| more updates...  Tequila sunset in CancúnSept. 17th 2003
 From The Economist Global Agenda
 The world trade summit in Cancún, Mexico, has                     collapsed without agreement. Its fate may have been sealed                     seven years ago in Singapore IN THE end, there were no bleary-eyed negotiators emerging                     in the early hours of the morning with a last-minute deal,                     no forced smiles putting a brave face on a forced compromise.                     By mid-afternoon on Sunday September 14th, Luis Ernesto Derbez,                     chairman of the world-trade talks in Cancún and foreign                     minister of Mexico, made up his mind that the talks were heading                     nowhere. In the early evening, he brought the World Trade                     Organisation's five-day summit to a formal close, with just                     six paragraphs of official pronouncements, and plenty of unofficial                     rumours and recriminations.  Failure at Cancún was not a complete surprise; WTO                     members have, after all, failed to meet any of the deadlines                     set at the launch of this trade round in Doha, Qatar. But                     the manner of the failure left some bemused. The talks did                     not, as many had predicted, collapse over agricultural subsidies.                     A long Saturday night of negotiations had apparently found                     some scope for agreement between the rich world, which spends                     about $300 billion each year subsidising its farmers, and                     the G22, a newly formed block ofdeveloping nations. Instead, the proximate cause of death                     for the talks was the so-called Singapore issues.
  In 1996, ministers met in Singapore and talked about incorporating                     rules on foreign investment, competition policy, government                     purchases and "trade facilitation" (things like                     customs clearance) into the WTO. It was time, said some, to                     write the rules for globalisation. If you want to put your                     money in a foreign country, get your goods cleared by a foreign                     customs official, or sell to a foreign government, you should                     have international rules to play by. Likewise, if you wanted                     to collude with a foreign competitor, youshould have international as well as national laws to dodge.
  Some of the proposed rules made sense on their own terms.                     Customs procedures in much of the developing world, for example,                     are trade-debilitating, not trade-facilitating. It takes almost                     11 days on average to get goods that have been sent by sea                     cleared by Indian customs, for instance. Only the customs                     officials themselves benefit from such tardiness. But if the                     rules were worth having, why not let countries adopt them                     of their own accord? Why should a global organisation police                     them? Poor countries in particular did not want to take on                     a new set of international obligations, some of which might                     prove costly to implement and monitor. Worse, if they signed                     up to new obligations, then failed to fulfil them, they could                     be hit with trade sanctions.  Rules on foreign investment proved especially controversial                     at Cancún. Proponents of globalisation have long argued                     that inward investment not only brings new money into a poor                     country, it also brings new expertise and technology, which                     "spills over" to local firms and workers. Poor-country                     governments have devised many a strategy to encourage these                     spill-overs, by requiring foreign companies to undertake joint                     ventures with local firms, for example. They fear that rich                     countries want to take these rules on investment out of their                     hands. Some of these fears are probably premature. Investment                     negotiations, if started at all, would have started small,                     with relatively innocuous calls for more transparency. The                     WTOwould not write countries' investment rules for them; it would                     simply require them to be upfront about what those rules were.
  But if poor countries do not want to hear about the Singapore                     issues, why are some richer countries so keen to talk about                     them? The United States, which invests a great deal abroad,                     has some interest in protecting those investments with WTO                     rules. It recently concluded trade pacts with Chile and Singapore,                     for example, that restricted their use of capital controls.                     But the Americans view the rest of the Singapore agenda with                     some diffidence. They would not take kindly, for example,                     to having the antitrust decisions of theirjudges trumped by a world competition policy set at the WTO's                     headquarters in Geneva. The main proponents of the Singapore                     issues are the EU, already accustomed to supranational rules                     on competition and government procurement, and Japan. But                     even among the EU's members, opinion is divided, and few companies                     are throwing their weight behind the EU's stance.
  Some cynics suggest that the Singapore issues are just chaff                     thrown up by the EU and Japan to disguise their own intransigence                     over agriculture. Ever since the current round of trade talks                     was launched in 2001, Japan and the EU have been on the defensive.                     The Doha round's focus on agricultural liberalisation has                     forced them to defend some of the most illiberal but well-entrenched                     systems of agricultural protection in the world. Japan's import                     tariffs on rice go up to 1,000%, for instance. The EU spends                     more on annual subsidies for each of its cows than most sub-Saharan                     Africans earn in a year. Both insist on progress on the Singapore                     issues as a quid pro quo for long-overdue agricultural reforms                     that still seem politically beyond them. If poor countries                     refuse to yield ground, the EU and Japan can blame them for                     their inflexibility over the Singapore issues, rather than                     taking the b  Nonetheless, the EU did give ground at Cancún, albeit                     belatedly. On Sunday afternoon, it suggested dropping all                     but one or two of the Singapore issues from this trade round,                     leaving only trade facilitation and, possibly, government                     procurement in the negotiations. The offer, if it was ever                     truly on the table, was a good one. But by this late stage,                     the EU's interlocutors were about ready to kick the table                     over. The African Union refused the Europeans' offer, partly                     because its own pleas for an end to cotton subsidieshad been stonewalled earlier in the week by the Americans.                     Then South Korea (backed by Japan) insisted on all four Singapore                     issues being negotiated together. At that point, Mr Derbez                     threw in the towel.
  At the end of the talks, Celso Amorim, Brazil's foreign                     minister, put a positive spin on the collapse. Though Cancún                     had not produced an agreement, he said, it had forged a new                     coalition of developing countries, which had refused to fall                     apart or roll over. Certainly, the developing world conceded                     nothing at the summit. But the G22 should aim to be more than                     just another mercantilist negotiating block, demanding that                     other countries lower their barriers while resisting calls                     to lower its own. Poor countries have as much, if not more,                     to gain from lowering their own barriers with each other as                     they do from overcoming rich-country obstinacy.  Besides, that obstinacy needs to be properly tested. The                     American delegation, for one, came to this summit talking                     a good game. They proposed to eliminate tariffs on all manufactured                     and consumer goods by 2015, and to cut agricultural tariffs                     by 76% over five years. They were prepared to be bold, they                     said, if other countries were bold too. Of course, this might                     have been empty posturing. If so, Cancún was a missed                     opportunity to call their bluff.   |