THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 06 MAY 2019 (Talking fair trade in Delhi (The Hindu)

Talking fair trade in Delhi (The Hindu)

Mains Paper 1 : International
Prelims level : WTO
Mains level : International Trade and its impact

Context

  • India will host the second mini-ministerial meet of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), on May 13-14, 2019.
  • The 11th Ministerial Conference (Buenos Aires, December 2017) collapsed despite efforts by 164 WTO members to evolve a consensus on several issues.
  • The U.S. has refused a reduction in subsidies and also pulled back on its commitment to find a perennial solution to public stockholding an issue central to developing and less developed countries. In fact, the deadlock left many trade analysts wondering whether this was the beginning of the end for the WTO.

Bridging the gaps

  • It may be useful to recollect that the WTO replaced the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) as an international organisation mainly to overcome tussles over trade interests.
  • The economies of the developing and less developed world (with little bargaining power) were unable to gain market access in most of the developed economies (which were influential in negotiations), especially when it came to agricultural commodities.
  • The deadlock on the issue of agricultural trade negotiations, first in the late 1980s and then in 2017, was no surprise.
  • The disagreements between developed countries (the European Union and the U.S.) and developing countries (Malaysia, Brazil and India) to discipline the farm regime in their favour continue, thereby threatening the WTO’s comprehensive development agenda.
  • The expectations of developing countries from trade also get belied due to sizeable support by the developed nations to their farmers in a situation of market failure and other uncertainties.
  • The support through subsidies tends to bring distortions in commodity prices.
  • The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development estimates the quantum of subsidies by developed nations to vary from $300 to $325 billion annually, which is much higher than that estimated for developing countries.
  • This has become a bone of contention in trade talks as farm lobbies in the U.S., Europe and Japan have steadily exercised political clout to influence officials and lawmakers to continue giving subsidies to farmers.

Non-tariff measures

  • Another point of concern is that developed countries design and implement stringent non-tariff measures (NTMs) which exacerbate the problems faced by poor countries that are willing to export. NTMs significantly add to the cost of trading.
  • However, the costs of acquiescence with many NTMs are asymmetrical across exporters because compliance depends on production facilities, technical know-how and infrastructure factors that are usually inadequate in developing economies.
  • These countries are, therefore, unable to compete in international markets and hardly gain from sectors with comparative advantage such as agriculture, textiles and apparels.
  • Developing countries are willing to break the deadlock on these issues and are preparing a common ground to jolt the mandate of the global trade body.
  • India, in particular, seeks amendment of laws on unilateral action by members on trade issues and a resolution of the WTO’s dispute settlement system.
  • The expectation is that the meeting may lead to policy guidance on issues such as global norms to protect traditional knowledge from patenting by corporates, protection through subsidies, e-commerce, food security and continuation of special and differential treatment to poor economies.

Breaking the deadlock

  • Importantly, if the interests of developing and less developed countries are not addressed, ceteris paribus, jargon, convoluted negotiations and dictums will become trivial now and in the future.
  • The outcome eloquently showed the constraints of a ‘multilateral negotiation system where the need for agreement and not compromise prevails and allows any member, no matter how small, to block any progress on all issues.
  • In what has become an increasingly politicised environment, members with wide and divergent interests have simply halted the process and refused to negotiate in good faith across a spectrum of issues’.
  • Developed nations created alliances to prepare the ground to push nascent issues such as investment facilitation, rules for e-commerce, gender equality and subsidy on fisheries, while most developing nations were unable to fulfil or implement rudimentary dictums.
  • It was agreed to ‘establish a work programme to examine global e-commerce, with a focus on the relationship between e-commerce and existing agreements.
  • It generated a sizeable debate on the fringes of the conference as many accredited NGOs opposed it and raised concerns that it was a push by dominant global players.
  • The underlying fear was it might allow unfettered access to data, which could then be processed and exploited for profit’ by developed nations, mainly the U.S.

Conclusion

  • The Delhi meeting can be a breakthrough if members negotiate these issues in a convergent manner.
  • The time is opportune for developing countries to voice their concerns and push for a stable and transparent environment for multilateral trade.
  • India must do its homework to focus on the unresolved issues and address the newer ones which are of interest to developed nations, mainly investment facilitation.
  • The WTO needs to be sustained as countries need an international platform to formulate trade rules and bring convergence on divergent matters.

Prelims Questions:

Q.1) Consider the following statements with reference to Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA):

1. It is a legal tool that balances environmental concerns with developmental activities.
2. It starts with a 'public hearing' for consultations on the proposed developmental project.
3. Under the Environmental (Protection) Act, 1986, EIA has been made mandatory for all the projects.

Select the correct answer using the code given below.
(a) 1 only
(b) 1 and 2 only
(c) 2 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3

Answer: A

Mains Questions:
Q.1) To what extent the WTO mini-ministerial meet, developing countries must make a case for stable and transparent multilateral trade. Critically examine.