| more updates... After Cancun, Rich Man's 'Debacle' Is the Poor Man's                     'Moral Victory' By Jefferson Morleyspecial to washingtonpost.com
 Tuesday, September 16, 2003; 11:19 AM
 http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A18471-2003Sep16.html
 In the United States, the failure of the World Trade Organization                     meeting in Cancun, Mexico, to reach a new agreement was seen                     as a "debacle" that cast a shadow on the future                     of free trade. The online media in the world's poorer countries had a very                     different view.  The editors of The Times of India call it "a great                     moral victory for the world's poor."  In Malaysia, the New Straits Times hails "a victory                     for developing countries which have come into their own."  While the European and U.S. media have been more evenhanded                     in assessing blame, the banner headline in the Daily Star,                     a leading Bangladesh daily, proclaimed the consensus of the                     developing world: "Cancun Talks Collapse Over Rich's                     Rigidity."  There isn't a lot of dispute about what happened at Cancun.                     The world's wealthiest countries -- the United States, the                     European Union and Japan -- sought to expand trade rules into                     new areas such as foreign investment overseas, corruption                     and bureaucratic reduction.  These proposals, known to policy wonks as the "Singapore                     issues," were spurned by the poor nations, led by India,                     China and Brazil. They demanded that the wealthy countries                     first commit to a schedule of eliminating subsidies and protective                     tariffs for interest groups, including Japanese rice growers,                     U.S. textile manufacturers, and French farmers.  With a specificity that is all too rare in the Western economic                     press, the People's Daily, the organ of the communist party                     of China, yesterday gave some specific examples of what the                     poor countries view as unfair.  "The tariff on the goods imported from developing countries                     is 4-5 times on average higher than the tariff collected between                     developed countries," the Beijing-based news site notes.  "For example, a shirt produced by Bangladesh workers,                     after high customs duties are collected from it when entering                     the U.S. market, is more expensive than a shirt imported from                     Britain. . . . American clothes imported from India are charged                     19 percent tax, whereas clothes imported from France, Japan                     and Germany are charged only 0-1 percent tax. The average                     tax rate on goods imported by the United States from Vietnam                     is 8 percent, whereas the tax ratio on goods imported from                     Holland is only 1 percent."  Another example: "U.S. cotton growers get government                     subsidies exceeding $3 billion a year, according to figures                     released by the international cotton advisory committee. These                     subsidies have caused a 25 percent cotton price reduction                     on the world market. This is disastrous to the cotton growers                     of poor nations."  The Times of India says that "Any sign of weakness                     or concessions from the developing countries at the Mexican                     resort would only have further skewed the already lopsided                     terms of global trade."  "It was important to tell the western world that unless                     there was a time-bound commitment to end farm subsidies once                     and for all, there was simply no way forward. After all, in                     the 10 years since the Uruguay round, which gave birth to                     the WTO, farm subsidies in the U.S. and the EU have, instead                     of being scaled down, shot up: From $180 billion to more than                     $300 billion. With the developing countries forced to liberalize                     trade and open up markets, this has brought millions of Third                     World farmers to the brink of penury and starvation. "  There were benefits for wealthy countries out of the failure                     in Cancun, as Japan Today, a Tokyo news site, acknowledges                     today.  "The breakdown . . . saved Japan from being forced to                     take tougher farm-liberalization measures such as significant                     tariff cuts for politically sensitive rice. . . . Agricultural                     products, particularly rice, are highly protected in Japan                     as many governing party lawmakers depend on farmers for votes."  In Johannesburg, South Africa, The Independent blames the                     attitude of the rich countries.  "What is needed is for the U.S. and EU to acknowledge                     their role in the collapse of talks. It has been clear for                     a while that developing countries were not going to accept                     anything less than an agreement by the EU and U.S. to cut                     their massive farm subsidies," The Independent writes.  But the celebration in the poorer countries was tempered                     by concern that the trade barriers to markets in the wealthy                     countries remain in place:  "The breakdown of talks was the biggest defeat for                     trade liberalisation since a chaotic meeting in Seattle in                     1999 was rocked by violent street protests and a similar revolt                     by poor countries," notes Bangladesh's Daily Star.  "There is now a danger that the talks failure could                     hasten the formation of regional trading blocs and country-to-country                     deals, which will hit the poorest nations hardest." © 2003 Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive |