| Framework for modalities or 'platform' for future                     careers?By Chakravarthi Raghavan, Chief Editor, South-North Development                     Monitor
 Published in SUNS, 20 July 2004
 The draft framework text, Job(04)/96, issued on 16 July by                     General Council chair Shotaro Oshima and WTO Director-General                     Supachai Panitchpakdi, aimed at restarting the stalled WTO                     negotiations, is a "Doha-minus" document, that has                     probably made an overall package to relaunch and conclude                     the negotiations launched at Doha more difficult. Studying the paper over the weekend, and while awaiting instructions                     from capitals, several trade diplomats of developing countries                     (speaking non-attributively) felt that the paper would need                     so many changes and re-drafting to put a balance back into                     the package, that it may not be easy to negotiate all these                     in just about 10 days. The entire paper, and its approaches, are viewed by developing                     country delegations and by civil society groups as imbalanced                     and lacking equity, and heavily weighted in process and substance                     in favour of the developed countries, in particular the US                     and EC. It lacks any specificity in agriculture, but is specific                     in Non-Agricultural Market Access, is merely rhetorical on                     Special and Differential Treatment, downgrades even more the                     priority issue of Doha, 'implementation issues', and subsumes                     it with the S&D issue, clothing both in rhetoric but without                     any operational content. In agriculture, it accommodates some of the key concerns                     of the US and EC and other developed countries (in market                     access, and on 'sensitive products'), while mentioning the                     concerns of the developing countries but not in the same way. On domestic support, the text is so framed that it would                     legitimise the various current illegal subsidies, and in effect                     create a new ceiling (for the US in a new blue box), and then                     provide for negotiating some reductions in these, but not                     elimination. On export subsidy and export credits, it makes some advance,                     and envisages the phasing out (when and how in the future                     is not clear), but any benefit this may give to the competitive                     agricultural exporters is more than offset by the way the                     domestic support and market access pillars are dealt with. On Non-Agricultural Market Access (NAMA), though presenting                     it as 'a platform' and not 'a basis', the framework is specific                     and uses the Derbez text, which has been in fact rejected                     by the developing countries. It launches negotiations on Trade Facilitation on the basis                     of modalities set out in an annex, even though there is no                     agreement, leave aside explicit consensus on the modalities. En plus, the other three Singapore issues, are kept on the                     WTO agenda, to be pursued even during the current negotiations,                     as a study process, and likely to be brought up later after                     a Doha minus accord is concluded. Overall, there is no value-added or benefit to developing                     countries, as a group or individually, in adopting a Doha-minus                     framework package, and perhaps some harm, some trade experts                     suggest. At Doha, and later at the UN General Assembly in New York,                     the EC had sought to put a label on the Doha Work Programme,                     by having it titled as the Doha Development Round.. This was not acceptable to the developing countries, and                     was not accepted.. However, the former WTO head, Mike Moore, and the current                     DG, Dr. Supachai Panitchpakdi, as well as the EC and others                     have been using the term 'Doha Development Agenda' as a kind                     of public relations and marketing tool, but have not cut much                     ice. And since the Doha Declaration and the meeting in 2001, the                     'development deficit' in the Doha Work Programme and its implementation                     have been repeatedly brought to the fore, by the developing                     countries, and even more by civil society and many academic                     studies. Instead of making up this deficit, and paying attention to                     the 'development' issues, there is a renewed attempt at marketing                     - by calling it in the draft decision as 'Doha Development                     Agenda'. There was little of 'development' in the original                     agenda, and none at all in the Oshima-Supachai package for                     a 'Doha minus'. The WTO has set itself an end-July deadline for a framework                     package to relaunch the negotiations, and an attempt to rush                     through the Oshima-Supachai package. This is based on some dubious assumptions related to the                     political calendars of the US elections and the change of                     guard at Brussels - and that if the package is not agreed                     now and the talks relaunched, it would be a long time before                     negotiations can be resumed and concluded. In the cover-note to the framework paper, and in justifying                     the use of the Derbez NAMA text, which has been opposed by                     developing countries and latest by the G90 Ministers, Oshima                     and Supachai have cited the chairman of the NAMA negotiating                     group as saying that this was the only practicable option                     given the wide divergences among members, but that it should                     be treated not as an agreed text but as "a platform for                     the further negotiations that will be necessary." Perhaps, the entire Oshima-Supachai paper, and not merely                     Annex B on NAMA, could be seen and understood as a 'platform'. The Oxford English Dictionary has several meanings for the                     noun 'platform', most related to the physical nature (side-walk,                     train or bus-conductor's platform, railway platform at stations                     etc). But the figurative, applicable, meaning in the usage                     here is ".... raised flooring in hall or open air from                     which speaker addresses audience; the platform (fig.) oratory                     suitable for this; (fig.) political basis of party etc. declared                     policy of political party." No one now believes that the negotiations on the Doha work                     programme can be back on track and completed by end of 2004                     (as envisaged in that ministerial declaration), or even August                     2005. The framework perhaps is thus a 'platform' for future                     careers of three personalities. EC Trade Commissioner Pascal Lamy is already a lame-duck,                     and will be out of office soon, certainly before November,                     by when the new EU Commission President gets confirmed by                     the EU Parliament, and presents his commissioners before Parliament.                     Even if Bush wins a second term in the White House, judged                     by his views about his USTR Robert Zoellick (as 'combative')                     expressed reportedly at the US-EC summit in Ireland, there                     will be a new USTR. And the term of the WTO head, Dr. Supachai Panitchpakdi (and                     with it those of some of his aides) will end on 31 August                     2005 and cannot be renewed (as part of the compromise under                     which he was elected in a split term with Mike Moore). Already, the candidature of former Uruguay ambassador and                     (General Council chair in 2003), Mr. Perez del Castillo (who                     during his tenure here, firmly believed that what is good                     for the US and EC is good for the rest of the world) has been                     presented in capitals to WTO member-governments. The Canadian                     envoy Sergio Marchi is also said to be in the process or likely                     soon to throw his hat into the ring. And another dark candidate                     being mentioned is the Mauritius Trade Minister, Mr. Cuttaree. And the US is said to think that a developing country person                     as head of WTO would suit its interests better, as such a                     person would be more amenable to US influence. Thus, the July framework paper, if adopted, could at best                     be added on to the curriculum vitae of these personalities                     - as they do a 'revolving door' exercise into some other positions,                     in the private or public sectors. The 'minus' in the Doha declaration and mandates, is for                     the benefit of the US and EC, who have been constantly striving,                     over the last two years and more, to rewrite that mandate. This 'minus' has been achieved at the expense of developing                     countries, trade diplomats said over the week-end. The way the Oshima-Supachai paper has been drawn up and issued                     also shows that the powers-that-be at the WTO have learnt                     no lessons from Seattle and Cancun, and are persisting in                     the GATT/WTO culture of drawing up documents, ignoring the                     strong views of a large part of the membership, and use of                     manipulative decision-making process that was responsible                     for the failures of the Seattle and Cancun Ministerial Conferences. At a time when the WTO's remit and its invasion of domestic                     sovereigndecision-making has been attracting considerable opposition                     in many developed and developing countries, and there are                     calls in parliaments and in civil society against allowing                     further inroads by the WTO, the multi-lateral organization                     risks facing a severe backlash and repudiation by such tactics.
 The WTO members perhaps would do well to read what the Butler                     Commission in the UK, even while white-washing and absolving                     the individuals (ministers and intelligence officials) responsible                     for reliance on faulty intelligence in launching the war in                     Iraq, has said in a section relating to the machinery of government                     and decision-making. In some under-stated language, the Commission has come down                     against what a Guardian newspaper comment has called 'the                     chino-pant, chat method' of informal government decision-making                     processes of government, and said: "...we are concerned                     that the informality and circumscribed character of government's                     procedures, which we saw in the context of policy-making towards                     Iraq, risks reducing the scope of informed collective political                     judgement..." (Para 611 of the report) This is even more applicable to the WTO and its processes                     for decision-making - since the decisions they make, and acquiesced                     in by developing country governments, now affect and worsen                     the conditions of millions of poor in these countries, and                     seals their fates against development. The Oshima-Supachai text on the long-pending development                     concerns of developing countries - Implementation issues and                     operationalising the Special and Differential Treatment provisions                     in current agreements have been given short shrift - by some                     rhetorical language up front in the 'draft decision' by the                     General Council, but without any operational content, guideline                     or mandate to get these long-stalled issues and concerns addressed                     with priority and agreements reached. These issues were given priority at Doha but several deadlines                     were missed, and there is nothing in the Oshima-Supachai paper                     beyond the rhetorical exhortation to the various bodies dealing                     with them, and the Special Sessions of the Committee on Trade                     and Development (where S&D issues being negotiated) to                     expeditiously complete the review of all outstanding agreement-specific                     proposals and report to the General Council with recommendations                     for clear decision. On the Implementation issues, the TNC (headed by Supachai),                     the negotiating bodies and WTO bodies, where these issues                     are bottled up, are again asked to "redouble their efforts"                     to find appropriate solutions as a priority. But given that                     nothing happenned on past exhortations, repetition is value-less. The Implementation issues came up at the time of the Geneva                     Ministerial meeting, and subsequently on the agenda of the                     Seattle Conference. At Doha, the developing countries agreed                     to a compromise and place those issues that may need change                     of the rules into the negotiating agenda, and to be treated                     as a single undertaking.  But all this is now being sought to be given a go-by. The Implementation issue, identified as a priority negotiating                     issue in the Doha Declaration, and to be dealt with by Trade                     Negotiations Committee (TNC) and as part of a single undertaking,                     and specific deadlines set, is in fact now being pushed into                     the General Council - where it will be more easily buried. As developing country diplomats point out in private, the                     secretariat and its head have never believed in or accepted                     these issues - trotting out some dubious economic theories                     against them. One of the first things, Dr. Supachai did, when                     he assumed office in September 2002, was to go before an UNCTAD                     forum to question these concepts, but was in fact challenged                     by developing country diplomats and was unable to respond                     to them. Supachai also scoffed at the implementation issues, asking                     whether there would be another set of 'implementation issues'                     at the end of the Doha negotiations. No wonder there has been no focus or effort at the WTO, and                     in the framework to deal with them, even from the secretariat                     side. [And Groser, and those in the secretariat playing with words                     and English language, are setting the scope for more havoc,                     on basis of negotiating history, by future panels and the                     Appellate Body, the WTO's Star Chamber, by converting 'a single                     undertaking' of the Doha Declaration into 'The Single Undertaking'                     - making it a specific legal concept - that was never there                     or intended at Punta de Este, during the tortous Uruguay Round                     negotiations, or in the Marrakesh treaty, but imported as                     a legal concept by the negative consensus approach for adopting                     rulings in the DSU processes to hit developing countries,                     in the Indonesia car dispute and other rulings.] There is some rhetorical language and promise used on the                     problems of the African cotton producers and their Cotton                     initiative (for a three-year phase out and compensation),                     and how it is to be addressed in the Agricultural negotiations. But in fact, the cotton subsidy issue that is politically                     very embarrassing for the US, is to be part and parcel of                     the agriculture negotiations. And the US cotton subsidy payments                     will be subsumed into its new blue-box (the second tiret of                     paragraph 13 of Annex A) and then reduced, but not eliminated,                     over time. In Agriculture and Non-Agricultural Market Access (NAMA),                     as well as on the Singapore issues, the Oshima-Supachai paper                     advances the cause and interests of developed countries, in                     particular that of the US and EC - while the positions of                     developing countries are prejudiced by the prejudgements and                     non-formulation of alternatives to reflect their views. The Oshima-Supachai text is to come up before an informal                     General Council session Monday evening, when the text and                     its annexes are set to be introduced and explained. A night                     meeting of the General Council has been set from eight to                     midnight Geneva time, presumably to hear any comments. However, as of lunch-time Monday, most developing countries                     were unclear about the informal General Council meeting or                     the likely process. A number of them also see a major effort in the Oshima-Supachai                     text, and in the activities of the EC, to divide the developing                     countries, and play one against the other. # Trade: Agriculture framework, an asymmetric Doha-minus
 Geneva, 19 July (Chakravarthi Raghavan) -- The draft framework                     text, Job(04)/96,issued on 16 July by General Council chair Shotaro Oshima                     and WTO
 Director-General Supachai Panitchpakdi, aimed at restarting                     the stalled WTO
 negotiations, is a "Doha-minus", both overall and                     in the agriculture annex.
 The framework on agriculture in Annex A provides for what                     (when implemented)would perhaps come to be called 'dirty greening and blueing'                     of the domestic supports
 of the developed countries, and enable these countries to                     shield their markets in
 'sensitive' products from import competition from developing                     countries.
 The annex gives full recognition to the continuance of blue                     box and green boxsubsidies which are generally adopted by the major developed                     countries, but there is
 no guidance in the text about any possible elimination of                     these subsidies in future.
 On green box subsidies, para 16 of the annex wants to ensure                     continuance of the basicconcepts, principles and effectiveness of these subsidies,                     thus entrenching these
 subsidies deeper in the WTO system.
 This is purported to be balanced approach. Groser in his text also is opening the way for future mischief,                     by using the term'The Single Undertaking' as a specific accepted legal norm,                     while the Doha
 Declaration merely uses the term 'a single undertaking'.
 Some ambiguous language of principles is used to accommodate                     the concerns ofdeveloping countries (with offensive or defensive interests)                     - but with many details
 even of the concept left to be negotiated.
 After Doha (November 2001), the US adopted its Farm legislation,                     and this lawmandated (well into the future) increase in domestic supports                     under various heads,
 including some socalled 'counter-cyclical payments' of about                     $10 billion a year.
 Depending on final agreements - on percentages and the 'historical                     periods' tocalculate average total farm output (para 8 and second tier                     of paragraph 13 of Annex
 A) - one expert estimated that in theory the US could increase                     this support to an
 annual 12-20 billion dollars, and show this in the new blue                     box for the US. It could
 show against this new blue box several of the payments claimed                     to be in the 'green
 box' but should rightfully have been in its 'amber box'.
 In further talks for settling a 'historical period' for calculating                     the total agriculturaloutput (calculated as the value as close as possible to the                     point of first sale and
 included in the member's schedule) a total value is to be                     set, and from this an 'agreed
 percentage' to be negotiated for cuts.
 It would thus be painless for the US to cut over time, and                     in harmonisation with EC,the subsidies to be put into a new blue box, from a notional                     12-20 billion dollar
 ceiling down to the current $10 billion counter-cyclical payments                     - without any pain
 to their farmers or congressmen and senators who are backing                     the farm lobby.
 And if there be any pain, paragraph 14 of Annex A can be                     invoked! The framework for General Council decision has up-front the                     'reaffirmation' of thesectoral initiative on cotton, and says that it would be pursued                     in the agriculture
 negotiations within the parameters set.
 However, in the agriculture annex, though there are some                     references, in substancethere is in fact nothing tangible to benefit the west African                     cotton producers,
 excepting as part of the overall agricultural modalities package.                     There is no question
 of the phasing out of the heavy subsidisation by the US and                     Europe over a 3-year
 period or for compensating the West African producers (all                     LDCs) for their losses
 hitherto and till phase-out.
 The Groser drafted, 'Doha-minus' mandate for drawing up modalities                     in agriculture,shows that it would not only give full recognition to and                     legitimise the 'blue box' and
 'green box' subsidies of the developed countries to their                     agriculture sector, but
 everything the major developed countries are now doing, and                     many contrary to
 Marrakesh promises, may be continued and legitimised, albeit                     under claims of
 capping and tighter rules etc.
 In effect it means that whenever the US and EC for their                     treasury reasons cutanything, this can be put it into the WTO as the norm, so                     that others will also be
 forced to do the same - an extension of the 1992 Blair House                     approach to agriculture
 in the Uruguay Round.
 And if the unpublished Brazil cotton ruling, and the one                     yet to come out on sugaragainst the EC show anything, it is the difficulty to 'prove'                     that something contrary
 to rules is being done under green, blue etc. Those subsidising                     illegally can just delay
 producing data in their possession, or plead commercial secrecy,                     and since the onus
 of proof rests first on the complainant, nothing can be done.                     Whether any adverse
 inference can be drawn or not, has been ruled to be a question                     of fact, and hence not
 amenable to reversal by the appellate body.
 There are some positive elements in the agriculture annex                     over export subsidies andexport credits, and how to discipline these through future                     negotiations.
 But the question of how these export subsidies will be eliminated                     and the reductioncommitments effected by 'progressive annual instalments' is                     left open. Would the
 majority of export subsidies be reduced in a final instalment                     (and backloaded into the
 distant future) or would it be cut in an initial installment.                     This is not clear either, but
 left to negotiations.
 And without cuts in domestic support in developed countries,                     and with the shieldingof the domestic markets of developed countries on 'sensitive'                     products, the
 competitive exporters of developing countries would still                     be at a disadvantage in these
 markets, or in matching the reduced subsidies or credits in                     third markets.
 Developing countries with a defensive interest - whether                     in G20 or G33 - have beenfor the moment left alone to fight the market access battle                     later - but still under a
 tiered 'single formula'.
 There is no empirical evidence to support the view that developing                     countries needonly longer time span and lesser cuts to adjust. This non-economic,                     but ideological
 view of the AoA and Marrakesh treaty, is now carried into                     the framework.
 So developing countries with defensive interests need not                     think they have beenspared. It is just a new attempt to split the G-20 and the                     G-33.
 Those developing countries with 'aggressive' or export interest                     also get nothing: unless the domestic support in developed countries is drastically                     reduced, no amount
 of 'substantial improvement' in tariff lines for market access                     will create a level playing
 ground.
 After Doha, the US enacted its Farm Bill (2002), and this                     aid is mandated well intothe future as counter-cyclical payments to farmers: when prices                     fall support will
 increase, in effect insulating the farmers from the market                     and market-based reforms.
 Some of these payments were found (after very costly evidence                     gathering andresearch by Brazil) in the Brazil vs US cotton dispute to                     be in violation of the US
 commitments under agriculture.
 On this basis, the panel went on to judge the effect of the                     US subsidy on third marketsfor Brazilian cotton exports and judged it had been hurt.                     All these may now be
 reversed and payments accommodated in the 'new US Blue Box'                     (second tiret of
 paragraph 13 of Annex A for amending Art. 6.5 of AoA) and                     then gradually reduced
 (but not eliminated).
 The second tiret of para 13 of the agriculture annex, for                     changes to Art. 6.5 of theAoA, is tailored to meet the US needs. The framework ensures                     it. Only some details
 are left for the next stage of negotiations.
 No wonder at Mauritius, USTR Robert Zoellick was purring                     like a cat that swallowedthe canary.
 The Marrakesh Agreement and the AoA was supposed to have                     laid out a reversal ofcourse in agriculture and set in motion a process of reform                     over a period on
 agricultural support in all three pillars (domestic support,                     export subsidy and market
 access) to bring that trade into line with market-forces.
 The AMS was set on a particular time period calculation,                     and cuts were to be effectedon that. But the de minimis, and the lack of product specificity,                     plus the leeway for
 the supposedly non-trade distorting 'green box' support was                     misused to the point that
 the support levels now are much higher than in 1995.
 Instead of cuts from the point at the end of that implementation                     period (end 2003), theceilings and caps are to be set at the Final Bound AMS (UR                     commitments) plus
 allowed de minimis plus a level to be determined of blue box                     payments - and then cut
 by developed countries on a harmonised basis.
 The green box itself was framed to enable the developed world                     to put all its subsidiesfrom the treasury into the 'green box', knowing developing                     countries can't afford such
 payments
 Though there is some reference to reviewing the green box                     criteria, it is to be in termsof its "basic concepts, principles and effectiveness"                     and to take "due account of
 non-trade concerns."
 There will be no particular new disciplines nor reductions,                     only a promise of the'particular' importance of the improved obligations for monitoring                     and surveillance.
 
 The blue box level is now to be set at an agreed percentage                     of average total value of
 agricultural production during a historical period. Both the                     percentage and the
 historical period are to be agreed in negotiations.
 The original AMS excluded product-specific domestic support                     upto 5% of total valueof the agricultural product during the agriculture year. Also                     excluded was non-product
 specific domestic support upto 5% of total value of agricultural                     production. This is
 already a substantial exemption.
 Read together, the new proposals will mean that the AMS plus                     the allowed deminimis, will be increased further by the new 'blue box' level                     to be negotiated.
 This is apart from the green box availability. To avoid or prevent circumvention of agreement and box- or                     product-shifting ofsupport, product-specific AMS is to be capped at their respective                     average levels
 during a historical basis to be agreed.
 The term 'historical basis' occurs too often; but it is not                     clear when 'history' begins or'ends' for the AoA. Is it pre- or post-Uruguay Round? pre-Doha                     or post-Doha?
 The Groser text envisages that "some" (but not                     all!) of these product specific caps arethen to be reduced.
 And de minimis is to be reduced by an agreed percentage,                     not cut either. The United States and Europe and Japan could drive a coach                     and four through thesegaps.
 All in all, the failure of developed countries to reverse                     course after Marrakesh, andthe current estimated support now of $350 billion will be                     legitimised and then perhaps
 cut over a period.
 In return, at the moment the US and EC are getting a Trade                     Facilitation agreement -which in fact will be an agreement where all the ideas that                     they had been pushing, but
 failed to get agreements (in the Tokyo Round and the Uruguay                     Round) will be
 resurrected to expand the space in developing country markets                     for TNCs of Europe,
 US and Japan., with developing undertaking shipping and transport                     infrastructure
 improvement to facilitate these.
 However, in the US and Europe, the exports of the developing                     world can easily beblocked or their trade "unfacilitated" by the various                     defensive measures already in
 their armoury (anti-dumping etc) plus the new 'security' related                     restrictions under the
 plea of fighting 'terror'.
 At some not too distant medium-term, the various subsidies                     can be increased undersome other count, and legitimised promised to be cut in future                     negotiations - in return
 for negotiating agreements in one, two or the three dormant                     Singapore issues.
 When this happens, those who pushed for 'flexibility' at                     Mauritius can take the credit. In market access, the provision for protection of sensitive                     products of developedcountries is assured - with a purported maximum number as                     "close approximation"
 to the number of tariff lines with out-of-quota tariff rates.
 By one calculation, some trade experts said that as many                     as 25% of the EU's tarifflines could be brought under 'sensitive products' and shielded,                     and more than 30%
 of the tariff lines of Japan and a few others. While this                     may hurt the US and its
 exports, and thus the US could be expected to oppose it, the                     provision also would
 enable the US to use the approach to prevent imports on its                     own 'sensitive products'
 - cotton, dairy products and sugar.
 The Groser text also talks that no sensitive product category                     could be completelyshielded.
 However, the demand of Brazil and others that there should                     by a limit on high tariffs(resisted by Japan and others who wish to vary, and even increase                     tariffs for example
 on rice etc) is left for future negotiations - to be dealt                     with in terms of a 'role of tariff
 caps under a tiered formula'.
 In contrast, there is only a promise of negotiating Special                     Products ('sensitiveproducts' for developing countries) and a Special Safeguard                     Mechanism (SSM) - and
 both to be made coherent with each other. The basis for selection                     and treatment of
 these sensitive products for developing countries is to be                     established in the
 negotiations. The question of SSM itself (para 38) remains                     under negotiations.
 In the paragraph 43 on Special Safeguard Mechanism for the                     developing countries,there is a mention at the end of "under conditions to                     be agreed". This gives the
 impression that the SSM will not be applicable to all products                     by the developing
 countries, but only to some selected products. This is asymmetric                     and iniquitous.
 Added to the yet to be achieved fullest liberalization of                     tropical products (fromHeberler report time in the late 1950s and early 60s at the                     old GATT), a promise
 recommitted at Montreal mid-term and the Marrakesh agreement)                     are now to be
 added products to diversify from illicit narcotic crops, and                     the question of
 long-standing preferences and addressing preference-erosion.
 May be all developing countries should diversify into narcotic                     crops for exportsonly, and then trade it off with promises to control and diversify,                     so that they could
 also get the benefits!
 Everyone except LDCs are to make a contribution in agriculture. The tariff reductions from 'bound rates' perhaps may help                     developing countries, butalso would be of greater help to the developed where there                     has been dirty tariffication.
 In NAMA, this issue is still dangling, and the Derbez text                     is still pushing aharmonised approach, with the tariff reductions from the bound                     rates or twice the
 applied MFN rates for non-bound tariffs, and 2001 as the base                     year.
 In contrast, in the Groser text for agriculture, the 'historical                     periods' are left to benegotiated. And if the past be any guide to the future, it                     will be post-Doha, rather than
 2001 or pre-Doha.
 Overall, the entire Oshima-Supachai text is completely biassed                     against developingcountries. Concluding such a bad framework package at the                     27 July General Council,
 and foreclosing developing country positions in the talks                     ahead, does not seem to
 serve any interest of any developing country or groups of                     countries.
 The WTO and its leaders, and its governments are in the business                     of promoting theinterests of corporations and enterprises - behind the rhetoric                     of growth, employment
 and poverty reduction, the WTO is a mercantilism organization.
 Any chief executive officer (CEO) of a corporation, at some                     point or other, will assessthe pros and cons of continuing a loss-making unit of the                     enterprise with no
 foreseeable prospect of turning into a profit-making one.                     At that point, the CEO
 would cut the losses and close down the unit or discontinue                     the line of production.
 There is nothing in the framework to benefit developing countries,                     or even enablethem to 'freeze' some of concessions made between Doha and                     Cancun. It will set the
 WTO on a course of potential danger to the institution itself,                     and it may be time for
 a pause and rethink.
 The WTO leadership, and even many trade ambassadors, have                     become too involvedto sit back and think again. But it is perhaps time for governments                     to think and act
 like a CEO, and see how useful it is to continue this kind                     of negotiating process with
 undigestible and unrelated agendas.
 +
    
                                         |