Future of the world trading system: Asian perspectives
The WTO risks losing its centrality in the world trading system
due to its focus on 20th century trade issues and lack of progress in the Doha
Round
Asia, meanwhile, has built a deep
network of supply chains and is experimenting with new forms of regional trade
governance. Asia’s experience of open trade-led
development offers lessons for other regions. Better coherence is also vital
between Asia’s regional trade rules and global trade governance.
The 1995 creation of the WTO — as an
institutional extension of the GATT — held out the promise of an effective,
rules-based world trading system where all countries were treated alike. In
addition to establishing a global judiciary for trade disputes, the WTO was
expected to provide a forum for trade negotiations and other related functions.
Progress on the dispute-resolution side has been brilliant, but the promise to facilitate trade negotiations has yet to be
fulfilled .
Recent developments, however, have
thrown the world trading system into a state of flux causing uncertainties over
global trade governance under the WTO. There is little doubt that the world
trading system has changed fundamentally over past years with the rise of
emerging markets, the expansion of international production networks and supply
chain trade, signs of new commercial and industrial policies, and the spread of
trade-agreement-led regionalism. These developments are all here to stay but the WTO has not kept up with them . Furthermore, the WTO
Doha Round has been going on for more than a decade. Despite being the longest
multilateral trade talks in history, it shows no signs of concluding anytime
soon. WTO centricity in global trade governance is eroding and risks continuing
to erode.
The rise of Factory Asia through
supply chain trade has placed it increasingly at the heart of the global
economy. The slicing of production stages into geographically separate stages
illustrates how Asian countries uniquely interact with each other through trade
and investment. Trade and regional integration are likely to influence Asia’s
future growth, with some predicting that the region will account for over half
of world GDP by 2050.
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Asia is also experimenting with new
approaches to free trade agreements and economic policies to sustain economic
growth amidst a fragile world economy. Bilateral trade agreements are spreading
with the risk of a troublesome Asian ‘noodle bowl’ of different, competing
tariff schedules, exclusion lists, rules and standards. Additionally, there are
two competing mega regional proposals for trade agreement consolidation — the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership and the
Trans-Pacific Partnership. How Asia thinks and acts on these issues will likely
influence the world economy.
As Pascal Lamy, Director-General of
the WTO, writes
in his essay :
Asia has been a successful model of
development through trade, which has inspired many others around the world.
There is no doubt that the region will continue to inspire the trade community in
the next decades to come.
With its significant economic and
trade weight in the global economy, Asia is expected to shoulder more
responsibilities and take the lead in the global trading system in the future.
Their contribution to a successful WTO Ministerial Conference in Bali in
December 2013 will be essential.
Asia’s experience of open trade-led
development offers many valuable lessons for other regions. These include the
importance of pursuing market-friendly trade and industrial policies to develop
supply chain trade, improving surveillance of non-tariff measures, and
consolidating trade agreements into a large region-wide one. Using more
accurate data to measure value-added trade and participants in supply chain
trade, such as small firms, provide empirical insights for policy development.
In the longer term, better coherence
between Asia’s regional trade rules and global trade governance is vital.
Improving the quality of large Asia-wide trade agreements, a WTO agenda on
supply chains and trade agreements, and significant reforms of the WTO are
necessary moves towards this end. Issue-based plurilateral agreements and an
eventual multilateral agreement on investment can also play a role in
facilitating coherence between regional and global rules on trade.
Richard Baldwin is Professor of
International Economics the Graduate
Institute , Geneva, and part-time Visiting Research Professor at the
University of Oxford.
Masahiro Kawai is Dean and CEO of
the Asian
Development Bank Institute .
Ganeshan Wignaraja is Director of
Research of the Asian
Development Bank Institute .
This article was first published on
VoxEU. The VoxEu eBook, ‘Future of the world trading system: Asian perspectives’,
Rob Carter says: Brest news yet ~ Throw GATT, WTO, TPP, NAFTA and all their smart arsed legal tricksters in the USA garbage pile where they belong ASEAN, and APEC can do better without the Doha Crappers and USA Cunning to boot. If indoors file in the round file some call WPB or waste paper basket as the Yankees are doing nothing hut wasting paper to spike the Diplomats travel perks and associated income luxurious living and reason to get away from nagging USA wives.
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