Opinion

WTO Talks Collapse Amidst Developing Countries' Reluctance to Sacrifice Food Security

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by: The Center for Economic and Policy Research

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Indian women farm laborers plant rice. India and other developing nations are reluctant to sacrifice food security measures during World Trade Organization negotiations. ( Photo: Noah Seelam / AFP / Getty Images)

    Last-minute attempt to push through a WTO expansion "deal" fails.

    Washington, DC - Despite trade ministers' hopes for a last-minute deal, World Trade Organization (WTO) negotiations collapsed yet again today, and observers at the talks in Geneva say that the failure is not surprising, given the reluctance of India and other developing nations to sacrifice food security measures in the wake of the recent global spike in food prices.

    Given President Bush's lame duck status, negotiators had been called to Geneva to try to push through a last-minute deal before Bush left office. Because negotiators need about six months after a deal on the major issues to complete the details of the agreement, this possibility has now evaporated.

    "Given what's been on the table, no deal is better than a bad deal. A Doha conclusion would have had major negative impacts for workers and farmers in developing countries. The tariff cuts demanded of developing countries would have caused massive job loss, and countries would have lost the ability to protect farmers from dumping, further impoverishing millions on the verge of survival," said Deborah James, Director of International Programs for the Center for Economic and Policy Research, who has been observing the talks in Geneva.

    It is unclear why negotiations were proceeding, given the fact that the U.S. delegation does not have a mandate to conclude negotiations, as made clear by a letter from Senators Feingold and Byrd sent to President Bush last week. In addition, cuts in subsidies agreed to by the U.S. are also incompatible with the new U.S. Farm Bill passed by Congress, and over-riding a veto by President Bush.

    Many developing nations not invited to participate in the exclusive "Green Room" meetings in Geneva this past week are likely to continue strong opposition to a deal in the midst of a global economic downturn and increasing concerns over food security.

    At a time when many countries are seeking to reduce dependence on troubled economies in the U.S. and Europe, and as fears of a global recession loom, many nations are questioning the development gains to be achieved from trade liberalization. The projected gains from the Doha Round offer developing countries very little in potential gains. According to World Bank modeling, developing country benefits would be just 16 percent of total world gains, or 0.16 per cent of GDP. This works out to less than a penny per day per capita in the developing world. Poverty reduction - which in itself would be very limited - would reach only 2.5 million people.[1] These projections do not include many of the costs of implementing the Doha Round, which UNCTAD estimates to be as much as four times the projected gains.

    The Doha Round could also increase world prices for food.[2] Since most developing countries are net food importers, the recent increase in food prices has led some developing country governments to reconsider food security mechanisms such as tariffs and domestic subsidies, which the WTO seeks to reduce. A number of countries have also imposed restrictions on exports, in response to the food crisis.

    "There just hasn't been much to gain for developing countries in this round - or for that matter, the majority of people even in the rich countries," said CEPR Co-Director and economist, Mark Weisbrot. "The attempts by the rich countries to reduce policy space for developing countries in manufacturing are widely seen as 'kicking away the ladder' that rich countries like the United States used when they were developing countries.

    "The whole process of subordinating national policy to special commercial interests - whether in agriculture, telecommunications, pharmaceuticals (one of the most powerful interests and gainers in the WTO), or the financial sector - has gone way too far. Growth and development in most countries has been hurt, and they are pushing back. In the United States, too, rising inequality and now an economic downturn have provoked a backlash."

    Throughout the negotiations, some developing nations promoted trade policies and objectives at odds with the Doha Round's objectives of opening developing country markets, including commitments to food sovereignty and defending policy space for alternative forms of economic development.

    In a written statement, Bolivian president Evo Morales said that, "The WTO negotiations have turned into a fight by developed countries to open markets in developing countries to favor their big companies."

    [1] Kevin P. Gallagher and Timothy A. Wise, "Back to the Drawing Board: No Basis for Concluding the Doha Round of Negotiations." Research and Information System for Developing Countries Issue Brief. No. 36, April 2008.

    [2] Sandra Polaski, "Winners and Losers: Impact of the Doha Round on Developing Countries." Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, March 2006.

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    The Center for Economic and Policy Research is an independent, nonpartisan think tank that was established to promote democratic debate on the most important economic and social issues that affect people's lives. CEPR's Advisory Board of Economists includes Nobel Laureate economists Robert Solow and Joseph Stiglitz; Richard Freeman, professor of economics at Harvard University; and Eileen Appelbaum, professor and director of the Center for Women and Work at Rutgers University.


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Comments

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Fr Tothus: I agree with most

Fr Tothus: I agree with most of your post, except where you state that you don't know why our citizens behave as they do... While I am aware that all the power people deny that TV affects our thinking, on the face of it, that is ridiculous. They invest billions of dollars in advertising and sitcoms etc that dull the brightest watcher. If it wasn't effective, they wouldn't spend the money! The only defense available to the poor citizen is to disconnect entirely and forbid his kids the TV that most are fed with their mother's milk. The last thing our controllers want is an informed, intelligent, and thinking audience. Until the advent of the web, the only sources to educate oneself were books and a few magazines. Of course the internet is being targeted as we speak... Glad the little guys won this round. I was hoping the DOHA effort would collapse entirely and give the poor world a breathing space. I am afraid the conglomerates will be back meaner then ever with this failure. Makes our upcoming election ever more important, no matter what we think the real chances for a Progressive government may be.

Like the feudal lords of the

Like the feudal lords of the Middle Ages, the corporations and encountering the winds of change, an' it ain't looking good for they powdered wigs.

Now all we Americans have to

Now all we Americans have to do is stand up to the big western corporate pirates as effectively as the developing countries have. Time to take our country back, and become the citizens of the world that most Americans would want to be, if only everyone hear read the information available on Truthout!

Fr. Tothus -- I agree with

Fr. Tothus -- I agree with you so much! This rejection of "free trade" gives me hope. At long last.

Maybe some of those

Maybe some of those attending finally read The Shock Doctrine by Naomi Klein.

This is Great News! Despite

This is Great News! Despite the relentless and often dishonest bullying, the US representatives were apparently unable to twist enough arms. Principle and honor, it seems, is not the only thing that has moved offshore. Together with occurrences like the world-wide demonstrations PRIOR to the US invasion (A First in History!), the rise and growing support of Populist leaders (along the Bolivarian Model) and liberation theology, signal a growing awareness of the cancer of capital, the growing widespread rejection of the Chicago School & the Washington Consensus, the emerging picture is a hopeful one. The appeals to fear may have a shelf life. Maybe the boy has cried "Wolf" too many times. But didn't Lincoln reminded us that "...You cannot fool all of the people all of the time"? Whatever it is, it is a welcome development. Humanity will win out. The gilt-edged institutions and the Corporation of the United States' money men offer little to those wise to their games of chance, who've known for a long time that it isn't all about money. Most of the rest of the industrialized world (the other 95%, more or less) knows more about our spotty history, and our use of the lofty words and the CIA and Green Berets than we are allowed. They know of our many broken treaties and promises unfulfilled, our heavy-handed means, our Our Way or the Highway self-importance. They have also seen Empire before, and know what it looks like, know it comes with a smiling face and shines of respectability, but they have heard it all before, you see. They distrust tyranny, and know that it calls itself by many names. So did our founders, but the revolutionary spirit has long left the people, frightened time and again into accepting security over liberty, order over justice. Americans have no seeming humility, having become too comfortable in their privilege, perhaps. I do not know what the cause is, but I do know, that in the many opinion polls that are done, across the spectrum, and despite the incessant propaganda blitz, Americans are surprisingly far to the left of Congress and the President, by striking majorities, though you wouldn't know it because such things are not published in the "Free Press". Real newspapers would make this front page news, wouldn't they? But we know how the elites have decided that that message is the entire wrong one to use- it would excite the sheep. That would raise some embarrassing questions for the sheep-herders. Nonetheless, it is heartening (for me, at least) to see that once in a while, the good fight wins one. (Struck, as I am, at the positive nature of this article, I apologize for the tangent, but as a thought experiment, please consider how we might feel if stories like this were more often published and given prominence in the MSM, stories that reported on how effective community action was in creating justice, in winning large settlements against corporate crime, stories that gave us real pride and hope and showed how a functioning democracy is supposed to work... Consider, if you will, how strengthened we, as a people, would become, and what a good thing for our failing Republic it would be. What successive US Administrations and their minions in the Press (for reasons of their own) have done for decades has been using fear against their own people, and the press, which is inundated daily with reams of government bulletins, is only too happy to go along. It's so much easier and cheaper, and you don't upset the powerful. The fear can be seen in nearly every article purporting itself to be serious news. Look for yourself. My point here is that Good Government promotes fearlessness. It doesn't use fear against its own people.) Respect!

It's about time that the

It's about time that the rest of the developing world realizes that bush and the current world financial leaders are nothing but a bunch of lying snakes.