhard Schröder.
Jacques Chirac, fearful of France's farmers, has no real incentive to speed
things up.

The spat over Saddam has made matters worse. There were some hopeful signs
last week that a deal on providing affordable life-saving drugs for poor
countries might be finally agreed in Geneva tomorrow following concessions
designed to mollify the fears of big American drugs companies that their
patents would be infringed willy-nilly by low-cost producers in India and
Brazil.

But as one official put it: "The White House is very involved in this issue.
The US drugs industry is involved through the White House." In the
circumstances, there are doubts about whether Bush will be willing to sign up
to a deal which - despite the new safeguards - would be seen as a climbdown.
There is considerable frustration with the tough American stance in Geneva,
where an agreement on drugs is seen as a way of breaking the logjam.

Scoffing

Officials openly scoff at some of the points raised by the US, particularly
that the new system may be abused so that poor people in Africa would be
demanding cut-price Viagra. "If you've got Aids and malaria, you're really not
that worried about erectile dysfunction," one said. "You really don't live
long enough for it be a problem." Moreover, any watering down of patent
protection in the world's poorest countries will have scant impact on the
profitability of the multinational drugs companies, which make the lion's
share of their money in the US itself. A deal on drugs for poor countries
should be a win-win play - better healthcare, no risk of damage to research
and development of new drugs, and a sign of good intent from the west that
might help kickstart the talks.

The second problem is the sheer scale and complexity of the agenda. As ever,
the core of the negotiations concern market access - breaking down the system
of tariffs and other barriers, such as quotas - that restrict trade. But there
are also attempts to liberalise trade in services and agriculture, and to
bring a new range of issues - such as competition policy and investment -
under the WTO umbrella.

There was always a risk that the agenda would become so overloaded that the
system could not cope and this looks like more and more likely as the weeks
and months roll past. The three-dimensional chess means that progress in one
area is contingent on progress in another. As such, none of the players is
prepared to offer anything on market access or services until it sees what is
on offer on agriculture.

There is frustration with poor countries, mainly those in Africa, who have
demanded a set of more than 80 concessions and exemptions and are refusing to
negotiate on them, let alone put them in a list of priorities. Such a hardline
approach may be understandable after the shabby way in which the interests of
poor countries were blatantly ignored in the last round of talks, but it is
leading to stagnation in Geneva. What's more, it may backfire in the end if
the developed countries lose patience and decide that the agonising process of
negotiating special and differential treatment is more trouble than it's
worth.

Impasse

Finally, of course, no trade talks these days would be complete without an
impasse over agriculture. The extent of the problem here was underlined by the
paper put out last week by Stuart Harbinson, the chair of the agricultural
talks; this was sent back to the drawing board by ministers from more than 20
world trade organisation members at the Tokyo meeting over the weekend after
it failed to please either of the two main camps. Harbinson said he hoped his
second draft in the coming weeks, would find a better compromise.

His original plan was a serious attempt to force the players to face up to how
much needed to be done between now and the WTO's ministerial meeting planned
for Cancun in Mexico in September. The EU hated the Harbinson paper, because
it demands big cuts in the export subsidies that are ravaging agriculture in
the developing world, as well as reductions in the support the Americans give
their farmers through export credits. Deep down, however, the Americans are
far more ready to countenance liberalisation of trade in agriculture than is
the EU. Washington will not move in other areas unless Brussels accepts deep
cuts in farm subsidies.

Talks hang by a thread but here are some predictions. Ultimately, a compromise
will be reached on agriculture, where it is questionable whether Europe can
continue its extravagant feather-bedding of farmers at a time when
unemployment is high, budget deficits are rising and the farmers of central
and eastern Europe are about to join the club. Reducing farm support - even
though it will not meet the aspirations of the development agencies - will act
as a catalyst for the rest of the talks, where there will be a surprising
amount of liberalisation of trade in services. But this won't happen yet. The
chances of the talks ending on schedule next year are between slim and none. A
crisis in the talks is needed first. On current form that will come in Cancun.
There is too much to do, and very little time.



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