A joint statement issued by farmers,
fishers, workers, NGOs, and concerned individuals in the Philippines
campaigning against further trade liberalization.
The proponents of trade liberalization have hailed the framework
agreement that emerged from the General Council Meeting of
the World Trade Organization in Geneva on 1 August 2004 as
an important step towards jump starting stalled multilateral
trade talks and the completion at the soonest possible time
of the “Doha Round.”
United States Trade Representative Robert Zoellick has called
the framework, a road map to prosperity. The Philippines has
joined the celebratory chorus. Trade Secretary Cesar Purisima
expressed elation over the framework, saying that many of
the positions advanced by the Philippines in the negotiations
were reflected in the framework agreement. A close reading
of the text however shows that the outcome in Geneva is definitely
no cause for celebration especially for a developing country
like the Philippines. The WTO framework is flawed. It will
not address but instead further aggravate the imbalance in
world trade in favor of the rich countries. It is a road map
not to prosperity but catastrophe for developing countries
like the Philippines.
Development for whom?
The framework sets the stalled Doha Round negotiations back
on track. The Doha Development Agenda (DDA) provided the mandate
for new negotiations on agriculture, services, industrial
tariffs, and the so-called Singapore Issues. The new negotiations
that began in Doha in 2001 has been referred to as a development
round because it claims to address among others, the implementation
issues raised by developing countries.
But what the Doha Development Agenda is really about is further
liberalization not just in agriculture, but services and non-agricultural
products as well. DDA is more about prying open new markets
for the rich rather than redressing the imbalance in world
trade. The only development that the DDA secures is that of
the already rich and powerful countries.
Protection for the strong
The framework further aggravates this imbalance. The text
is crystal clear when it comes to protecting the interest
of the developed countries and so conveniently vague when
it comes to accommodating the demands of the developing countries.
In the agriculture negotiations, which remains the most contentious
by far, the central issue is the failure of the trading superpowers-
mainly the United States and Europe- to comply with their
commitments to reduce their huge subsidies to their agriculture
sector. The US and EU subsidizes their agriculture to the
tune of around $70-80 billion each.
The framework agreement gives a go-signal to the United States
and Europe to continue their huge subsidies to agriculture.
The text, which allows an expansion of the blue box category
of minimally trade-distorting support, legitimizes the box-shifting
tactics of the United States. The US has been demanding an
amendment to the blue box provision to allow its counter-cyclical
payments to its farmers under the notorious US Farm Bill 2002.
This redefinition will allow the US to shift some $9-10 billion
dollars from the Amber Box to the Blue Box. The EU has Blue
Box subsidies amounting to 14.31 billion euro.
Adding insult to injury, the text even provides for flexibilities
to members with
“exceptionally large percentage” of trade-distorting
support in the Blue Box, to ensure that a member is not called
upon to make a wholly disproportionate cut.” (Para 15
of Annex A: Framework for establishing modalities in Agriculture)
The framework for Non-Agricultural Market Access (NAMA) resurrects
the Derbez text that was already rejected by Members in Cancun.
The July text calls for comprehensive coverage without a priori
exclusions and sets the basis for a formula for tariff reduction
and binding tariffs that will cause further injury to the
already ailing industries in developing countries.
The text directs members to bind 100 percent their non-agricultural
tariff lines and prescribes a formula that will bind still
un-bound tariffs at a rate twice that of MFN applied rates
in base year 2001. For a country like the Philippines, with
a tariff coverage for industrial products not exceeding 50
% and where applied MFN rates are already low, with no tariffs
exceeding 35 %, this is a sure formula for disaster.
The fisheries sector, a sector considered sensitive to the
Philippine economy because of the millions of fishers dependent
on it for livelihood, has been included in NAMA. The tariff
rates of local fishery products ranged from 10-15 percent
in 2001, twice these rates mean 20-30 percent starting tariff
rates. These rates cannot provide ample protection to a sector
that is already drowning from so many threats and pressures
on its resource base.
Lip Service for Developing Country Concerns
The text dealing with the demands by developing countries
for Special and Differential Treatment (S&D), for flexibilities
for sensitive and special products (SP) remains vague. The
language does not go any further than saying that all of these
concerns will be noted in the negotiations. That is to say
that what developing countries got out of the framework on
S&D and SP are no more than empty promises. Furthermore,
as in the case of provision on sensitive products, the flexibilities
are allowed not just for developing countries who gravely
need them, but are afforded to developed countries as well.
An Unjust Process
The process that gave birth to the flawed framework is an
unjust process, fraught with the usual bullying and intimidation
tactics by developed countries. Prior to the meeting in Geneva,
in fact immediately after the collapse of the talks in Cancun,
the proponents of free trade have already made painstaking
efforts to put the agenda of programmed and rapid trade liberalization
back on track.
The failure to consolidate a new trade deal under WTO only
strengthened the resolve of the United States and Europe to
push forward their trade liberalization agenda at all cost
through bilateral, regional, and or multilateral trade agreements.
In the lead up to the meeting, the United States have used
all sorts of tactics to intimidate, pressure, and lure members
to accede to its demands. The US for example announced just
a week before the July meetings its sugar quota allocation
for 40 countries including the allocation of 142,160 metric
tons for the Philippines. Was this the sweetener that enticed
the Philippines to support the framework?
The framework has been projected as a consensus of the 147
members of the WTO. In reality however, the process was much
more exclusionary.
The negotiations for agriculture were held only among a small
group of five countries (called the non-group of five or NG5)
which included the US, EU, Australia and two of the most influential
members of the Group of 20-Brazil and India. The second draft
of the framework was written by Tim Grosser the chairperson
of the Committee on Agriculture based on the NG5 discussions.
The second draft was then discussed by a group of around 20
countries in a green room process. The outcome was a draft
endorsed by the 20 countries. This draft was then presented
to the other groups. By this time, the pressure to accede
was at its strongest with endorsement already secured from
the major players.
Conclusion
The WTO framework is unjust. It is a framework that protects
the interests of trade superpowers like the US and EU by further
aggravating instead of addressing the imbalance in the global
trading system. The framework provides ample leverage and
flexibility for rich countries to consolidate and further
corner the benefits from trade at the expense of the rest
of the world. In contrast, what developing countries got are
empty promises once again.
The so called consensus in Geneva over the framework for
WTO trade negotiations is unacceptable. We reject this framework
and demand accountability from the Philippine government for
this tragic mishap. |