|
S&D PROPOSALS
NEED REDRAFTING, CLARIFICATION, MEMBERS SAY
The WTO Committee
on Trade and Development Special (negotiating) Session (CTD-SS)
met in informal mode on 16 and 17 June and looked at revised versions
of agreement-specific proposals from least-developed countries (LDCs)
as well as all the remaining agreement-specific proposals from other
Members. Although the LDC revisions were welcomed, many Members
expressed concerns that the agreement-specific proposals on the
table needed work to clarify and update the proposals and ensure
that the text addresses the stated needs of developing countries.
Emphasis
on LDC proposals continues
The CTD-SS has
been proceeding in recent meetings by looking informally at the
five agreement-specific proposals made by LDCs (see BRIDGES
Weekly, 5 May 2005), but waiting for delayed revised language
from the LDCs (see BRIDGES
Weekly, 5 June 2005). The LDCs tabled new language on the proposals
on 15 June. Several Members said, however, that they did not have
enough time to consult with their capitals and examine the text
in order to respond by the 16 June meeting. Initial responses at
the 16 June meeting suggested that the changes to the text that
had been considered at the May meeting were relatively minor and
cosmetic.
Members raised
questions regarding the automaticity of some of the LDC proposals,
including redrafted text on proposals number 22 and 23 regarding
" Understanding in Respect of Waivers of Obligations under
the GATT 1994," where the redrafted text says that requests
for waivers of obligations from LDCs, as well as from other Members
acting "in favour of LDCs", should be given special consideration.
Members feared this could open the door to claims for waivers from
WTO disciplines for measures that are allegedly, but not in fact,
in the interest of LDCs. In addition, Members continued to raise
questions regarding proposal 84's demand for the exemption of LDCs
from the disciplines of the Agreement on Trade-Related Investment
Measures (TRIMS). Sources suggested that the US, EU, Canada and
Japan were unwilling to concede to such a comprehensive exemption
owing to fears that this would create a precedent of exceptions
to the rule and different treatment of different developing countries.
Members suggested, however, that additional work was necessary to
align the language of the proposal with the stated needs of LDCs
and what other countries were willing to agreed to.
Nonetheless,
there was a renewed impetus at the meeting to examine the LDC proposals
in the hopes of agreeing on text on at least four of the five proposals
by the end of July. An informal meeting of the CTD-SS was held on
21 June to further consider these proposals.
All agreement-specific
proposals examined
The Chair suggested,
and Members agreed on 17 June that -- given the July 2005 deadline
for a step forward in the negotiations in the lead-up to the December
Hong Kong ministerial -- the group move to address the other remaining
agreement-specific proposals, beginning with those by the African
Group and moving on to others. The proposals, which have not been
examined since the Cancun ministerial meeting, went through a cursory
reading, including a first reading of some of the more difficult
proposals, collected in a "category III."
The tension
between the so-called "horizontal" or "cross-cutting"
issues and the agreement-specific proposals surfaced during discussions.
Members commented that, similarly to the LDC proposals, much of
the language in the other agreement-specific proposals did not match
the stated needs of developing countries and more particularly the
country or group that submitted the proposal. A number of developed
country Members said that in many cases, the underlying objective
behind the proposals was not clear and this made it difficult to
ascertain the exact problems that the proposals were actually attempting
to address. They suggested that the proposals needed to be more
targeted and specific. In addition, Members suggested that several
proposals were outdated and failed to take into account agreements
reached in the July Package.
Next steps
CTD-SS Chair
Faizel Ismail will be holding small group consultations in the coming
weeks to continue discussions on the LDC agreement-specific proposals
to explore language that could provide a basis for possible recommendations
in July or thereafter. Once work on LDC proposals is completed,
the CTD-SS will shift its attention to agreement-specific proposals
from the African Group.
ICTSD reporting.
.
|