Volume 11 Number 32 26 September 2007

RESOURCES

BIOFUELS AT WHAT COST? GOVERNMENT SUPPORT FOR ETHANOL AND BIODIESEL IN SWITZERLAND. By Ronald Steenblik and Juan Simón. Global Subsidies Initiative (GSI)/International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD), June 2007. This report is the most comprehensive account to date of the Swiss government's government support for biofuels. It is part of a multi-country effort by the Global Subsidies Initiative (GSI) to characterise and quantify subsidies for biofuels production, distribution, and consumption, as well as the subsidies to producers of key factor inputs. Similar reports on Australia, Brazil, Canada, the European Union, Indonesia, and Malaysia will be released over the summer and fall of 2007. Available online at http://www.globalsubsidies.org/IMG/pdf/Swiss_Support_to_Biofuels2.pdf.

CAN THE TRADING SYSTEM BE GOVERNED? INSTITUTIONAL IMPLICATIONS OF THE WTO'S SUSPENDED ANIMATION. By Robert Wolfe. Centre for International Governance Innovation Working Paper No. 30, September 2007. Do the difficulties in reaching an agreement in the Doha round signal the need for institutional reform of the WTO? Members face great difficulty in undertaking needed renovations and new agreements through negotiations, even as the organisation goes about its daily work as usual. This paper is structured by two hypotheses, that the way in which interests are aggregated changes outcomes; and that deliberation aids learning, which changes outcomes. The paper shows that WTO decision-making principles, dominated by the Single Undertaking and consensus, are essential given the nature of the membership and the political saliency of the issues, which has implications both for what is discussed (the agenda) and how (process). New rules apply to all, which means that voice for all Members matters. While exit is difficult, any Member can deny consensus, in principle if not in practice, which creates more roles for small groups and coalitions, and a common need for transparency. The paper concludes that procedural improvements by themselves will not solve intractable policy disagreements, but the lessons now being learned in the Doha Round on how to manage traditional negotiations involving many more Members within a changing global power structure might pay off in a subsequent round. Nevertheless the engagement of thousands of officials in the WTO process continues to shape collective management of the global trading system, even when revisions to the treaty prove elusive. Available online at http://www.cigionline.org/cigi/Publications/workingp/canthetr.

BUSINESS GUIDE TO PARTNERING WITH NGOS AND THE UNITED NATIONS. By the UN Global Compact, 2007. This guide was created through a partnership between Dalberg, the UN Global Compact, and The Financial Times. It seeks to facilitate partnerships between companies and NGOs or UN agencies. Available online at http://www.civicus.org/new/media/ExSum-Business-Guide.pdf

                                                                                                               
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