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Muted outcome of WTO talks throws trade body into ‘crisis’

In World
March 02, 2024

“We will have to see how we pick up the pieces,” the official said, on the condition of anonymity.

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, director general of the World Trade Organization, holds a press conference in Abu Dhabi on Monday. Photo: Kyodo

Speaking at the closing press conference, the Emirati chair of the so-called MC13 gathering, Thani Al Zeyoudi, acknowledged the shortcomings.

“Despite our best efforts, we failed to agree on some texts which are of great importance to many of our members,” said Al Zeyoudi, who also serves as the UAE’s foreign trade minister.

For her part, WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said the talks came up “against an international backdrop marked by greater uncertainty than at any time I can remember”.

“We have achieved some important things and we have not managed to complete others,” she said.

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The WTO, the only international body dealing with the rules of trade between nations, requires full consensus from all members to chalk up deals.

It was hoping MC13 would replicate the landmark success of its 2022 ministerial in Geneva, which yielded a deal on fisheries and saw members agree to restore a now-defunct dispute settlement system by the end of this year.

But the latest ministerial fell short of that objective.

“The unexpected weakness of the overall (MC13) package should … serve as a wake-up call,” the secretary general of the International Chamber of Commerce, John Denton, said in a statement. “The quick take is that base domestic politics have trumped effective international cooperation this week in Abu Dhabi.”

02:31

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After a 2022 deal that banned subsidies contributing to illegal, undeclared and unregulated fishing, the WTO was hoping to conclude a second package focusing on subsidies that result in overcapacity and overfishing.

Negotiations in recent months at the WTO headquarters in Geneva had enabled a draft text to be brought forward for a second fisheries deal, which provided flexibility and advantages for developing countries.

But some – notably India – demanded further concessions, including transition periods that others consider to be too long.

At MC13, a new draft fisheries agreement was brought forward but it faced strong objections from New Delhi.

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“There was basically just one country that was blocking the deal,” said EU trade commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis, without specifying which member.

Richard Ouellet of Canada’s University of Laval said “consensus, which was once the cement of this organisation, has now become the mud in which it is bogged down”.

With farmer protests sweeping Europe and India, agriculture agreements also emerged as a particularly sensitive topic of debate.

Member states were trying to negotiate a text listing the subjects that merit further discussion.

Indian farmers shout slogans before burning an effigy depicting the World Trade Organization during a protest on the outskirts of Amritsar on Monday. Photo: AFP

An agriculture package, however, was hampered by a firm demand by India for permanent rules governing public stockholding of food reserves to replace temporary measures adopted by the WTO.

India’s insistence on a permanent solution for public stockholding was “impossible to bridge”, Dombrovskis said.

Despite failing on agriculture and fisheries, the WTO managed to salvage a moratorium on customs duties for digital transmissions that was extended for another two years.

The moratorium has been regularly extended since 1998, when WTO members first agreed not to impose customs duties on electronic transmission of digital products.

It faced a particularly strong challenge at MC13, with countries led by India and South Africa arguing that it harms customs revenues.

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India’s Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal said Friday that he allowed the extension to pass “out of respect” to the conference’s Emirati chair, whom he called a “good friend”.

On dispute settlement reform, the final outcome mainly reiterated the commitment made at MC12 to have a fully and well-functioning dispute settlement system in place by 2024.

Washington, under former US president Donald Trump, brought the system to a grinding halt in 2019 by blocking the appointment of new judges to the WTO’s appeal court, the organisation’s highest dispute settlement authority.

“We wished for more progress on the question of appeal … but we were not able to move forward as fast as we wanted,” Dombrovskis said.

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