Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Assignment On International Business Topic: World Trade System &World Trade Organization (WTO) Submitted To: Md. Mahmudul Hasan Fouji Associate Professor Department of marketing Jagannath University Submitted By: THREE MUSKETEERS 4th Year 2nd semester 6th Batch Jagannath University Date of Submission: August 20, 2015. Group Name: THREE MUSKETEERS Group Leader: Md. Helal Mridha Serial No. 01. Name ID No. Md. Helal Mridha 02. Md. Mokshadur Rahman B-110204049 [email protected] 03. Mohammad Amzad Hosen B-110204111 [email protected] 04. Md. Famtiaj Islam Miltu B-110204112 [email protected] 115494 E-mail [email protected] Executive Summary Table of Contents Executive Summary ..................................................................................................................... 3 Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 5 1.0 The World Trade organization (WTO) ................................................................................ 5 2.0 Functions of World Trade Organization (WTO) ................................................................. 8 3.0 Structure of World Trade Organization ............................................................................... 8 4.0 Secretariat of World Trade Organization............................................................................. 9 5.0 World Trade Organization Agreements ............................................................................... 9 6.0 Benefits of WTO Trading Organization ............................................................................ 11 6.1 The system helps to keep the peace ..................................................................................................................12 6.2 The system allows disputes to be handled constructively..................................................................................13 6.3 A system based on rules rather than power makes life easier for all ................................................................14 6.4 Freer trade cuts the cost of living ......................................................................................................................15 6.5 It gives consumers more choice, and a broader range of qualities to choose from ...........................................15 6.6 Trade raises incomes..........................................................................................................................................16 6.7 Trade stimulates economic growth and that can be good news for employment ............................................16 6.8 The basic principles make the system economically more efficient, and they cut costs ....................................17 6.9 The system shields governments from narrow Interests ...................................................................................18 6.10 The system encourages good government ......................................................................................................18 7.0 Developing Countries and World Trade Organization ...................................................... 19 7.1 Development and Trade .............................................................................................................................19 7.2 Technical Assistance and Trading ..............................................................................................................20 8.0 The Role of Developing countries in World Trade System ............................................... 20 9.0 The World trade Organization and A Changing Global Economy ......................................... 22 10.0 Free Trade Agreements: Implication for the WTO .............................................................. 24 11.0 The Challenge of the WTO’s Legitimacy............................................................................. 25 12.0 The Future of the World Trading System: Asian Perspective .............................................. 28 13.0 The Multilateral Trading System: Past, Present, and Future ................................................ 32 14.0 Conclusion ............................................................................................................................ 33 15.0 Reference .............................................................................................................................. 33 Introduction In brief, the World Trade Organization (WTO) is the only international organization dealing with the global rules of trade between nations. Its main function is to ensure that trade flows as smoothly, predictably and freely as possible. The result is assurance. Consumers and producers know that they can enjoy secure supplies and greater choice of the finished products, components, raw materials and services that they use. Producers and exporters know that foreign markets will remain open to them. The result is also a more prosperous, peaceful and accountable economic world. Decisions in the WTO are typically taken by consensus among all member countries and they are ratified by members’ parliaments. Trade friction is channeled into the WTO’s dispute settlement process where the focus is on interpreting agreements and commitments, and how to ensure that countries’ trade policies conform with them. That way, the risk of disputes spilling over into political or military conflict is reduced. By lowering trade barriers, the WTO’s system also breaks down other barriers between peoples and nations. At the heart of the system known as the multilateral trading system are the WTO’s agreements, negotiated and signed by a large majority of the world’s trading nations, and ratified in their parliaments. These agreements are the legal ground-rules for international commerce. Essentially, they are contracts, guaranteeing member countries important trade rights. They also bind governments to keep their trade policies within agreed limits to everybody’s benefit. The agreements were negotiated and signed by governments. But their purpose is to help producers of goods and services, exporters, and importers conduct their business. The goal is to improve the welfare of the peoples of the member countries. 1.0 The World Trade organization (WTO) The World Trade Organization, created in 1995, is the successor to, and incorporates within it, the GATT – the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade – which was a treaty among western market economies at the end of World War II. Member countries agree to rules about when they may increase trade barriers, especially tariffs, in order to prevent them using trade policies that harm other countries. The GATT was also a forum for negotiation to reduce trade barriers. Presumably the WTO will do this as well, although it has not yet. The GATT oversaw eight rounds of multilateral trade negotiations, culminating in the Uruguay Round that created the WTO. The WTO also took on issues that GATT had not covered, including trade in services, tariffication in agriculture, and intellectual property protection. The most important change in the WTO, compared to the GATT, may be its dispute settlement mechanism (DSM). The GATT permitted countries to complain against other countries for violating its rules. Each complaint was handled by a “panel” of experts who issued a report that, if adopted unanimously by GATT members, would require the offending party to either change its behavior or be subject to sanctions. However, unanimity meant that the offending party could block a report, in effect giving every country veto power over findings against itself. The surprise was that this ever worked at all, which it did. The WTO reversed this bias, requiring instead a unanimous decision to block a report, and it therefore made the DSM much more effective. It also made other improvements, including the right to appeal. The intent was to provide viable enforcement for WTO rules, and it appears to have worked. The DSM has been used much more often than under the GATT, both by and against a wide range of countries, as shown in Table 1. Just as important, large countries (the U.S.) have stopped going outside the GATT with their most important complaints. Inevitably, however, the DSM has not worked to everyone’s satisfaction. The WTO restricts policies that harm other countries, not only deliberately, but also inadvertently, as when policy restricts the options of another country’s citizens. A contentious example was the “shrimp-turtle” case. A U.S. law protected sea turtles from death in the nets of shrimp fishermen by prohibiting imports of shrimp caught without “turtle exclusion devices” (TEDs). Since it is impossible to tell from looking at a shrimp how it was caught, the law restricted imports from certain countries. These took the case to the WTO, which decided against the United States. In effect, this decision struck down U.S. law, an intrusion into sovereignty that offended environmentalists and others. There have been other, similar examples. The potential of the WTO to intrude in national affairs was also increased by its expanded coverage. The GATT was limited to trade in goods, even excluding certain sectors such as agriculture and textiles/apparel. The latter was covered instead by the GATT-sanctioned Multi-Fiber Arrangement (MFA), restricting developing-country exports to developed countries. The WTO changed all that, or at least it promises to. The Uruguay Round scheduled the elimination of the MFA, though the most difficult liberalization is postponed (“back loaded”) ten years. First steps were also taken in agriculture, converting existing NTBs to tariffs (tariffication) so as later to negotiate them downward. And trade in services was covered in a parallel agreement to the GATT, the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). The WTO also expanded to new areas. Most prominent and effective is it’s TRIPS (Trade Related Intellectual Property) Agreement covering intellectual property – primarily patents, copyrights, and trademarks. In addition, the WTO includes (as the GATT had before, actually) some small ways that countries may use trade policies for environmental purposes. However, the one area – much discussed – where the WTO has not been extended is labor standards and rights. Despite many in developed countries who favor using trade policies for this purpose, resistance from the developing world, as well as from corporations who employ labor there, has prevented it from even being discussed. 1.1 Basic Information about WTO ❖ Location: Geneva, Switzerland ❖ Established: 1 January 1995 ❖ Created By: Uruguay Round negotiations (1986–94) ❖ Membership: 134 countries (as of February 1999) ❖ Budget: 122 million Swiss francs for 1999 ❖ Secretariat Stuff: 500 ❖ Head: Director-general 2.0 Functions of World Trade Organization (WTO) The WTO’s overriding objective is to help trade flow smoothly, freely, fairly and predictably. It does this by: ➢ Administering trade agreements ➢ Acting as a forum for trade negotiations ➢ Settling trade disputes ➢ Reviewing national trade policies ➢ Assisting developing countries in trade policy issues, through technical assistance and training programs ➢ Cooperating with other international organizations 3.0 Structure of World Trade Organization The WTO has more than 130 members, accounting for over 90% of world trade. Over 30 others are negotiating membership. Decisions are made by the entire membership. This is typically by consensus. A majority vote is not also possible but it has never been used in the WTO, and was extremely rare under the WTO’s predecessor, GATT. The WTO’s agreements have been ratified in all members’ parliaments. The WTO’s top level decision-making body is the Ministerial Conference which meets at least once every two years. Below this is the General Council (normally ambassadors and heads of delegation in Geneva, but sometimes officials sent from members’ capitals) which meets several times a year in the Geneva headquarters. The General Council also meets as the Trade Policy Review Body and the Dispute Settlement Body. At the next level, the Goods Council, Service Council, and Intellectual Property Council report to the General Council. Numerous specialized committees, working groups and working parties deal with the individual agreements and other areas such as the environment, development, membership applications and regional trade agreements. The first Ministerial Conference in Singapore in 1996 added three new working groups to this structure. They deal with the relationship between trade and investment, the interaction between trade and competition policy and transparency in government procurement. At the second Ministerial Conference in Geneva in 1998 ministers decided that the WTO would also study the area of electronic commerce, a task to be shared out among existing councils and committees. 4.0 Secretariat of World Trade Organization The WTO Secretariat, based in Geneva, has around 500 staff and is headed by a director general. It does not have branch offices outside Geneva. Since decisions are taken by the members themselves, the Secretariat does not have the decision-making role those other international bureaucracies are given. The Secretariat’s main duties are to supply technical support for the various councils and committees and the ministerial conferences, to provide technical assistance for developing countries, to analyze world trade, and to explain WTO affairs to the public and media. The Secretariat also provides some forms of legal assistance in the dispute settlement process and advises governments wishing to become members of the WTO. The annual budget is roughly 122 million Swiss francs 5.0 World Trade Organization Agreements How can you ensure that trade is as fair as possible, and as free as is practical? By negotiating rules and abiding by them. The WTO’s rules—the agreements—are the result of negotiations between the members. The current set were the outcome of the 1986–94 Uruguay Round negotiations which included a major revision of the original General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). GATT is now the WTO’s principal rule-book for trade in goods. The Uruguay Round also created new rules for dealing with trade in services, relevant aspects of intellectual property, dispute settlement, and trade policy reviews. The complete set runs to some 30,000 pages consisting of about 60 agreements and separate commitments (called schedules) made by individual members in specific areas such as lower customs duty rates and services market-opening. Through these agreements, WTO members operate a non-discriminatory trading system that spells out their rights and their obligations. Each country receives guarantees that its exports will be treated fairly and consistently in other countries’ markets. Each promises to do the same for imports into its own market. The system also gives developing countries some flexibility in implementing their commitments. 5.1 Goods Agreement It all began with trade in goods. From 1947 to 1994, GATT was the forum for negotiating lower customs duty rates and other trade barriers; the text of General Agreement spelt out important rules, particularly non-discrimination. Since 1995, the updated GATT has become the WTO’s umbrella agreement for trade in goods. It has annexes dealing with specific sectors such as agriculture and textiles, and with specific issues such as state trading, product standards, subsidies and actions taken against dumping. 5.2 Services Agreement Banks, insurance firms, telecommunications companies, tour operators, hotel chains and transport companies looking to do business abroad can now enjoy the same principles of freer and fairer trade that originally only applied to trade in goods. These principles appear in the new General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). WTO members have also made individual commitments under GATS stating which of their services sectors they are willing to open to foreign competition, and how open those markets are. 5.3 Intellectual Property Agreement The WTO’s intellectual property agreement amounts to rules for trade and investment in ideas and creativity. The rules state how copyrights, trademarks, geographical names used to identify products, industrial designs, integrated circuit layout-designs and undisclosed information such as trade secrets—“intellectual property”—should be protected when trade is involved. 5.4 Dispute Settlement Agreement The WTO’s procedure for resolving trade quarrels under the Dispute Settlement Understanding is vital for enforcing the rules and therefore for ensuring that trade flows smoothly. Countries bring disputes to the WTO if they think their rights under the agreements are being infringed. Judgments by specially-appointed independent experts are based on interpretations of the agreements and individual countries’ commitments. The system encourages countries to settle their differences through consultation. Failing that, they can follow a carefully mapped out, stage by stage procedure that includes the possibility of a ruling by a panel of experts, and the chance to appeal the ruling on legal grounds. Confidence in the system is borne out by the number of cases brought to the WTO— 167 cases by March 1999 compared to some 300 disputes dealt with during the entire life of GATT (1947–94). 5.5 Policy Review The Trade Policy Review Mechanism’s purpose is to improve transparency, to create a greater understanding of the policies that countries are adopting, and to assess their impact. Many members also see the reviews as constructive feedback on their policies. All WTO members must undergo periodic scrutiny, each review containing reports by the country concerned and the WTO Secretariat. Over 54 members have been reviewed since the WTO came into force. 6.0 Benefits of WTO Trading Organization ❖ The system helps promote peace ❖ Disputes are handled constructively ❖ Rules make life easier for all ❖ Freer trade cuts the costs of living ❖ It provides more choice of products and qualities ❖ Trade raises incomes ❖ Trade stimulates economic growth ❖ The basic principles make life more efficient ❖ Governments are shielded from lobbying ❖ The system encourages good government 6.1 The system helps to keep the peace Peace is partly an outcome of two of the most fundamental principles of the trading system: helping trade to flow smoothly and providing countries with a constructive and fair outlet for dealing with disputes over trade issues. It is also an outcome of the international confidence and cooperation that the system creates and reinforces. History is littered with examples of trade disputes turning into war. One of the most vivid is the trade war of the 1930s when countries competed to raise trade barriers in order to protect domestic producers and retaliate against each other’s barriers. This worsened the Great Depression and eventually played a part in the outbreak of World War 2. Two developments immediately after the Second World War helped to avoid a repeat of the pre-war trade tensions. In Europe, international cooperation developed in coal, and in iron and steel. Globally, the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) was created. Both have proved successful, so much so that they are now considerably expanded—one has become the European Union, the other the World Trade Organization (WTO). Crudely put, sales people are usually reluctant to fight their customers. In other words, if trade flows smoothly and both sides enjoy a healthy commercial relationship, political conflict is less likely. What’s more, smoothly-flowing trade also helps people all over the world become better off. People who are more prosperous and contented are also less likely to fight. But that is not all. The GATT/WTO system is an important confidence builder. The trade wars in the 1930s are proof of how protectionism can easily plunge countries into a situation where no one wins and everyone loses. The short-sighted protectionist view is that defending particular sectors against imports is beneficial. But that view ignores how other countries are going to respond. The longer term reality is that one protectionist step by one country can easily lead to retaliation from other countries, a loss of confidence in freer trade, and a slide into serious economic trouble for all including the sectors that were originally protected. Everyone loses. Confidence is the key to avoiding that kind of no-win scenario. When governments are confident that others will not raise their trade barriers, they will not be tempted to do the same. They will also be in a much better frame of mind to cooperate with each other. The WTO trading system plays a vital role in creating and reinforcing that confidence. Particularly important are negotiations that lead to agreement by consensus and a focus on abiding by the rules. 6.2 The system allows disputes to be handled constructively There could be a down side to trade liberalization and expansion. More trade means more opportunities for disputes to arise. Left to themselves, those disputes could lead to serious conflict. But in reality, a lot of international trade tension is reduced because countries can turn to organizations, in particular the WTO, to settle their trade disputes. Before World War 2 that option was not available. After the war, the world’s community of trading nations negotiated trade rules which are now entrusted to the WTO. Those rules include an obligation for members to bring their disputes to the WTO and not to act unilaterally. When they bring disputes to the WTO, the WTO’s procedure focuses their attention on the rules. Once a ruling has been made, countries concentrate on trying to comply with the rules, and perhaps later renegotiating the rules—not on declaring war on each other. Around 300 disputes have been brought to the WTO since it was set up in 1995. Without a means of tackling these constructively and harmoniously, some could have led to more serious political conflict. The fact that the disputes are based on WTO agreements means that there is a clear basis for judging who is right or wrong. Once the judgment has been made, the agreements provide the focus for any further actions that need to be taken. The increasing number of disputes brought to GATT and its successor, the WTO, does not reflect increasing tension in the world. Rather, it reflects the closer economic ties throughout the world, the GATT/WTO’s expanding membership and the fact that countries have faith in the system to solve their differences. Sometimes the exchanges between the countries in conflict can be acrimonious, but they always aim to conform to the agreements and commitments that they themselves negotiated. 6.3 A system based on rules rather than power makes life easier for all Decisions in the WTO are made by consensus. The WTO agreements were negotiated by all members, were approved by consensus and were ratified in all members’ parliaments. The agreements apply to everyone. Rich and poor countries alike have an equal right to challenge each other in the WTO’s dispute settlement procedures. This makes life easier for all, in several different ways. Smaller countries can enjoy some increased bargaining power. Without a multilateral regime such as the WTO’s system, the more powerful countries would be freer to impose their will unilaterally on their smaller trading partners. Smaller countries would have to deal with each of the major economic powers individually, and would be much less able to resist unwanted pressure. In addition, smaller countries can perform more effectively if they make use of the opportunities to form alliances and to pool resources. Several are already doing this. There are matching benefits for larger countries. The major economic powers can use the single forum of the WTO to negotiate with all or most of their trading partners at the same time. This makes life much simpler for the bigger trading countries. The alternative would be continuous and complicated bilateral negotiations with dozens of countries simultaneously. And each country could end up with different conditions for trading with each of its trading partners, making life extremely complicated for its importers and exporters. The principle of non-discrimination built into the WTO agreements avoids that complexity. The fact that there is a single set of rules applying to all members greatly simplifies the entire trade regime. And these agreed rules give governments a clearer view of which trade policies are acceptable. 6.4 Freer trade cuts the cost of living Protectionism is expensive: it raises prices. The WTO’s global system lowers trade barriers through negotiation and applies the principle of non-discrimination. The result is reduced costs of production (because imports used in production are cheaper) and reduced prices of finished goods and services, and ultimately a lower cost of living. There are plenty of studies showing just what the impacts of protectionism and of freer trade are. These are just a few figures: 6.5 It gives consumers more choice, and a broader range of qualities to choose from Think also of the things people in other countries can have because they buy exports from us and elsewhere. Look around and consider all the things that would disappear if all our imports were taken away from us. Imports allow us more choice—both more goods and services to choose from, and a wider range of qualities. Even the quality of locally-produced goods can improve because of the competition from imports. The wider choice isn’t simply a question of consumers buying foreign finished products. Imports are used as materials, components and equipment for local production. This expands the range of final products and services that are made by domestic producers, and it increases the range of technologies they can use. When mobile telephone equipment became available, services sprang up even in the countries that did not make the equipment, for example. Sometimes, the success of an imported product or service on the domestic market can also encourage new local producers to compete, increasing the choice of brands available to consumers as well as increasing the range of goods and services produced locally. If trade allows us to import more, it also allows others to buy more of our exports. It increases our incomes, providing us with the means of enjoying the increased choice. 6.6 Trade raises incomes The WTO’s own estimates for the impact of the 1994 Uruguay Round trade deal were between $109 billion and $510 billion added to world income (depending on the assumptions of the calculations and allowing for margins of error). More recent research has produced similar figures. Economists estimate that cutting trade barriers in agriculture, manufacturing and services by one third would boost the world economy by $613 billion — equivalent to adding an economy the size of Canada to the world economy. than they would have done without the Single Market. So trade clearly boosts incomes. Trade also poses challenges as domestic producers face competition from imports. But the fact that there is additional income means that resources are available for governments to redistribute the benefits from those who gain the most—for example to help companies and workers adapt by becoming more productive and competitive in what they were already doing, or by switching to new activities. 6.7 Trade stimulates economic growth and that can be good news for employment This is a difficult subject to tackle in simple terms. There is strong evidence that trade boosts economic growth, and that economic growth means more jobs. It is also true that some jobs are lost even when trade is expanding. But a reliable analysis of this poses at least two problems. First, there are other factors at play. For example, technological advance has also had a strong impact on employment and productivity, benefiting some jobs, hurting others. Second, while trade clearly boosts national income (and prosperity), this is not always translated into new employment for workers who lost their jobs as a result of competition from imports. The picture is not the same all over the world. The average length of time a worker takes to find a new job can be much longer in one country than for a similar worker in another country experiencing similar conditions. In other words, some countries are better at making the adjustment than others. This is partly because some countries have more effective adjustment policies. Those without effective policies are missing an opportunity. 6.8 The basic principles make the system economically more efficient, and they cut costs Trade allows a division of labor between countries. It allows resources to be used more appropriately and effectively for production. But the WTO’s trading system offers more than that. It helps to increase efficiency and to cut costs even more because of important principles enshrined in the system. Imagine a situation where each country sets different rules and different customs duty rates for imports coming from different trading partners. Imagine that a company in one country wants to import raw materials or components—copper for wiring or printed circuit boards for electrical goods, for example—for its own production. It would not be enough for this company to look at the prices offered by suppliers around the world. The company would also have to make separate calculations about the different duty rates it would be charged on the imports (which would depend on where the imports came from), and it would have to study each of the regulations that apply to products from each country. Buying some copper or circuit boards would become very complicated. That, in simple terms, is one of the problems of discrimination. Imagine now that the government announces it will charge the same duty rates on imports from all countries, and it will use the same regulations for all products, no matter where they come from, whether imported or locally produced. Life for the company would be much simpler. Sourcing components would become more efficient and would cost less. Non-discrimination is just one of the key principles of the WTO’s trading system. Others include: ➢ Transparency (clear information about policies, rules and regulations); ➢ Increased certainty about trading conditions (commitments to lower trade barriers and to increase other countries’ access to one’s markets are legally binding); ➢ Simplification and standardization of customs procedure, removal of red tape, centralized databases of information, and other measures designed to simplify trade that come under the heading “trade facilitation”. Together, they make trading simpler, cutting companies’ costs and increasing confidence in the future. That in turn also means more jobs and better goods and services for consumers. 6.9 The system shields governments from narrow Interests One of the lessons of the protectionism that dominated the early decades of the 20th Century was the damage that can be caused if narrow sectorial interests gain an unbalanced share of political influence. The result was increasingly restrictive policy which turned into a trade war that no one won and everyone lost. Superficially, restricting imports looks like an effective way of supporting an economic sector. But it biases the economy against other sectors which shouldn’t be penalized—if you protect your clothing industry, everyone else has to pay for more expensive clothes, which puts pressure on wages in all sectors, for example. Protectionism can also escalate as other countries retaliate by raising their own trade barriers. That‘s exactly what happened in the 1920s and 30s with disastrous effects. Even the sectors demanding protection ended up losing. Governments need to be armed against pressure from narrow interest groups, and the WTO system can help. The GATT-WTO system covers a wide range of sectors. So, if during a GATTWTO trade negotiation one pressure group lobbies its government to be considered as a special case in need of protection, the government can reject the protectionist pressure by arguing that it needs a broad-ranging agreement that will benefit all sectors of the economy. Governments do just that, regularly. 6.10 The system encourages good government The rules include commitments not to backslide into unwise policies. Protectionism in general is unwise because of the damage it causes domestically and internationally, as we have already seen. Particular types of trade barriers cause additional damage because they provide opportunities for corruption and other forms of bad government. One kind of trade barrier that the WTO’s rules try to tackle is the quota, for example restricting imports or exports to no more than a specific amount each year. Because quotas limit supply, they artificially raise prices, creating abnormally large profits (economists talk about “quota rent”). That profit can be used to influence policies because more money is available for lobbying. It can also provide opportunities for corruption, for example in the allocation of quotas among traders. There are plenty of cases where that has happened around the world. In other words, quotas are a particularly bad way of restricting trade. Governments have agreed through the WTO’s rules that their use should be discouraged. Nevertheless, quotas of various types remain in use in most countries, and governments argue strongly that they are needed. But they are controlled by WTO agreements and there are commitments to reduce or eliminate many of them, particularly in textiles. Many other areas of the WTO’s agreements can also help reduce corruption and bad government. Transparency (such as making available to the public all information on trade regulations), other aspects of “trade facilitation”, clearer criteria for regulations dealing with the safety and standards of products, and nondiscrimination also help by reducing the scope for arbitrary decision making and cheating. Quite often, governments use the WTO as a welcome external constraint on their policies: “we can’t do this because it would violate the WTO agreements.” 7.0 Developing Countries and World Trade Organization 7.1 Development and Trade Over three quarters of WTO members are developing or least-developed countries. Special provisions for these members are included in all the WTO agreements. They include longer time periods for implementing agreements and commitments, measures to increase trading opportunities for these countries, provisions requiring all WTO members to safeguard the trade interests of developing countries, and support to help developing countries build the infrastructure for WTO work, handle disputes, and implement technical standards. In 1997, a high-level meeting on trade initiatives and technical assistance for leastdeveloped countries brought their concerns to Centre stage. The meeting involved six intergovernmental agencies and resulted in an “integrated framework” to help leastdeveloped countries increase their ability to trade, and some additional preferential market access agreements. A committee on trade and development, assisted by a sub-committee on leastdeveloped countries, looks at developing countries’ special needs. Its responsibility includes implementation of the agreements, technical cooperation, and the increased participation of developing countries in the global trading system 7.2 Technical Assistance and Trading The WTO organizes around 100 technical cooperation missions to developing countries annually. It holds on average three trade policy courses each year in Geneva for government nonofficial. Regional seminars are held regularly in all regions of the world with a special emphasis on African countries. Training courses are also organized in Geneva for officials from countries in transition from central planning to market economies. In 1997/98, the WTO set up reference centers in over 40 trade ministries in capitals of least developed countries, providing computers and internet access to enable ministry officials to keep abreast of events in the WTO in Geneva through online access to the WTO’s immense database of official documents and other material. 8.0 The Role of Developing countries in World Trade System At the inception of the GATT in 1947, flowing out of the Breton Woods Agreement that provided the basic architecture for the international economic system in the post-war years, little provision was made for the special circumstances of developing countries ( at that stage, in most cases, still colonies of developed countries). While Article XXIV, from the outset, provided for the possibility of Preferential Trade Agreements (with the formation of the European Community on the horizon), these provisions were little utilized until the beginning of the 1990s. The original normative foundations of the GATT reflected both economic and geopolitical considerations. Obviously, as a matter of classical trade theory, going back to Adam Smith, the larger a market the greater the potential gains from specialization and economies of scale and scope. From a geo-political point of view, a world trading regime that provided a common set of rules by which all countries in the world (whatever their political, ideological or cultural orientation) could, in principle, trade with each other, with the Most Favored Nation principle as its central pillar, offered the prospect of increasing economic interdependence, raising the costs of military conflict and hence reducing the risk of the calamities that had beset Europe and much of the rest of the world in the first half of the 20th century. In many respects, this framework has served the world well over the intervening years, with average tariffs on industrialized products falling from almost 50 percent in 1947 to a little over 3 percent today, reflected in vast increases in world trade (and global welfare) and increased economic interdependence that has in fact substantially reduced the risk of military conflicts amongst major powers. As I point out in my recent book, Dealing with Losers: The Political Economy of Policy Transitions,5 this dramatic transformation of world trade was advanced by an astute combination of transition cost-mitigation strategies, principally gradualism in reducing tariffs and other trade barriers within and across negotiating rounds, reciprocity in the exchange of concessions so that contraction on the import side was offset by expansion on the export side, and reversibility through a safeguard regime that permitted the temporary reinstatement of trade restrictions in the face of unexpectedly large import surges. But the adequacy of these mechanisms to meet the adjustment costs faced by developing countries in integrating into a liberal trading regime has been a persistent source of controversy. Beginning in the early 1980s, both limbs of Special and Differential Treatment came in for increasingly searching scholarly scrutiny.6 On the import side, infant industry or import substitution policies were often criticized for fostering uncompetitive and nonsustainable domestic industries, while also fostering extensive corruption in the administration of import controls and related foreign exchange controls. On the export side, reliance on non-reciprocal preferences – in effect, altruism or welfare transfers, as Hudec put it – by developed countries on a highly discretionary basis, often influenced by geo-political considerations, led to uneven, unpredictable, and often negligible benefits for developing countries, while mobilizing the latter as a source of resistance to further MFN tariff reductions out of concern for erosion of whatever preferences they enjoyed. Hence, with the launch of the new Doha Round in 2001, many developing countries were determined to reassert and indeed expand their Special and Differential status under the GATT/WTO system and rebalance what they conceived of as the unfair bargain imposed on them at the end of the Uruguay Round. Beginning with the aborted Ministerial meetings in Cancun, Mexico in September 2003, a major fault-line has now emerged between developed countries and many developing countries, with the former initially pressing for an expansion of the Uruguay Round mandate of the GATT/WTO into new areas of regulation such as investment, competition policy, trade facilitation, government procurement, and a broader range. Thus, two cornerstone principles of the post-war multilateral system are under serious threat: first, the principle of reciprocity where trade or related commitments are exchanged for quid pro quo commitments by other countries; and the principle of nondiscrimination as enshrined in the MFN principle. Whether the multilateral trading system can survive these dual threats in the longer run is a serious and open question. In my view they represent a more mortal threat to its sustainability than any that it has faced over the course of its history. 9.0 The World trade Organization and A Changing Global Economy According to the World Trade Organization, trade liberalization achieved since its establishment in 1995 has raised global income by as much as $510 billion. Since its creation, WTO rules, its dispute settlement mechanism and the work of its secretariat have also become central to the management and smooth functioning of global trade. During the 2008 global financial crisis when plunging economies and rising unemployment created pressures to protect domestic industries, the WTO was credited for stopping a descent into the type of tit-for-tat protectionism that countries engaged in during the Great Depression. Despite the WTO’s undeniable success, a changing international economic environment creates a series of signifi cant challenges for the organization. The most obvious challenge is that the Doha Development Round—the current round of multilateral trade negotiations to further liberalizes trade and reform the WTO. After a decade of talks, it still remains to be concluded. The Doha Round is focused on reducing important trade barriers in sectors, such as agriculture, industrial goods and services. This would encourage businesses around the world to specialize in the production of goods and services, achieve economies of scale, and increase their efficiency and productivity, which would allow them to deliver improved and cheaper products to global consumers. As importantly, the Doha Round is particularly focused on providing increased market access to goods and services from developing countries. In the end, the WTO estimates that the Doha Round could increase global GDP by $150 billion per year. However since the launch of the Doha Round, countries have turned to free trade agreements (FTAs) in order to gain significant trade access in new markets and to explore new trade-related issues that are currently not addressed within the WTO. As more FTAs have been concluded, the central role of the WTO in liberalizing trade has been called into question. In addition, the WTO has played a very limited role in helping address other global issues related to trade, such as food security, climate change and global trade imbalances. In order for the WTO to respond to these new challenges, it must focus on its capacity for global economic governance. This capacity is derived from the WTO’s ability to exercise power and the WTO’s dispute settlement mechanism, rules and secretariat are a central part of this process. However, as with all forms of governance, the ability of the WTO to exercise governance effectively depends largely on its own legitimacy—the acceptance by those people or entities being governed. Thus, for the WTO to secure a key role for itself in global economic governance, it needs to address concerns regarding its legitimacy. 10.0 Free Trade Agreements: Implication for the WTO Since the launch of the Doha Round, there has been a proliferation of free trade agreements. Whereas the U.S. only had FTAs with four countries in 2000, it has now concluded FTAs with 17 countries and has signed another three. Since 2002, Japan has gone from having one FTA with Singapore to 11 FTAs. Additionally, regional FTAs are also on the rise. The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) has entered into FTAs with China, Japan, South Korea, India, and most recently with Australia and New Zealand. In an effort to establish free trade among pacific-rim countries, the U.S. is currently negotiating the so-called Trans-Pacific Partnership with Australia, Chile, Vietnam, New Zealand, Brunei, Singapore, Malaysia and Peru. The proliferation of FTAs presents a number of challenges for the WTO’s mandate to liberalize trade multilaterally. The most profound change impacting the WTO is that FTAs have increasingly become the means for liberalizing trade. Currently, there remain numerous large bilateral trade relationships not governed by FTAs for which the WTO remains the focus; the U.S.-EU, the U.S.-Japan and the U.S.-China are three of the most significant. However, if Japan manages to join the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations, the U.S. will have an FTA with its fourth largest (Japan) and largest (Canada) trading partners. The market access gains that countries have achieved under FTAs have reduced the economic value of an outcome from the Doha Round, thereby making its completion less significant. In fact, it is estimated that approximately half of world trade now occurs under preferential tariff rates or zero tariff rates granted on a most-favored nation basis.3 Negotiating FTAs also requires the investment of political capital by world leaders and the resources of trade negotiators. This leaves less energy and capacity to focus on the Doha Round. Also, once countries have negotiated preferential market access arrangements, there is less interest in reducing these potential gains through a multilateral outcome. WTO could provide the legal architecture and institutional structure, such as the dispute settlement mechanism and secretariat support. FTAs then become places where groups of countries experiment with different rules and undertake deeper levels of trade liberalization than otherwise possible under the WTO. Like the opportunity for U.S. states to be policy laboratories for the federal government, FTAs could provide the opportunity for countries to develop and test new international trade rules on a range of issues. Experience gained from FTAs has also made countries more willing to support the development of these rules in the WTO. For example, Singapore, Chile, Australia and Morocco became familiar with the U.S. approach to trade facilitation through their FTAs with the U.S. Therefore, they supported a U.S. proposal in the Doha Round on trade facilitation that was modeled on their FTAs with the U.S. This feedback interaction between FTAs and the WTO can be viewed as self-reinforcing instead of zero-sum. The capacity for free trade agreements to build momentum around new rules has also meant that FTAs have become an arena of strategic competition as countries use these negotiations to establish the new global norms. For example, the recently concluded Korea-EU FTA has included protection for geographical indications (GI) 8 that goes further than the GI negotiations in the Doha Round. The U.S. has responded with a proposal on GIs in the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations that limits protections for GIs. FTAs also provide an opportunity for countries to experiment with liberalizing highly protected sectors, which could be a step toward broader liberalization under the WTO. For instance, the Australia-Japan FTA negotiations might provide Japan with an opportunity to experiment with agriculture liberalization. With properly phased in tariff reductions and domestic assistance from the Japanese government to facilitate the structural reform such liberalization would require, this could allow Japan’s agriculture sector to adjust before opening its markets more broadly under other FTAs or multilaterally at the WTO. 11.0 The Challenge of the WTO’s Legitimacy The challenges in completing the Doha Round, the proliferation of FTAs, the growth of large developing countries and the globalization of the world economy require creative thinking about how the international community can strengthen the WTO as the key international institution for managing global trade. In contrast to other forums and institutions like the G-20 and the IMF, the WTO is the only international organization focused on international trade with legally binding rules and the power to enforce them. For the WTO to address the challenges identified above, international policymakers must enhance the WTO’s role in global economic governance. However in order to do this, the WTO needs to be seen as legitimate. It is often argued that the WTO derives a sufficient level of legitimacy from the consent of its members. However, there is a problem with relying on members’ consent for legitimacy. For instance, governments provided inadequate levels of consultation and transparency when formulating their negotiating positions during the Uruguay Round. Before countries consented to the final agreements of the Uruguay Round, there was limited opportunity for public comment and debate about the outcomes and implications of the round. Instead, public access to trade officials was restricted and the opportunity to follow the developments in the negotiations was made difficult by the secrecy of the process. This might happen in cases where career advancement of officials is tied to completing the trade round. In other cases, the negotiations may be so complex that officials do not fully understand the implications of the deal, as was the case in the Uruguay Round. The WTO’s power is manifest through its secretariat, its rules and its dispute settlement mechanism. For example, the WTO secretariat exercises power through agenda setting and framing the issues under consideration. The role of the WTO secretariat in choosing panelists for a dispute and providing legal advice to panels certainly influences the outcomes of WTO disputes. The WTO has sought to address some of these process issues by being more transparent about the negotiations and engaging directly with civil society. Ensuring that the interests of developing countries are adequately taken into account is also important for legitimating the Doha Round—particularly as this is meant to be the Doha Development Round. This should help alleviate some of the concerns felt by developing countries that the benefits from the Uruguay Round were biased toward developed countries. Member countries need to spend more time explaining the implications of the Doha Round and international trade more generally to their citizens. For example, only 19 percent of Americans believe that free trade can contribute to economic growth. Therefore, merely repeating that the Doha Round will increase global welfare is not enough to convince a public that is concerned about job security and sees global trade as a threat instead of an opportunity. Along with increased public outreach, governments around the world need a targeted set of policies aimed at assisting those most impacted by trade liberalization. For instance, many developed countries have policies that help the structurally unemployed. In developing countries, for example, the ability of farmers to adjust to the liberalization of agricultural trade will depend on a range of factors, such as access to adequate infrastructure. Ensuring that developing countries are able to take advantage of trade liberalization is important for all countries and providing development assistance to do this should be part of the Doha negotiations. Giving legitimacy to the Doha Development Round and the WTO means that agricultural sector liberalization must be a central focus. Should developed countries provide increased market access in areas such as services this would help developing countries take advantage of their lower cost labor to increase their services sectors. The WTO’s exercise of power also needs to be legitimated. For instance, the WTO secretariat must be seen as accountable to its members and civil society. Ensuring that the panel and appellate body process is conducted according to rules of due process and in a transparent manner will also go a long way in strengthening the WTO’s legitimacy. Thankfully, the appellate body has been dealing with these issues. In numerous decisions, it has found that the WTO texts incorporate a range of due process norms, such as a right to legal representation and a right of the defendant to be notified of the case against it and the legal basis of the claim. Reform of the dispute settlement process is part of the Doha Round, including developing rules for opening panel and appellate body hearings to the public and the use amicus briefs— submissions by non-parties to the dispute, such as civil society and businesses. Also, since the WTO appellate body adjudicates issues that impact public policy—such as how governments manage issues relating to human health—transparency of the process is especially important. The appellate body has found that it has the power to accept amicus briefs, but has tended to reject them as being not relevant to the dispute. Formalizing these reforms would affirm transparency in the WTO’s dispute settlement process and give the wider public a chance to be heard in WTO disputes. This would certainly further enhance the legitimacy of the WTO. Another important aspect of securing legitimacy for the WTO requires understanding and agreeing the limits of what the WTO can and should do. The need for WTO rules to prevent behind-the-border measures being used to protect domestic industries and erode market access gains from tariff reductions has made it increasingly difficult to draw a clear boundary around what laws the WTO should discipline. A similar mission creep has occurred at the international level, where compliance with environmental or human rights treaties has been raised to the WTO because of their impact on trade. While there might be no straightforward way of defining the proper scope of WTO’s responsibility, one way forward would be to encourage greater dialogue between it and other international organizations. The WTO has taken some steps in this direction. For example, it has encouraged engagement with the secretariats of other international institutions and the Doha Round includes negotiations on the relationship between the WTO and multilateral environmental agreements. However, a more systematic approach is desirable and should be extended to include other international bodies. 12.0 The Future of the World Trading System: Asian Perspective Asia is a vast continent with large heterogeneity – physically, culturally, linguistically, politically, and economically. The region includes some of the world’s most competitive and sophisticated economies, as well as large emerging ones which are fast becoming important global players. At the same time, they co-exist with numerous smaller, poorer and more vulnerable economies, including landlocked and island states. Despite its rapid economic growth, Asia still remains home to nearly half of the worlds poor. The region is facing numerous challenges, ranging from rising inequalities and disparities, limited natural resources and vulnerability to climate change to the risk of falling into the “middle income trap”, all of which have implications for the rest of the world. The past few decades have witnessed the rapid economic take-off of the region. Asia’s share of world merchandise trade has grown from around 13% in 1960 to over 30% in 2011. Asia is projected to account for more than half of global GDP, trade, and investment and to enjoy widespread affluence by the middle of the 21st century. Trade has played a key role in shaping the transformation of Asian economies in recent history; Asia is a living example of how trade can contribute to economic development. The trade share of GDP in Asia grew from 13% in 1960 to 70% by 2007. During the same period, hundreds of millions have been lifted out of poverty. It is my belief that trade will continue to play a defining role in Asia’s future prosperity. 12.1 WTO: Thinking ahead on global trade The cross-border flows of goods, investment, services, know-how and people associated with international production networks – call it ‘supply-chain trade’ for short – has transformed the world (Gereffi and Lee 2012). The WTO has not kept pace. It is time to change that, as I argued in CEPR Policy Insight No 64 (Baldwin 2012). Before turning to the governance issue, consider the changes. 12.2 The world of trade has changed Since the 1990s, globalization has been associated with a sharp drop in rich nations’ share of world income, world manufacturing and world exports (Figure 1). The big winners are developing nations that industrialized by joining, rather than by building, supply chains (Figure 2). The big share winners are all part of the supply chains of the US, Germany (Poland and Turkey), and Japan (People’s Republic of China (PRC), Republic of Korea, Indonesia and Thailand). India is the exception. This rapid industrialization also pulled up a wide range of developing nation commodity exporters like Brazil, Russia, Australia and South Africa. Figure 1: G7 share of world exports, manufacturing and GDP Figure 2: Manufacturing shares: Seven gainers and the G7 losers The world of trade politics and trade governance also changed. If a high-tech firm is to locate production stages in a developing nation, the nation’s government must ensure the necessary free movement of goods, services, information and the protection of tangible and intangible property rights. Old fashioned protection, anti-FDI policies, or lax property rights almost guarantee that the offshored stages will go somewhere else. Developing nations that got the offshored factories became hyper-competitive and wiped out the exports of developing nations that clung to import-substitution industrialization. In the world of supply-chain industrialization, protectionism has become destructionism. Having learned this lesson, developing nations unilaterally lowered tariffs and eagerly signed up for deep disciplines in regional trade agreements and bilateral investment treaties (Figure 3). It happened regionally, rather than multilaterally since most supply chains are regional (Baldwin and Lopez-Gonzales 2012). The fact that the WTO has been locked in a decade-long preoccupation with 20th century trade issues (tariffs and agriculture) in the Doha Round has merely exacerbated the regionalization of supply chain disciplines. Figure 3: Trade politics changed: Protectionism became destructionism The latest erosion of WTO centricity comes with the mega-regionals – like the TransPacific Partnership – that are being negotiated. On current trajectory, rules for supply chain trade will have been harmonized in these mega-regionals within a few years entirely outside the WTO’s ambit. 13.0 The Multilateral Trading System: Past, Present, and Future The World Trade Organization came into being in 1995. One of the youngest of the international organizations, the WTO is the successor to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) established in the wake of the Second World War. So while the WTO is still young, the multilateral trading system that was originally set up under GATT is already 50 years old. The system celebrated its golden jubilee in Geneva on 19 May 1998, with many heads of state and government leaders attending. The past 50 years have seen an exceptional growth in world trade. Merchandise exports grew on average by 6% annually. Total trade in 1997 was 14-times the level of 1950. GATT and the WTO have helped to create a strong and prosperous trading system contributing to unprecedented growth. The system was developed through a series of trade negotiations, or rounds, held under GATT. The first rounds dealt mainly with tariff reductions but later negotiations included other areas such as anti-dumping and nontariff measures. The latest round “the 1986-94 Uruguay Round” led to the WTO’s creation. The negotiations did not end there. Some continued after the end of the Uruguay Round. In February 1997 agreement was reached on telecommunications services, with 69 governments agreeing to wide-ranging liberalization measures that went beyond those agreed in the Uruguay Round. In the same year 40 governments successfully concluded negotiations for tariff-free trade in information technology products, and 70 members concluded a financial services deal covering more than 95% of trade in banking, insurance, securities and financial information. At the May 1998 ministerial meeting in Geneva, WTO members agreed to study trade issues arising from global electronic commerce. The next ministerial conference is due to be held in the United States in late 1999. In 2000, new talks are due to start on agriculture and services and possibly a range of other issues. 14.0 Conclusion 15.0 Reference ➢ http://www.wto.org/wto/about/about.htm