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Developing countries denounce re-calibration approach to end DDR
Third World Network
Published in SUNS #8036 dated 8 June 2015
 
 Geneva, 5 Jun (D. Ravi Kanth) -- Trade ministers of leading developing             countries denounced at Paris on Thursday (June 4) attempts by major             developed countries to force a decision on the so-called "re-calibration"             approach to lower the level of ambition of the post-Bali work program             to conclude the Doha Development Agenda (DDA) negotiations later this             year, several officials said.
  
 The developing country ministers at the meeting said the re-calibration             approach is aimed at pushing the most difficult issues (for developed             nations) such as trade-distorting farm subsidies and other developmental             issues like the cotton subsidies and duty-free and quota-free market             access for the poorest countries into cold storage, a developing country             trade minister told the SUNS.
  
 At the informal trade ministerial meeting convened on the margins             of the annual Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development             (OECD) meeting in Paris on June 4, the developing country trade ministers             from India, Brazil, South Africa, and Indonesia among others demanded             a comprehensive post-Bali work program for concluding the DDA negotiations.
  
 In sharp opposition, major developed countries - the United States,             the European Union, Japan, Australia, Canada, Switzerland, and New             Zealand - and some developing countries reiterated their position             that the level of ambition must be re-calibrated on the basis of the             so-called "doability" and "realism" criterion.
  
 The US deputy trade representative Ambassador Michael Punke told the             meeting that Washington is pursuing the re-calibration approach to             bolster the efforts of the World Trade Organization Director-General             Roberto Azevedo who had suggested the idea.
  
 India's trade minister Nirmala Sitharaman delivered a strong statement             at the meeting by emphasizing that the "development dimension             with enhanced special and differential flexibilities" must remain             at the centre of the post-Bali work program.
  
 "To conclude the Round on the basis of market access is unacceptable,"             Minister Sitharaman told trade ministers present at the meeting.
  
 Ambition in agriculture depends on the reform of the trade-distorting             domestic subsidies based on the revised 2008 modalities, the Indian             minister said.
  
 Minister Sitharaman criticized some industrialized countries for diverting             attention from their trade-distorting domestic subsidy reduction commitments             by raising issues that are not part of the Doha mandate.
  
 For India, she said, issues such as "the special safeguard mechanism             (SSM), the special products, the permanent solution for public stockholding             programs for food security, and the LDC package are ‘must haves' in             the post- Bali work program," according to a trade official who             was present at the meeting.
  
 South Africa's trade minister Rob Davies lamented that efforts to             bring about re-calibration was carried out on an uneven basis in which             the level of ambition in agriculture is drastically reduced while             the reverse was sought to be done in market access for industrial             goods.
  
 Davies said African countries need policy space for carrying out industrial             policies which will become difficult with the increase in the ambition             in market access for industrial goods.
  
 Brazil said while services and industrial goods are getting special             treatment, laggards like agriculture are left behind.
  
 China, Brazil, South Africa, and Argentina among others supported             India by demanding a comprehensive post- Bali work program for delivering             the results promised in the DDA.
  
 The United States deputy trade representative Michael Punke sharply             disagreed with the demands made by the developing country trade ministers             for a robust post-Bali work program to address all issues in the three             pillars of the agriculture package. Ambassador Punke said there is             little evidence of any convergence on any issue at this juncture,             said an official familiar with the meeting.
  
 The US official suggested that "red lines" of India, China,             and the US don't overlap. Ambassador Punke said there are only two             options open to members. Either accept a re-calibration or face failure             at the tenth ministerial conference in Nairobi, Kenya, said a participant             who asked not to be quoted.
  
 The EU trade commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom suggested that there is             no need for extending tariff rate quotas in agriculture with the average             formula approach.
  
 "There is no realistic assessment on issues among ministers at             this juncture," an EU official said.
  
 It is unfortunate that there is little common ground at this critical             juncture among ministers present at the meeting, another trade official             said.
  
 Faced with unbridgeable differences on the elements to be pursued             in the post-Bali work program, WTO Director-General Roberto Azevedo             said there is no deal as of today.
  
 Kenya's foreign minister Amina C Mohammed, who will chair the tenth             ministerial meeting in her capital Nairobi, expressed sharp concern             that there is no common ground among members at this juncture.
  
 Trade ministers and senior officials from 29 countries such as Argentina,             Bangladesh (LDC Group), Barbados (ACP Group), Brazil, Canada, Chile,             China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Egypt, European Commission, Hong Kong-             China, Iceland, India, Indonesia, Israel, Japan, Korea, Lesotho (Africa             Group), Mexico, New Zealand, Nigeria, Norway, Senegal, South Africa,             Switzerland, Chinese Taipei, Tanzania, Turkey and the United States             took part in the meeting.
  
 The Kenyan minister Mohammed chaired the informal ministerial meeting             in the absence of the Australian trade minister Andrew Robb (who had             convened the meeting).
  
 Azevedo gave his assessment on the state of play in the negotiations             following his recent consultations with trade envoys in different             configurations.
  
 In her statement, the Kenyan minister gave her assessment, both on             the process-related issues and the substantive items that must be             included in the work program.
  
 She urged the trade ministers to provide the "focus and direction"             to ensure that there is no slippage in the process.
  
 Minister Mohammed said "we must get the business of the WTO done             by working in workable, different, but complimentary formats and configurations             linked to transparency exercises in plenary meetings at appropriate             moments."
  
 On substance, she said, the post-Bali work program must be "realistic,             balanced, and which modernizes and updates the WTO negotiating agenda             and puts the WTO back in centre field."
  
 The Kenyan minister said "the work program should be substantively             robust, reflect the fundamentals in the Doha agenda and issues that             will ensure that the WTO is relevant and adaptable."
  
 It must not be a wish list and divide the membership, she cautioned.             "Doha never died," she said, arguing that "the work             program should facilitate closure on Doha."
  
 The work program "must include agriculture, including an outcome             on cotton and an understanding on food security, services, NAMA, trade             and environment, fishery subsidies, and an expanded information and             technology agreement," the Kenyan minister argued. +

