Title: An overview of the Doha Development Agenda
1An overview of the Doha Development Agenda
Trade Policy and WTO AccessionA Training of
Trainers Course for Russia and the CIS March 22,
2006
2Overview
- Why negotiate at the WTO?
- The Doha Mandate
- Key negotiating milestones
- Cancun Ministerial Meeting (2003)
- July 2004 Framework Agreement
- Hong Kong Ministerial Meeting (2005)
- Key negotiating issues across sectors
- Whats next?
3Why negotiate at the WTO?
- Compared to unilateral liberalization, reciprocal
trade liberalization holds certain political
economy advantages - Binding trade policy under international law
removes uncertainty - Why at the multilateral level?
- Liberalization is non-discriminatory (MFN)
- Subsidies can only be addressed meaningfully at
the multilateral level
4The Launch of the DDA
- Doha Ministerial Conference (Nov 2001)
- Political context
- Two months after September 11, 2001
- Failed Seattle Ministerial Conference in 1999
- Development dimension results of Uruguay Round
considered as unbalanced by developing
countries - In-built negotiating mandate in some areas
(agriculture, services) - Traditional interest in more liberal market
access
5Negotiating mandate
- Core negotiating areas
- Agriculture
- Non-agricultural market access (NAMA)
- Services
- TRIPS (geographical indications/public health)
- WTO rules (e.g., anti-dumping, subsidies)
- Dispute Settlement Understanding
- Trade and the Environment
Not part of the Single Undertaking
6Other elements agreed to in Doha
- Declaration on TRIPS and Public Health
- Consider negotiations on the four so-called
Singapore issues (investment, competition policy,
transparency in government procurment, trade
facilitation) - Work program on outstanding implementation issues
- Special and differential treatment (SDT) for
developing countries
7Why (initial) focus on agriculture?
- even though it provides less than 4 of global
GDP and 9 of intl merchandise trade - Arguably, most distorted segment of trade
- OECD manufacturing tariffs have fallen by 9/10ths
over the past 60 years to lt4, while agricultural
protection has risen - Agric. applied (bound) tariffs now average nearly
5 (10) times manufactures tariffs globally - Northern subsidies depressing world prices
- Comparative advantage of developing countries,
poor people rely on farming for a living
8Cancun Ministerial Conference
- Not much progress between 2001 and 2003, most
negotiating deadlines missed - Glimmer of hope August 2003 Decision on TRIPS
and Public Health - Failed Ministerial Conference
- No consensus on Singapore issues
- No progress towards modalities in agriculture
- Cotton initiative
9July 2004 Framework Agreement
- Political will to make progress in the
negotiations - Key elements
- Framework agreements in agriculture and NAMA
- Ambitious and expeditious treatment of cotton
within agricultural negotiations - Launch of negotiations on trade facilitation, no
negotiations on other 3 Singapore issues
10Hong Kong Ministerial Conference
- Initial goal full modalities in agriculture and
NAMA, bringing the round close to the finishing
line - Fall 2004 agriculture offers by the key players
(US, EC, G-20, G10) - But no consensus in sight, G-20/US argue that EC
should improve its agriculture offer EC first
wants to see movement in NAMA services - WTO DG Pascal Lamy lowered ambition for the
Ministerial Conference (but not for the DDA)
11Hong Kong Ministerial Conference
- Progress on TRIPS issues prior to Ministerial
- Key elements of the ministerial text
- Duty-free/quota-free access for Least Developed
Countries - Removal of export subsidies by 2013
- Agreement on a fast-track approach for cotton
- Greater detail on framework for full modalities
in agriculture and services - Plurilateral negotiations in services (to
complement the bilateral request and offer
process)
12The three pillars in agriculture
- Market access
- Agree on a formula for tariff reductions
- Find agreement on the number of sensitive
products - Special products/special safeguard mechanism for
developing countries - Export competition
- Phase-out of export subsidies
- Disciplines on food aid, export credits
- Domestic support
- Agree on a formula for cuts in domestic support
- Define what constitutes trade-distorting support
13Key issues in NAMA
- Agree on a formula for tariff reductions
- Sectoral initiatives (e.g., recent US-Swiss
proposal on pharmaceutical products) - Flexibilities for developing countries
- Treatment of non-tariff barriers
- Erosion of non-reciprocal trade preferences
14Key issues in services
- Fundamental difference to agriculture/NAMA
negotiations proceed on a bilateral/request offer
basis - Process has produced ambitious requests, but
existing offers are characterized as unambitious,
implying little if any actual liberalization - Plurilateral requests tabled in February/March
2006
15Interest groups in the DDA
defensiveinterest
offensiveinterest
16Recently acceded countries
- Recently acceded countries have made ambitious
commitments across all sectors - Small, if any, gaps between bound and applied
policies - Further liberalization perceived as unfair and
premature - Ministerial texts says that this situation
will be taken into account in the negotiations,
but so far little specifics on flexibilities
17Whats next?
- Pessimistic view if progress wasnt possible
before/at Hong Kong, why expect a breakthrough
now? - Key deadlines
- Full modalities in agriculture NAMA by April
30, 2006 comprehensive draft schedules by July
31, 2006 - Revised offers in services by July 31, 2006
final commitments by October 31, 2006 - Firm deadline expiry of US Trade Promotion
Authority in mid-2007