The WTO Doha Development Agenda, launched in November 2001, is in deep trouble.
The agenda is supposed to give developing countries a better deal from world trade and was due to have been completed by the end of last year. But negotiations are getting nowhere.
Ministers from the WTO's 148 member states meet in Hong Kong next month and will try to push things along but there is still a huge gap between Western and developing countries.
The hopes are that the agenda will be completed by the end of next year, but those involved are not holding their breath. Even WTO Director-General Pascal Lamy has scaled down his ambitions for Hong Kong, citing insufficient agreement in the key areas of agricultural subsidies, industrial tariffs and services.
Western countries support their farmers with more than US$300 billion a year. But this leads to over-production and to the dumping of surpluses in developing countries. Developing countries want the West to reduce this support drastically.
Four years ago there seemed to be progress. Doha launched itself on an optimistic wave.
"[W]ithout prejudging the outcome of the negotiations, we commit ourselves to comprehensive negotiations aimed at: substantial improvements in market access; reductions of, with a view to phasing out, all forms of export subsidies; and substantial reductions in trade-distorting domestic support," the Doha Ministerial Declaration says.
But little of substance has since emerged. The US still protects farmers through its Farm Act and the EU via its Common Agricultural Policy (CAP).
The US said recently that it would cut subsidies to its farmers by 60 percent while the EU has announced 70 percent. But international agency Oxfam says that these are not what they seem and that overall support would change very little.
The sleight of hand is that subsidies account for only about a quarter of total support to their own farmers by Western countries. Other forms -- like market price support, services and advice -- remain untouched and could rise.
EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson says the EU commission would not use the Doha round of talks to precipitate a new phase of CAP reform, and that there is opposition anyway from within the EU to further reform.
Developing countries are furious about the way the US and EU have announced what they claim are big cuts in their agricultural supports, but in reality are offering only modest cuts -- at a high price.
That price is that developing countries slash their tariffs on imported manufactured goods and open their economies up to services from Western countries.
And here lies the root of the problem. The West urges free trade for the poor while maintaining protectionism itself. It treats the WTO as a means to force a free-trade-for-them agenda on developing countries.
As a result the WTO has become lost in a free trade maze, while, it seems, losing sight of some of the most important trade issues which face poorer countries.
The WTO is supposed to be about more than free trade. The 1995 agreement setting it up tasks the organization with raising living standards and ensuring full employment, effective demand and steadily growing real incomes. It was also to expand trade in goods and services. And all this against a backdrop of sustainable development.
In the words of the Harvard economist Dani Rodrik: "It is clear from this preamble that the WTO's framers placed priority on raising standards of living and on sustainable development."
But the emphasis has been on free trade, and instead of promoting sustainable development the whole process has proved hugely damaging to developing counties.
Research by Christian Aid shows that sub-Saharan Africa is a massive US$272 billion worse off because of free trade policies forced on them.
John Madeley is the author of 100 Ways to Make Poverty History.
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