Hailed as a success, the Bali package seems
somewhat short of a win-win for North and South
“The ear of the
leader must ring with the voices of the people.” With those famous words, U.S.
President Woodrow Wilson explained that a core role of a leader is to voice the
concerns of his or her people. Prior to the Bali negotiations, the world’s
multilateral trading regime was foundering on bitter discord among the member
states, which had placed the legitimacy of the World Trade Organization (WTO)
as an effective international organization under doubt. WTO Director-General
Roberto Azevêdo has said the key to the successful outcome of the Bali Conference was “political will.” He observed that member states
rose above their ideological differences to promote the greater cause of free
trade and stood true to the postwar ideals upon which the General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade and later the WTO have stood.
The conference saw intense and tedious rounds of negotiation
on many issues, ranging from agricultural subsidies to trade facilitation reforms.
Azevêdo is certainly correct: political will brought those negotiations to a
successful conclusion. But has this actually bridged the ideological
differences that exist among different trading blocs? Are we seeing an erosion
of the traditional North-South divide?
In fact, it is quite easy to argue that ideological
differences remain and will not erode in the near future. India’s consistent
opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is evidence of this. The TPP
is essentially a U.S.-driven strategic manoeuver to consolidate its economic
presence in Asia. India has shown reluctance in the past at the WTO, on issues inter
alia relating to free foreign bidding for Indian government contracts, an
innovator-friendly patent regime and unregulated rights for foreign investors.
However, this reluctance has a strong socioeconomic basis for a developing
country like India, which has championed the movement on access to affordable
medicines. One of the core features of the TPP is to create stronger intellectual
property protection and a liberal patent regime in Asia, thereby maximizing
profits for pharmaceutical companies. As a leading manufacturer of generic
drugs and with a large population needing access to medicines, it is not
surprising that India opposes such an agreement. It is clear that differences
in perspectives on trade between developed and developing countries will not
yield easily to the success of the Bali Conference.
India’s major concerns prior to entering the Bali
negotiations were to protect its nascent food security program and strike a
profitable deal on trade facilitation. India proved adept during the
negotiations, making concessions on trade facilitation to protect its food
security program. However, this move may have proven costly for least developed
countries (LDCs) as the resulting binding agreement on trade facilitation is a
fiscal nightmare.
The trade facilitation agreement aspires to cut non-tariff
barriers, thereby increasing global trade volumes – by one trillion dollars,
based on current estimates. What is interesting, however, is that the agreement
will create a severe imbalance between the respective abilities of developed
countries and LDCs to achieve universal development goals. To execute the
obligations under the agreement, LDCs would have to develop new regulations,
hire human resources, and allocate significant resources to building new
infrastructure. Although the agreement states that “Least developed
country Members will only be required to undertake commitments to the extent
consistent with their individual development, financial and trade needs or
their administrative and institutional capabilities,” it fails to
appreciate that the LDCs stand to lose out on the gains from such reforms if
they adhere to this clause. For example, there are 16 landlocked countries in
Africa. A study by the African Development Bank reveals that the average
customs transaction involves 20 to 30 steps, 40 documents, and 200 data
elements. As a result, these cumbersome procedures account for 14 per cent of
the trade costs in these landlocked countries. Implementing the trade
facilitation reforms in their totality would give a substantial boost to
intra-African trade. However, limiting the level of commitment for LDCs will
result in only marginal gains for these countries.
This means that to maximize their gains, the LDCs will not
only need substantial technical support but also financial assistance. Yet the
agreement falls short of recognizing this, giving WTO member states the option
to either provide technical, financial or any other mutually agreed forms of
assistance rather than creating a specific obligation. As a result, LDCs may
have to reallocate budgets and compromise on other development goals. It
remains to be seen whether the gains from the trade facilitation reforms will
be able to offset these compromises and to what extent the developed states
will support the LDCs financially. However, it is evident that the immediate
beneficiaries of the agreement are large multinational companies, and by
extension developed states.
The LDCs had pinned their hopes on India to advocate for
them, but to protect its food security program, India chose to be flexible on
trade facilitation reforms. Moreover, this trade-off did not even result in the
intended agreement on food security. Rather, the current understanding on the
food program only allows India to implement its food security program until a
permanent solution is reached on the issue. Further, this understanding is only
limited to existing public stockholdings for food security programs and
prevents any developing country from launching a new food security initiative.
Further on the issue of providing duty-free, quota-free
access to products from LDCs, developed countries have steered clear of making
any absolute commitment. The language of the Ministerial Decision merely
obligates developed countries to “seek to improve their existing duty-free and
quota-free coverage… so as to provide increasingly greater market access to
LDCs.” That leaves the Bali package somewhat short of a win-win deal for North
and South.
Nevertheless, the Bali Conference has restored some faith in
the multilateral trading regime and there are many positives for developing
countries that have come out of the package. Azevêdo has observed that Bali is
just the start and that the road towards realizing the Doha Development Agenda
is long. Nations will not compromise on their national interests, but Bali has
shown that there is scope for contradicting trading interests to converge. For
the leaders of developing countries, it will be worth remembering at future
negotiating tables that their ears must ring with the voices of their people. By
Rachit Ranjan The author is currently working at the WTO.
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