The 153 members of the WTO agree on two things — we’re in a hole and we must keep digging.
The hole is the Doha Development Round, a decade-old negotiation that was billed as the next stage of trade liberalization after the creation of the WTO. After repeated failures to clinch a deal, Doha is on life-support, but nobody is prepared to kill it off.
“There is a Russian proverb that says: ‘Don’t chop off the branch you are sitting on,’” WTO Director-General Pascal Lamy told trade ministers, defending the body at its biennial conference in Geneva last Saturday.
The ministers had collectively acknowledged that the Doha round was unlikely to be concluded in the near future, but promised to keep working toward it, despite a gulf in opinions — especially between the US and China — that makes it almost unthinkable that the WTO could reach a consensus.
Trade diplomats like to point out that the WTO is more than Doha alone, and that a failure to complete Doha does not mean the end of the WTO, since the body also monitors world trade and arbitrates disputes brought to it by member states, but with so much negotiating capital already tied up in Doha, every new proposal to modernize WTO rules is seen part of a wider wrangle over the trade round, paralyzing discussion.
If the WTO does not keep the world’s trade rulebook up to date, it risks losing its position as the global arbiter. Recent allegations of protectionism, such as currency manipulation and environmental taxes, are outside WTO rules, or at best a gray area.
Lamy has blamed the paralysis on a “crisis of multilateralism” — a failure of diplomacy that has also hobbled negotiations on the eurozone crisis and global climate talks.
“The international system can’t be in good shape, because the members of the international system are in bad shape,” he said at a briefing two weeks before the Geneva conference. “They’ve got very little energy left for international compromise.”
Doha was originally meant to help developing economies, but that idea looks out of date now that India, Brazil and most of all China have grown into trading superpowers. For that reason, some officials say Doha, launched at the same time that China was accepted into the WTO, was doomed from the start.
Equally, that helps explain why China, India and Brazil are its most vocal champions, determined not to let any new ideas gain traction unless there is a payoff.
“There’s no question of redefining Doha,” Brazilian Foreign Minister Antonio Patriota said on the eve of the Geneva conference. “We agreed on its mandate 10 years ago.”
In short, Doha and arguments about Doha are using up all the WTO’s oxygen and, as a result, it has been largely unable to evolve for a decade.
That is not to say global trade governance is not changing at all — the WTO’s ministerial conference notched up two big successes, but both, in their own way, compound the problem.
One was the decision to grant Russia membership after 18 years of talks, so that at last all the big economies will be inside the club.
The other was a long-awaited reform of the Government Procurement Agreement (GPA), which will open US$100 billion of government contracts to foreign competition every year.
Russia has promised to play a positive role once it joins midway through next year and it may not even get into Doha negotiations, but having another big and opinionated player at the table will not make it any easier to reach consensus.
The procurement agreement is even more pernicious for Doha, since it is a side-agreement, a voluntary pact that only 42 of the WTO’s 153 members have signed up to.
For many, the fact that 42 countries could agree is proof that success lies in smaller, “plurilateral” agreements that forge coalitions of the willing, rather than those like Doha which include everyone.
Many WTO members, including the EU and the US, are already discussing setting up an agreement on trade in services, which could liberalize rules on accounting firms, doctors and insurance companies working across borders.
Many countries are also interested in the idea of cutting tariffs on parts used in renewable energy. Others want to move quickly to capture some of the “easy” wins from Doha, such as reducing cost and red-tape around customs.
However, unlike the trade in services, which has an exemption under WTO rules, such side-agreements will only be WTO deals if every WTO member signs up, and that is unlikely.
“We do not think that there should be peeling off,” Indian Trade Minister Anand Sharma said.
Without the WTO agreeing, what hope for side-deals?
The simple answer is every WTO member has already signed separate deals affecting trade, often in a drive for regional integration or to establish global rules in areas such as the trade in endangered species.
The WTO says it is unfazed by regional agreements and says they will not distort world trade as long as there are enough of them. If everybody has preferences, nobody has preferences, Lamy says.
The flowering of regional trade deals has moved up a gear as the big powers — the US, the EU and Russia — race to build blocs to compete with each other and with China.
The US is pushing the Trans-Pacific Partnership, whose members include Australia, Vietnam, Malaysia, Singapore and Chile.
“Part of our belief ... is saying: ‘Let’s not handicap ourselves by saying we can only do this one way,’” US Trade Representative Ron Kirk said in an interview. “It may be that they can become the fuel that ignites a broader discussion about how you merge those into a multilateral stream, like Doha.”
Lamy played down the suggestion that breakaway groups would damage the WTO and said they were nothing new.
Fear of “plurilateral” agreements was generated by paranoia and mistrust between governments, he said.
However, some of Lamy’s staff are worried and privately blame him for leading the WTO into a dead end by allowing Doha to stifle agreement.
Lamy, who is scheduled to step down in September 2013, argues that it is not up to him, but WTO members, and they have consistently chosen the Doha road.
After the latest push to clinch a deal came unstuck earlier this year, Lamy said that he had no plans to go early.
“You never say never, but it’s not my temper [style],” Lamy said. “So if that happens, it would be a surprise, even to me.”
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