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Making the WTO
Democratic
Jamaica
Observer, September 19, 2010
Commentary: Making the
WTO democratic
Caribbean
News Now, September 17, 2010
The World
Trade Organization (WTO) held its fifth public forum
in Geneva over three days beginning September 15. It
has become a kind of international bazaar in which
every conceivable idea on trade and development is
discussed formally and informally by representatives
of virtually every government in the world and more
Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) than can be
easily counted.
A great
deal of talk takes place without too much follow-up
action.
But, maybe
that’s the point. People who talk to each other
aren’t warring, so long may the talk continue.
That’s not
to say that good ideas don’t emerge from this
overcrowded market place. They do. But many perish
shortly after they are unveiled, usually because
representatives of a powerful government or group of
governments regard them as a threat to their
interest, and quickly kill them off.
I was in
Geneva for a Writers’ Conference on a book on
negotiations in the WTO for which I am contributing
a chapter. All the writers are from what used to be
called the “third world,” a description seldom used
these days, not because we have miraculously
graduated into some better world, but because other
descriptions suit the agenda of those who dictate
the form of discourse on the global economy. Far
better, in their view, to describe poor countries as
“emerging” or “developing” whether or not they are
really emerging or developing.
The
purpose of the book, which has been commissioned by
a progressive organization called CUTS
International, is to tell the story of the many
aspects of WTO negotiations from the point of view
of negotiators from developing countries.
When it is
published, it should make fascinating reading. It
will break new ground in presenting the personal
knowledge and experiences of the writers who were
either in the trenches of the negotiations or were
marginalized from the “inner sanctum” in which only
the rich and powerful nations enjoy belonger’s
rights, and into which they invite only those they
wish to suborn in order to stich-up deals.
Of the
many features of the WTO which point to the need for
reform, this insider trading - in what has come to
be called ‘the green room’ - is among the worst. No
democratically managed organization should continue
a process which so blatantly excludes from
decision-making the weak, poor, small, and
vulnerable nations which – as it happens – make up
the majority of world’s countries.
That it
has continued so long is entirely the fault of the
majority of governments who allow it to happen
without tangible and meaningful protest, such as
packing their bags and going home leaving the ‘green
room’ insiders to deal only with themselves, and
returning only when there is a table at which
representatives of all parties sit as equals.
But, that
would call for two things – courage and solidarity,
two very scarce commodities among “third world”
governments these days. National interests have
changed, some argue, and in pursuing these interests
following a “third world” strategy is not
productive.
It is
worth, noting, however, that a “developed countries”
strategy has never altered. The world’s
industrialized nations continue to cling to their
councils and to exploit their advantages. For
instance, the creation of the G20 (the
industrialized nations and the larger and wealthier
developed countries) has not overshadowed - let
alone eliminated - the G7 (the industrialized
nations alone) who continue to devise and coordinate
their own global positions.
Against
this background, I was surprised to hear Pascal Lamy,
the Director-General of the WTO, say at the opening
of this year’s Public Forum, almost boastfully, that
while the G20 has signalled the requirement for
institutional reform of some international
organizations, “the WTO was not amongst them”.
Lamy went
on to say: “That governance battle has already been
fought in the trade sphere, and the outcome is a
fairly democratic institution where the voice of the
small cannot be ignored.”
I have no
doubt that Lamy believes what he says, but his
belief – however sincere and fervent – does not make
his statement right. The governance of the WTO is
still an open sore. Despite Lamy’s personal efforts,
the organisation still reflects the preponderance of
power by the industrialised nations and the
marginalization of poor, small, and vulnerable
countries.
“No board,
no quotas. One member, one vote, is the background
rule against which the WTO forges its consensus”,
Lamy declared. Oh, were that to be entirely true,
what a far better world would mankind inhabit than
the one we endure today.
Sure,
there is technically no board and no quotas, but
every representative of a small or poor nation knows
that decision making is still the preserve of a few
nations whose economic power allows them to arrogate
to themselves the right to dictate agendas and
outcomes. The WTO is very far from the consensus
decision-making body that it should be. It is still
not yet even the “fairly democratic institution”
that Lamy believes it to be.
Those who
defend the ‘green room’ process do so on the basis
that it is impossible to negotiate agreements with
over 150 countries at the same table. There is truth
in that. But it is equally true that representatives
of like-minded groups of these countries can gather
on sectorial issues that are important to them such
as agriculture or services. This way their voices
will be heard during the debate and account taken
over their views.
Against
this background, it is good for developing countries
- and small and vulnerable countries in particular -
that the Bahamas is now negotiating the terms of its
accession to full membership of the WTO. No country
can now afford to stay out of an organisation whose
rules govern world trade, and every country should
want a say in the rules of the game it has to play.
The
Bahamas will strengthen the voice of small and
vulnerable countries, who if they act with courage
and in solidarity with themselves and other
like-minded developing nations, can negotiate
meaningful recognition and fair and flexible
treatment for their people – in other words, try to
make the WTO truly democratic.
The news item
can also be viewed at:
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/
http://www.caribbeannewsnow.com/
http://www.caribbean360.com/
http://www.bbc.co.uk/
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