 |
 |

Bridges
Coverage of the Singapore WTO Ministerial
12
DECEMBER 1996
Delegates
to the WTO MC heard thirty-four statements during
morning and afternoon Plenary meetings. Consultations on the ITA were
completed.
The heads of
delegations met during the night to consider the labor issue, the last
outstanding matter. In addition, the Director-General and Singapore signed
an agreement on a joint training programme for devleloping countries.
GENERAL STATEMENTS
Several countries emphasized that consolidation of the Marrakesh agreements
should be the primary goal of the WTO. A number of speakers noted national
efforts to implement the Marrakesh agreements.
SLOVENIA stated that the WTO needs to foster a deeper public understanding
of its role. CHINA noted that a few major players have dominated the multilateral
decision-making process and exert pressure on others to introduce issues
irrelevant to trade. Numerous countries recommended that the WTO avoid
overloading its agenda with matters that legitimately belong to other
multilateral institutions. SOUTH AFRICA called for cooperation and consultation
between WTO, UNCTAD and related organizations and said their failure to
cooperate is a primary reason for the failure of multilateral organizations
to promote development.
VENEZUELA and NAMIBIA highlighted the improvement of the dispute settlement
mechanism as a substantive success. DOMINICA stated that the present dispute
settlement system has proven unfavorable in regards to the participation
of small and institutionally weak Members.
BAHRAIN noted that the "considerable amount of unfinished business
on
the peace front" impedes progress toward global prosperity. BURUNDI
stated
that embargoes are a negation of the multilateral trading system. NIGERIA
called on the MC to consider a declaration against the use of unilateral
actions with extraterritorial effects. KENYA said the WTO Secretariat
should reflect the
geographical representation of the WTO membership.
CHINA
stated that political considerations and excessive demands for
immediate commercial benefits have slowed down accession. He also noted
that the scope of some accession negotiations has exceeded WTO provisions
and has sometimes been used as a pretext to undertake "inclusive
review of economic and trade regimes" of applicants. JORDAN noted
that acceding countries are being asked to give more concessions than
what is provided for in the Uruguay Round agreements and this could delay
accession. POLAND supported accession as soon as applicants are willing
to accept the terms of WTO membership. ALGERIA said that simplification
of the application process for developing countries should be considered.
MADAGASCAR stated that integration of LDCs is the main challenge to the
globalization of trade. MOZAMBIQUE stated that LDCs are overwhelmed with
implementation of the Marrakesh agreements and, rather than a rush to
introduce new issues, "gradualism" is required. DOMINICA said
that due to a lack of resources many developing countries were unable
to actively participate in the Uruguay Round and therefore accepted a
text negotiated by others. These countries are now grappling with the
implications of their commitments and tangible benefits have been difficult
to identify.
BAHRAIN called for technology transfer and direct investment to enable
developing countries to become internationally competitive. ZAMBIA and
CYPRUS called for financial resources and technical assistance to assist
LDCs in meeting their obligations. SWITZERLAND noted that technical assistance
needs exceed WTO capabilities and called on development agencies to collaborate
in supplementing this assistance. Several speakers said the technical
assistance to developing countries provided for in the Marrakesh agreement
has not been forthcoming.
ST. LUCIA noted that a number of countries that are small or dependent
on
single commodity exports also have difficulties competing in the global
economy and require special attention. The MALDIVES asked what the WTO
has to offer if a single-product exporter has problems and stated that
if the WTO is to remain relevant, it must create market opportunities
for LDCs. SENEGAL called for the simplification and reduction of notification
requirements.
SWITZERLAND emphasized the importance of concluding the agreement on basic
telecommunications. TAIPEI supported the ITA and recommended flexibility
for some Members and broad-based participation in the process of liberalizing
information technology trade.
POLAND noted that consideration of trade and environment was more controversial
than expected and, with PERU, supported continued work by the CTE. SWITZERLAND
said the consistency of MEAs with the WTO must be ensured and, with NIGERIA,
called for closer coordination between trade and environmental policy
makers. The COTE D'IVOIRE expressed concern that environmental measures
would lead to protectionist measures or conditionalities. KENYA said the
proliferation of eco-labelling schemes has raised concerns about market
access and developing countries will need technological and financial
assistance to conform to their requirements. NIGERIA noted that poverty
is the most significant cause of environmental degradation and trade liberalization
will yield environmental dividends. He called for positive measures, such
as increased market access and transfer of environmentally-sound technologies,
rather than restrictions.
HONDURAS expressed concern that the agricultural sector is not fully integrated
into the multilateral trading system and that sanitary and technical
restrictions are applied. HONDURAS also noted that the agreement on textiles
and clothing has not been strictly implemented and said the Textile Monitoring
Body should be impartial and transparent. KENYA said he saw no immediate
benefit accruing to developing countries if the textile products they
export are
integrated only in the final phases of the transition period.
SWITZERLAND
advocated the development of a multilateral framework for
investment. The COTE D'IVOIRE said the WTO could be an educational forum
on investment and could eventually consider an international treaty if
all agree.
PERU supported a study, especially as it relates to the simplification
of
technology transfer. VENEZUELA supported an analysis in close cooperation
with UNCTAD. NAMIBIA suggested further study, primarily by UNCTAD in consultation
with relevant international agencies. MADAGASCAR supported the active
involvement of the WTO. CAMEROON supported a discussion but stressed that
the development aspect must be emphasized and, together with CHINA, said
developing countries must be fully involved. MYANMAR called for attention
to Members' national policies and investment laws when studying and drafting
a multilateral agreement. ST. KITTS and NEVIS said an investment regime
that does not provide for differential treatment of small fragile economies
might not be considered appropriate or equitable. PAPUA NEW GUINEA stated
its strong reservation regarding a WTO investment agreement because it
would push them into the vicious spiral of aid dependency. MALAWI stated
that attempts to harmonize investment
policies would impede Members' ability to achieve national priorities
in their
development strategies.
ST. KITTS and NEVIS said it lacks the institutional capacity and resources
to undertake the additional commitments a competition policy in the WTO
would
involve.
The SLOVAK REPUBLIC noted that a working party already exists in the ILO
to
examine the relationship between trade and labor standards. ZAMBIA, VENEZUELA,
MYANMAR, NAMIBIA, SENEGAL and MALAWI said the ILO is the proper forum
to discuss
this issue. MYANMAR said that linking labor standards and trade would
be
detrimental to the effective functioning of the WTO. GUATEMALA rejected
any
initiative that tries to use labor standards for trade pressure. VENEZUELA
stated the WTO should not institute instruments to enforce compliance
with labor
standards. SWITZERLAND reaffirmed that protectionist measures should not
be used
and said the WTO should "reflect" on this issue in close cooperation
with the ILO.
IN THE CORRIDORS I
NGO participants reported that the launch of a critical WIDE (Network
Women
in Development Europe) report that examines world trade agreements from
a gender
perspective, together with a statement by the womenÕs caucus at
the MC,
led within hours to informal discussions with a senior member of the WTO
Secretariat. Activists from trade unions and NGOs participating in the
women's
caucus had complained that the Ministerial Conference failed to take on
board
recommendations from the UN's Fourth World Conference on Women that policy
formulation, decision-making, and implementation of policies take account
of gender sensitive analyses. The women's caucus said this should include
monitoring the impact of trade liberalization on women, notably those
in the LLDCs and in low-paid employment. After the informal discussions
the WTO
Secretariat was reported to have conceded that the gender issue is "something
new" to them, but one they are prepared to pursue. NGO experts are
now expected to press the Trade Policy Review staff to incorporate gender
sensitive
methodology in the preparation of their country trade reviews.
IN THE (NGO) CORRIDORS II
NGOs issued several joint statements on Thursday. The NGO Statement on
Transparency and Participation in the WTO, a call for greater openness
that
was signed by a coalition of public interest NGOs, was to be transmitted
to WTO Members Friday. It calls for increased NGO participation and consultation
in WTO meetings, including the Trade Policy Review and dispute resolution
mechanisms. It also calls for increased access to WTO documents. In another
joint effort, four environmental NGOs issued an open letter to the Director-General
of the WTO, in critical response to his opening Plenary speech, and attached
a critical assessment of the two years' work of the Committee on Trade
and Environment.
On another note, NGOs reported they were refused permission to take the
floor during Friday's Plenary to thank their Singapore hosts for setting
a new standard in providing for their needs. NGOs contrasted the outstanding
facilities in the NGO Centre, including e-mail and Internet access, with
the limits placed on their access to official proceedings. Some understood
that at one stage in the preparations for the MC there was a proposal
to exclude NGOs from the Suntec Center altogether, before their access
to floors 1 and 6 was granted.
IN THE CORRIDORS III
Informal sessions in the early hours of Thursday morning reportedly produced
a near-final text on investment and competition. Sources say meetings
of 40 or so key countries, of which India was one, agreed on a statement
that rolled the two issues together. According to reports, India had previously
been a key opposing force to such agreement, but support for its position
on investment began to erode Wednesday when Malaysia softened its stance,
and further weakened on Thursday when a number of African supporters did
the same. Observers said the text calls for WTO working groups to further
explore each issue and recognizes the value of UNCTAD's ongoing work.
Delegates said the draft, as of Thursday afternoon, contained two strong
statements that any working group analysis would not lead to negotiations
without the explicit consensus of Members. The text was taken into HOD
meetings Thursday night, where it was expected to face little substantial
opposition.
IN THE CORRIDORS IV
Delegates agreed Thursday to include in the Ministerial Declaration text
on what some have described as the biggest trade agreement since the Uruguay
Round.
The ITA was reportedly concluded, and some said the expected signatory
countries represent approximately 85 percent of world trade in IT products.
The product coverage for the agreement reportedly includes capacitors,
digital photocopiers, fibre optic cables, computer monitors and software,
telecommunication equipment,graphic display tubes and semi-conductors.
All computer software is included save for software carrying sound recordings
and films. The agreement is anticipated to remove existing non-tariff
barriers and deter new ones. Some reported that a side agreement linked
to the EU-US agreement covers brown and white distilled spirits and liquor.
Some expressed the concern that developing countries may be pressured
by developed countries to accede to the ITA, which they played little
part in drafting. Some developing countries have said that their demands
for staged implementation have not been adequately taken into consideration.
THINGS TO LOOK FOR TODAY
PLENARY: The closing Plenary is expected to meet sometime today.
NGO BRIEFING: A briefing sponsored by ICTSD and TWN will meet from
9:00 to 10:00 in the NGO Centre.
|
 |
|