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Post-Bali work programme not doable by end-July, says DG Azevedo
Third World Network
Published in SUNS #8060 dated 10 July 2015
 
 Geneva, 9 Jul (D. Ravi Kanth) -- Several developing countries on Wednesday             (July 8) expressed their frustration with the World Trade Organization             (WTO) Director-General Roberto Azevedo's announcement that the work             program with precise modalities for concluding the Doha Development             Round (DDR) trade negotiations will not be delivered by end-July.
  
 Many developing countries said that the new criteria based on "doability,"             "re-calibration," "simplification," "alternative             approaches," and "alternative paths" were responsible             for creating confusion and chaos in finalizing the work program.
  
 The criteria were proposed by the DG and developed countries for concluding             the DDR negotiations over the last seven months, particularly after             the DG's meeting with the European Union trade commissioner Cecilia             Malmstrom in December last year.
  
 At an informal heads of delegations (HOD) meeting on 8 July, Azevedo             issued a downbeat message that it is not possible to finalize the             post-Bali work program by end-July, as agreed by members at a General             Council meeting last year.
  
 Azevedo had repeatedly maintained over the past seven months that             the work program with precise modalities is essential for concluding             the DDR negotiations at the WTO's tenth ministerial conference in             Nairobi, Kenya, beginning on December 15, 2015.
  
 The DG said his consultations with members in different configurations             have failed to bring about convergence on the so-called landing zones.
  
 However, he did not elaborate on the landing zones, an issue on which             many developing countries expressed dismay because of the attempts             to change the landing zones without correspondence with the previous             mandates.
  
 In the statement to the HOD, put out on the WTO website, the DG said             "considering everything I have heard from members over the last             three weeks, I see very little prospect of delivering a detailed and             substantive work programme by the end of July."
  
 Azevedo shifted the responsibility for finalizing the work program             onto members. "Whether we can deliver a work programme is in             the hands of the members and their ability to bring forward new proposals             in the coming days which will pave the way to find consensus,"             he maintained.
  
 It is not clear what he meant by new proposals that members ought             to bring for paving the way to find consensus. Is the DG expecting             new proposals not based on the existing Doha mandates, asked a developing             country trade envoy.
  
 The DG's overall stance about the failure to comply with the end-July             deadline provoked an angry response from several African countries.
  
 Lesotho, on behalf of African Group, asked the DG why is it that the             failure to finalize the work program is being treated in such cavalier             fashion unlike the adoption of the Trade Facilitation protocol last             year?
  
 When members failed to adopt the TF protocol last year, the DG had             said that the credibility of the WTO is at stake and it would have             far reaching implications, Lesotho pointed out.
  
 But when it comes to the failure for delivering the work program which             is so critical for concluding the DDR negotiations, there is a "casual"             approach being adopted, Lesotho said.
  
 On behalf of the G-33 farm coalition, Indonesia delivered a strong             message that the development dimension of the Doha Round must be at             the center of the work program, as and when it is finalized. The livelihood,             rural development, and food security concerns of the developing countries             must guide the final outcome in which flexibilities for special products             and policy space for special safeguard mechanism (SSM) remain as the             scaffolding of the final agreement, Indonesia declared.
  
 India delivered the strongest criticism yet on what happened over             the past seven months when some members attempted to change the goal             posts. "At the cost of repetition Chair, we must say that a handful             of Members that have been espousing the need for ‘re-calibration'             or ‘simplification' seem desirous of moving the discussions away not             only from the 2008 texts but also perhaps from all previous mandates,"             India said.
  
 "At the same time they have been hesitant to directly come forward             with credible and wholesome alternatives," India's Ambassador             Anjali Prasad argued.
  
 Until now, the proponents of re-calibration failed to "translate             the rhetoric of re-calibration into actionable proposals on which             it is possible to engage meaningfully," she maintained.
  
 More disturbingly, the proponents of ‘re-calibration' are redefining             "their terms of engagement on the pre-condition that a couple             of developing country Members agree to undertake higher contributions             vis-a-vis the rest. Such conditionalities are unprecedented as a gateway,"             Ambassador Prasad said.
  
 India also pointed a finger at the lack of transparency when chairs             are submitting reports or papers without indicating the proponents             of those reports. "There cannot be any short-cuts to a member-driven,             bottom-up approach," India argued.
  
 India also said that "alternatives suggested in the Chair's papers             and those tabled so far by Members themselves have not found convergence."             India questioned the re-calibration or simplification criteria, pointing             out that it is not supposed to "result in the rewriting of mandates             contained in the Doha declaration and elucidated further in the July             Framework and Hong Kong Declaration."
  
 According to India, there is a concerted attempt to view "Special             and Differential treatment - a core principle of the GATT and the             WTO and informing all pillars of the negotiations, as is being viewed             by some, as a ‘threshold' issue now."
  
 Also, there is a demand for bigger contributions in some areas from             developing countries while the depth of obligations of developed country             Members is sought to be reduced, India maintained. "To give an             example, while some of the building blocks of Rev. 4 are either being             consistently and substantially diluted or dropped selectively on the             ground that they are not do-able, the linkage with the Swiss formula             for determination of tariff reduction targets in NAMA is being maintained             almost with a missionary zeal," India maintained.
  
 "This approach denotes a complete asymmetry in the rebalancing             of the level of ambition in these two critical areas," India             maintained. "Any negotiation," said India, "involves             compromises."
  
 "But if the compromises envisaged are blatantly asymmetrical             to be almost devoid of logic, the process, fragile as it is, could             suffer a breakdown," India warned.
  
 In a sharp critique of the process over the past seven months, Uganda's             Ambassador Christopher Onyanga Aparr asked some searing questions             to the Director-General. He asked whether members cast their minds             on the remaining DDA issues after the Trade Facilitation agreement?
  
 "We called for a discussion on the nature and scope of the work             program, but apparently the call has not yet found a landing zone,"             Ambassador Aparr said. "Mr. Chairman, the question is, what is             so wrong with the Doha Work Program?" asked Uganda.
  
 "Given the time constraints, we would favour an approach that             focuses on the end game," Uganda maintained. "Instead of             wasting any more precious time, we should focus on achieving concrete             deliverables for Nairobi," Uganda argued. "We do not want             to be like some leaders in 1814, who were accused to have learnt nothing             and forgotten nothing," it argued.
  
 Ambassador Aparr told the DG that members need to "deal with             all aspects of issues now."
  
 "Is it an Agreement-plus, like the case was in Bali; or a framework;             a declaration; a decision; or a Chairman's Statement?" Uganda             sought to know.
  
 Ambassador Aparr suggested that "the Chairs should not become             proponents, or surrogate demandeurs. Some may be sympathetic to follow             a certain line of thinking. Modalities for work should be the same             for all members. For instance, the approach adopted in the CTD should             not be different from that being used in NAMA."
  
 Uganda expressed its opposition to "re-calibration, doability             and realism", saying "they are words that only mean one             thing: Resistance to undertaking (subsidy) cuts by developed countries."
  
 "We would reject approaches that places us in a position as taking             part in a ‘collective' decision to deny ourselves the much needed             reform, which is akin to swallowing a poison pill. History will be             harsh in judgement of our generation!" Ambassador Aparr maintained.
  
 Uganda called for undertaking "tough reduction commitments on             trade distorting domestic supports; grant of DFQF in line with the             Hong Kong Ministerial declaration; and reform the Rules of Origin             to make them simple, transparent and objective in line with the Hong             Kong [declaration]."
  
 Barbados, on behalf of the ACP group, told the WTO chief that it is             essential to have a work program without which members would not know             the road to Nairobi.
  
 Turkey said it is not in favour of the re-calibration approach as             it does not have any basis. If there is a basis for concluding the             Doha negotiations it is only the 2008 revised draft modalities, Turkey             argued.
  
 Several countries disagreed with the DG's assessment that a work program             cannot be produced by the end of the month, saying that there is still             time for more consultations.
  
 Faced with stinging criticism from several quarters, Azevedo said             he would hold more consultations to see if he could come up with a             program by the end of the month.
  
 In short, the DG's approach based on "do-ability" criteria             for concluding the DDA negotiations, stands exposed as an attempt             to salvage the major developed countries, particularly the United             States, several trade envoys told the SUNS. +

