| The Decision-making Process and the Single UndertakingPresentation by Shefali Sharma, Institute for Agriculture                     and Trade Policy (IATP)
 WTO Symposium, June 17, 2003 - "Investment in                     the WTO? Myths and Realities" Panel
 Though this is the last subject on the panel, it is perhaps                     one of the most important subjects given that we have discussed                     some very serious implications of investment in the WTO. We                     have also discussed how BITs (Bilateral Investment Treaties)                     are a serious concern and that a multilateral framework in                     investment is not going to reduce their scope or their number.                     We have also talked about how there is not even a remote sense                     of consensus on any aspects of these negotiations much less                     an agreement on the clarification exercise. Given this, why                     is the decision-making process so crucial to discuss in the                     run up to Cancun? Today, we are 55 working days till Cancun. While the preparatory                     process began a month ago, today there is still no clarity                     as to what exactly this process entails. Will there be a declaration?                     A communiqué? A series of sheets of paper going to                     Cancun? Will there be a Ministerial draft text for Cancun                     and in what form? This will not be explicit until at least                     July 24th—the ONLY real General Council meeting scheduled                     during the entire preparatory process. After July, there will only be about 15 working days before                     September, meaning before the whole process moves to the capitals.                     15 days. How are governments, especially resource strapped                     ones, but ALL governments supposed to practically handle inputs                     into this process? How are they to ensure that the proceedings                     here are not only filtering to capital ministries, but also                     receiving feedback from citizens at home? Does this process facilitate inclusiveness and transparency?                     Especially--- especially since the list of outstanding and                     unresolved issues is long and complicated. There are currently                     a series of important issues at stake: agriculture, implementation,                     special and differential treatment, TRIPs and health, tariff                     liberalization in industrial products (which is another key                     area for developing countries), services and the four important                     decisions on the Singapore Issues. And all of these negotiations                     are in a state of deadlock! Nor is this an exhaustive list;                     there are a series of other decisions that Ministers are expected                     to take in Cancun.  Is this process more transparent, more predictable, more                     inclusive since Seattle? No. How do we judge this? For the                     following reasons:                     The entire process is informal. Apart from the July 24                       General Council meeting, there are two forms of meetings                       taking place. The first is the open ended Heads of Delegations                       or HOD Meetings (the ambassador plus one other person from                       the mission) where no minutes are taken and where meetings                       are “open” for all members. The entire process                       is informal. The second will be in the form of small group                       consultations or "green rooms." If any briefings                       of the small group consultations are to take place, they                       will be done in the HODs format. This means that there will                       be no formal records at all for most of the preparatory                       process. As the process escalates and momentum builds towards                       Cancun, it will become unclear how many meetings will be                       taking place simultaneously and it is even less likely that                       Ambassadors will be able to attend all "open-ended"                       HODs. The process is squeezed into a shorter time than the preparatory                       process for Doha, though more issues are on the table. Currently,                       members are dealing with 17 issue areas (this does not even                       count the subsidiary issues in each of these areas). But                       the process started much earlier for Doha. The process is unclear. As mentioned, we do not know what                       kind of concrete paper will be produced for the Ministerial,                       or what role "friends of the Chair" might play,                       etc. In this case, these “friends” are helping                       the chair move the process towards Cancun. In other cases,                       the term “friends” in the WTO could mean a group                       of countries interested in the same issue or supportive                       of it i.e. “friends of investment.” The process is entirely "chair-driven." This                       dangerous practice of reverse consensus has become habitual                       in the WTO. By "reverse consensus," I mean that                       normally in most UN bodies and as was supposed to be the                       norm at the WTO, consensus is achieved through a series                       of drafts that put forth a variety of positions that are                       then discussed openly (at the UN, they even project the                       draft onto a screen in the meeting room whereby members                       can see the changes being proposed). Consensus is then attempted                       collectively. The reverse consensus process (as I am defining                       it) at the WTO starts with a clean text i.e. differences                       in views are not reflected by the use of brackets in the                       text or are limited to very few brackets. The text is prepared                       by the Chair based on his or her understanding of where                       consensus lies, based on informal consultations and “on                       his own responsibility.” This process of reverse consensus                       requires enormous political or economic clout to alter language.                       Unless you have political clout or you are a member of a                       large coalition of countries that propose changes, amending                       the text is difficult.  Dr. Supachai, last February 2002 at the Intellectual Property                     Rights Commission meeting in London pledged that he would                     address decision-making issues at the WTO when he became Director                     General. But discussions on the issue of transparency and rules of                     procedure are also in a state of deadlock. The most recent                     draft regarding internal transparency is dated December 2002.                     Why? because a number of influential countries refuse to provide                     clarity on important demands from developing countries. For                     example, here are some of the basic proposals made by the                     Like Minded Group of developing countries that need a response:                                        Facilitators must be chosen in Geneva through a transparent                       process and must not be demandeurs of the issue they are                       chairing. For example, a Cairns member would not be eligible                       to chair the agricultural negotiations Meetings at the ministerial should be announced at least                       a few hours ahead so that all interested parties can attend                     Late night marathon meetings should be avoided It should be clear which country is proposing any draft                       proposal that is circulated during the Ministerial Delegations have the right to decide who speaks in meetings                       and should be allowed at least two representatives The most important issue in their proposal was that differences                       of position must be clearly reflected in Ministerial texts.                       These are very basic demands and result from the fact that                       none of these basic procedures were followed in Doha.
 For instance in Doha, there were all night green room consultations,                     during hich LDCs and the Africa Group were persuaded to reverse                     their positions. In the last plenary session, Barbados (not                     India) demanded an amendment on paragraphs referring to negotiations                     on the Singapore issues, followed by several other countries.                     However, they were ignored.  They had to settle for a chairman’s text that clarified                     that negotiations could not begin unless there was agreement                     on modalities. After Doha, the WTO was quick to state on its                     website that the Chair’s text was not part of the official                     Ministerial texts, though the chair read out his statement                     before the final gavel. The Doha story is a repeat of the Singapore Ministerial,                     with added drama because India was portrayed as the only dissenting                     voice. But in Singapore also, the decision to adopt the four                     Singapore issues was taken by 30 countries (of the then over                     120 members) in a green room. The Singapore Issues were then                     put on the WTO agenda in spite of opposition by many developing                     countries. The Singapore text states, “it is clearly                     understood that future negotiations, if any, regarding multilateral                     disciplines in these areas, will take place only after an                     explicit consensus.” Doha was a repeat of Singapore,                     only now members have included the term ‘modalities,’                     Meaning countries have to agree on the terms of negotiations                     before accepting to negotiate.  Are WTO members courageous enough to define “explicit                     consensus?” Allow me to define it for you as the following:                     Unless people state an approval to negotiate, there is no                     explicit consensus.  But when asked in the WTO what explicit consensus means,                     it is said, “it means the same as consensus.”                     And consensus in the WTO is “passive consensus,”                     which means that unless you object, you agree. This means                     that if you are not present in the room, you agree. As momentum builds to Cancun, pressure is building to put                     the Singapore Issues on “fast track.” This means                     that countries must decide yes or no to negotiate without                     having agreed to the elements of the negotiations-- a “yes                     or no” decision, despite the fact that the WGTI (Working                     Group on Trade and Investment) shows no sign of any agreement                     in the clarification exercise. This fast track approach is essentially signing a blank check                     to negotiate. We need to remember the TRIPs negotiations in                     the Uruguay Round where we started with talks about counterfeiting                     and ended up with 20 year monopoly rights. As a result, today                     there is deadlock on the TRIPs and health negotiation and                     the US Trade Representative suggests that governments should                     negotiate with their pharmaceutical companies to get a solution.                     Can we afford a similar process on four complex issues in                     the WTO? The Indian Prime Minister said on November 10, 2001, while                     Ministers met in Doha: “For most developing countries, the Uruguay Round had                     done little for economic growth, while poverty levels and                     income gaps have worsened…This is also why we have argued                     strongly that implementation issues should first be resolved                     before we try to widen the WTO agenda further. Our public                     is unwilling to accept another post-dated cheque, when an                     earlier one has bounced. » Now, hopes are pinned on Agriculture. But the US is hiding                     behind the EC criticism on CAP reform while it’s own                     farmbill continues to allow dumping onto the world market                     and the EU cap reform will do nothing but shift support from                     one box to another. European NGOs say, the « The EU’s                     current proposal would in effect not commit the EU to do more                     than it is already doing. » And we all know that there                     will be no real change until after 2013. Yet, both the US and the EU continue their quest for market                     access in Services, in Industrial products, in Agriculture                     from developing countries. In exchange for what? The Singapore                     Issues? Norway’s State Secretary of Trade said yesterday in                     the opening of the Symposium, « It took 50 years to                     negotiate industrial tariffs. Agriculture has just started.                     These things take time. This is a real challenge to us due                     to our climate conditions and the special role of agriculture.                     »  The question to ask Norway, then, (who is also a proponent                     of investment) : Is Norway willing to support LDCs, most African                     countries, Caribbean countries and many Asian countries who                     are saying we need more time to assess development implications                     of these issues in the WTO arena ? There is a special role                     for investment in developing countries, and they should have                     the right to decide in which fora and at what pace they should                     handle investment. We should first deal with the problems                     at hand with existing agreements.  A final note on technical assistance (TA), since it is often                     used as an excuse to introduce the Singapore issues at the                     WTO and within the trade departments of member state governments.                     According to the WTO Technical Cooperation Audit report handed                     to member states on the evaluation of such technical assistance                     activities for 2002, « “The current evaluation                     system does not provide evidence of the sustainability of                     the results since it stops where the TA ends. Indeed, sustainability                     can only be verified through ex-post evaluations taking place                     one-two years after the completion of the TA. Such evaluations                     may generate valuable information, but cannot be carried out                     without additional resources. In any case, there is little                     point in measuring the sustainability of individual activities,                     which are too short and specialized to have much long-term                     impact; that is not even their aim normally. »  WTO documents further admit that the Technical Assistance                     is quantity based and not on quality : “The emphasis                     in the prevailing approach to TA in the WTO is on quantity.                     This is perhaps not surprising given the demand-driven notion.                     But within this there is a need to focus also on the quality                     of the capacity-building. Squeezing complex issues into 2-3                     days when they need five, not providing an administrative                     assistant for regional seminars, reinventing presentations                     with each resource person who deals with a given subject,                     and omitting to make reference to local/regional issues, all                     detract from quality. » For all of the reasons we have heard today and the fact that                     the process leading up to Cancun is extremely untransparent                     and problematic, we must oppose a fast track approach to modalties                     for the Singapore Issues in Cancun. It is imperative for democracies                     everywhere. 
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