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IN FIRST
TNC ADDRESS, LAMY ANNOUNCES "NEW PHASE" IN TALKS
In his first
address to the WTO Trade Negotiations Committee (TNC) on 14 September,
new Director-General Pascal Lamy called on Members to focus all
of their efforts towards reaching an ambitious and coherent agreement
at the organisation's Hong Kong Ministerial Conference in December.
That agreement, he said, should take Members two-thirds of the way
towards finishing the Doha Round by the end of 2006. He warned that
the Doha Round could only succeed if the "development dimension
is at the centre of the negotiations."
The former EU
Trade Commissioner dedicated much of his statement to process-related
steps that he would take to try to push the negotiations forward.
Proclaiming a "new phase" in the negotiations, he exhorted
delegations to be "brief, pragmatic, practical, and action-oriented"
instead of wasting time on long and repetitive declarations. He
said that the WTO was entering into a period of "permanent
negotiations," which he likened to a football team's "training
camp" before a crucial match.
Outlines
substantive hurdles that must be overcome
Instead of describing
the overall state of the negotiations, Lamy chose to outline strategic
issues in the talks that he believed must be solved "for us
to get out of the vicious circle and into the virtuous one."
These included agreeing by Hong Kong on an end date for agricultural
export subsidies, a "clear understanding" on how to cut
and limit domestic farm support, and a formula for cutting tariffs
on farm products that incorporates flexibilities for certain goods.
With regard to non-agricultural market access (NAMA), he said that
Members would have to "find the right balance between the [tariff
reduction] formula and the flexibilities."
"From now
until Hong Kong," Lamy went on, "Members should develop
different approaches in services, leading to an increased number
and to an enhanced quality of commitments." He also urged Members
to try to arrive at draft negotiated texts on anti-dumping, subsidies
and countervailing measures, and fisheries subsidies in the Negotiating
Group on Rules.
The WTO chief
was emphatic about the centrality of development concerns to every
area of the ongoing negotiations. "The challenge is to maximise
the development value of every sector and of the round as a whole,"
he said. Notably, he expressed the conviction that an "aid
for trade" facility could "help us translate the development
package of the round into reality."
Trade sources
report that Lamy also said that Members would have to agree on a
public health amendment to the WTO Agreement on Trade-related Aspects
of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) by Hong Kong.
Lamy stresses
efficiency, transparency; urges constant evaluation of progress
As WTO Director-General,
Lamy is Chair of the TNC. He outlined some changes in how the body
would function under his guidance. Emphasising that the purpose
of the TNC was to assess progress in the different negotiating areas,
he said that he would not fix a date for the next TNC meeting, as
has been customary. Instead, he would wait to see what was happening
in the different negotiating groups before scheduling the next TNC
session.
Both in his
TNC speech and the press conference that followed, Lamy stressed
that Geneva must be the centre of WTO activity between now and Hong
Kong. He said that other initiatives to push the negotiations forward
were welcome, but that they must be done in a way that supports
the Geneva-based processes.
Lamy said he
would attach a great deal of importance to transparency in his functions
as Director-General. He said that he would make use of formal and
informal TNC meetings at the head-of-delegation level to keep all
Member delegations involved and informed of progress in his informal
consultations.
Reminding Members
that precisely three months separated their meeting from the 13
December start of the ministerial summit, Lamy asked them to constantly
evaluate progress -- or the lack thereof -- in the negotiating groups,
so as to keep things on track. He did identify two specific junctures
for evaluation before December: mid-October, for evaluating progress
made up to that point and coming to a clearer understanding of what
it is that Members hope to achieve in Hong Kong; and mid-November
as a date by which Members would need to see specific and substantive
results from each negotiating group. Ideally, a consolidated draft
ministerial text would emerge by the latter time, which would give
delegations a month to hash out differences before the Ministerial
Conference, thus improving their chances of reaching a deal.
Following the
meeting, Lamy appealed to the US and the EU to make concessions
in the agriculture talks, saying that they could break the deadlock
in the negotiations by doing so. "They have margins of manoeuvre
which they have to use tactically to the maximum of their capacities,"
he added. "The question is: when do they show their hand?"
Pascal Lamy's
full statement is available online at http://www.wto.org/english/news_e/news05_e/tnc_stat_lamy_14sep05_e.htm.
ICTSD reporting;
"WTO chief urges US, EU to break deadlock in farm talks,"
XINHUA, 14 September 2005.
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