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HOPES
FADE FOR DOHA MODALITIES MINI-MINISTERIAL IN MAY
WTO Members
"have only a few weeks, not months" in which to conclude
framework agreements on agriculture and industrial goods trade if
they are to have any hope of concluding the Doha Round this year,
the head of the global trade body said this week.
"This is
a very tight schedule, but it is still doable," Director-General
Pascal Lamy told the WTO General Council on 7 May. He claimed that
the ongoing global food price crisis underlined the necessity of
completing the round as soon as possible. "The conclusion of
the Doha Round is more urgent today than it was yesterday,"
he said.
May "extremely
difficult"
However, hopes
are fading for bringing trade ministers to Geneva by the end of
May to finalise 'modalities' deals with formulae and figures for
subsidy and tariff cuts, as well as the terms for contentious exceptions
to these. Slow progress in the farm trade talks has pushed back
the release of a crucial negotiating text from the end of April
to the middle of May.
That text, along
with a companion draft deal on manufacturing trade, is supposed
to become the basis for a 'horizontal' negotiating process of cross-sectoral
tradeoffs, first among senior officials, and ultimately among ministers.
Following the
meeting, WTO spokesperson Keith Rockwell acknowledged "it would
be extremely difficult under this time constraint and given the
importance of substance to this process to have such a meeting in
May," reports Agence France Presse.
Echoing comments
he made to ambassadors last month, Lamy told the WTO's top permanent
decision-making body that "it is clear that the primary focus
of the next weeks has to be on modalities in agriculture and NAMA."
He pointed to ongoing work on services trade, where developed countries
in particular have been eager to see signs of progress in parallel
with the agriculture and NAMA negotiations (see related story, this
issue).
Lamy added that
the chair of the rules talks would come up with a "document
which would not prejudice Members' positions" on controversial
issues such as anti-dumping rules and fisheries subsidies. He repeated
that Members risked a "big clash" during a modalities
push over differences on whether to extend additional intellectual
property protections to geographically-linked foods such as Roquefort
cheese, as well as on whether patent applicants should be obliged
to disclose any biological resources or traditional knowledge used
in their inventions (see BRIDGES Weekly, 23 April 2008, http://www.ictsd.org/weekly/08-04-23/story2.htm).
High food
prices raised
Sources report
that many countries that spoke at the meeting alluded to global
financial market instability and record high food prices as reasons
for why it was particularly urgent to conclude the round.
China said that
although negotiations in recent months had made "some progress,"
it was still "far from satisfactory."
"It would
be difficult for us to succeed in the negotiating process if Members
fail to bridge the gaps in the key areas of agriculture and NAMA,"
the Chinese ambassador said.
Paraguay stressed
that rich country farm subsidy cuts should not be made conditional
on exaggerated demands in return.
Taiwan urged
countries currently searching for compromises on three crucial areas
in the agriculture negotiations - 'sensitive' products eligible
for gentler tariff cuts, expedited liberalisation for tropical products,
and addressing preference erosion - to hurry, so that their work
could be incorporated into the chair's forthcoming draft deal.
Brazil, one
of the countries at the heart of those sensitive product discussions,
said that the agriculture talks were moving in the right direction,
but that industrialised nations needed to be more flexible on manufacturing
trade.
The EU stressed
the need to conclude the round by the end of 2008. EU Trade Commissioner
Peter Mandelson this week called for the draft agriculture and NAMA
texts to be circulated by "mid-May". Speaking to journalists
in Brussels, he said that "If people ask me now or later, I
say there may not be a later for this deal - it's got to be now."
Mandelson said that the need for greater speed arose from the necessity
of wrapping up a Doha Round agreement in time for US President George
W. Bush to sign off on it before he leaves office in January 2009.
Lamy said that
many Members shared the end of year target, and stressed that "putting
the modalities in place very soon" was the only way to achieve
it, "since it would leave us just enough time for scheduling
[specific liberalisation commitments] in agriculture and NAMA and
to wrap up the negotiations in the other areas."
Trade sources
expect some haggling over the scheduling process, as countries express
dissatisfaction with how their trading partners choose to translate
the modalities into liberalisation commitments.
Directly addressing
global food prices, Lamy said that "although the WTO cannot
provide anything immediate to help solve the current crisis, it
can, through the Doha Round negotiations, provide medium to long
term solutions."
"A WTO
deal could help soften the impact of high prices by tackling the
systemic distortions in the international market for food,"
he explained. Trade barriers and trade-distorting subsidies, particularly
in developed countries, "have hampered food production and
investment in agriculture in many developing countries." These
barriers and subsidies stand to be reduced as part of any Doha Round
deal.
Once the draft
agriculture and NAMA texts are released, sources expect them to
be reviewed in the respective issue-specific negotiating committees
(although some countries would prefer to skip this step). If all
goes smoothly, the horizontal process will then begin.
As for the potential
timing of a ministerial meeting, officials were until recently saying
that if there was not a gathering in May, one might not be possible
before late June or even July, due to Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation
(APEC) and Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD) summits, followed by the 7-29 June European football championship
in Switzerland and Austria. Now, different schools of thought exist
on the matter, with some suggesting that a June meeting might be
possible.
ICTSD reporting;
"WTO sees no ministerial meeting in May as trade talks still
bogged down," AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE, 7 May 2008.
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