| INVESTMENT WORKING GROUP MEETING ILLUSTRATES MODALITIES                     SPLITDate: June 13, 2003
 The last formal meeting of the World Trade Organization's                     investment working group before the September Cancun ministerial                     illustrated the deep divisions among members on how specific                     the mandate must be in order to proceed with investment negotiations                     and over how broad the scope of a potential agreement should                     be. The debate over the scope of an agreement is centered                     on whether an investment agreement should cover so-called                     portfolio investment as the U.S. wants or be limited to foreign                     direct investment as developing countries want. These divisions are accompanied by a debate on whether WTO                     members should proceed to investment negotiations at all,                     Geneva sources said. Countries such as India and Malaysia, for example, expressed                     serious opposition to the appropriateness of the WTO as the                     venue for negotiations on an investment agreement. There is                     a huge divergence of views on whether the WTO is the appropriate                     venue for investment negotiations, said a developing country                     official. On modalities, members are split into two camps with developed                     and developing countries pushing for vastly different approaches.                     Developed countries, such as the EU and Japan, are advocating                     vague modalities that would include items such as the scheduling                     of meetings, the naming of a chair and other procedural issues,                     according to trade officials. The U.S., according to Geneva trade officials, has not yet                     fully staked out its position on modalities for investment                     negotiations. However, last month a U.S. trade official said                     that given the disagreements among members it could be difficult                     to get a very elaborate statement on modalities at the end                     of the day. The official said modalities could range anywhere                     from procedural issues such as the establishment of deadlines                     to more substantive issues. Developing countries such as Brazil, India, Malaysia and                     other Southeast Asian nations which have traditionally been                     cool to investment negotiations contend that any modalities                     must be detailed and specific and clearly outline what issues                     will be addressed in any negotiations, according to developing                     country officials. The possibility for us to influence the                     shape of an agreement is right now, not after the negotiations                     have begun, said one developing country official. That point was made in a paper presented by a group of 26                     developing countries to this week's meeting of the Trade Negotiations                     Committee that insisted that modalities would have to provide                     certainty on the structure and precise content of negotiations.                     But one Geneva diplomat said the significance of the June                     6 proposal, which was supported by India and Malaysia, is                     that it does not reject the idea of negotiations on Singapore                     issues out of hand. Developing countries are looking for negotiating modalities                     to be specific enough so as to allow for the provision of                     policy space, according to one Asian trade official. Such                     policy space could include carve-outs for developing countries                     that would exempt them from certain obligations, such as post-establishment                     national treatment requirements for foreign investors, said                     the official. The idea of policy space could also address pre-establishment                     issues for developing countries that would give them the flexibility                     to screen possible foreign investors and determine whether                     to condition investments by channeling them into certain sectors,                     said the official.  Another possible policy space issue is the desire by some                     developing countries to prevent an investment agreement from                     introducing further restrictions in the WTO's Agreement on                     Trade Related Investment Measures, according to a developing                     country official. That official said developing countries would like to retain                     their ability to require investors to engage in joint ventures                     with local firms. Additionally, the official said developing                     countries might push for new TRIMS flexibility with respect                     to export performance requirements.  In contrast, supporters of vague modalities argue that any                     substantive differences on how to proceed in the negotiations                     can be addressed in the negotiations themselves. This point                     was made in a paper presented to the working group by Canada,                     Korea and Costa Rica, that said very real progress has been                     made in clearing the underbrush for a greater understanding                     of issues to be taken into account during negotiations. The                     paper said that outstanding differences could be settled in                     the negotiations themselves, which they want to start at the                     Cancun ministerial.  According to the paper, an investment agreement could take                     into account in a balanced way the interests of all Members                     of the WTO-developed, developing and least-developed alike.                     For developing countries, that would mean an agreement that                     would allow members to undertake any obligations and commitments                     commensurate with their individual needs and circumstances. An investment agreement would have to reflect in a balanced                     manner the interests of home and host countries, and take                     account of development policies and the objectives of host                     governments including their right to regulate in the public                     interest, according to the paper. The paper received mixed reviews with one Asian trade official                     describing it as a waste of time, because it did not contain                     anything new. Another developing country official also said                     the paper merely re-stated well-known positions. The U.S. said it agreed with the principal message of the                     paper, namely that negotiations on investment should begin                     at Cancun, according to a Geneva source. The EU backed the                     U.S. position, saying that it supported most of the paper,                     and that disagreements over certain issues could be worked                     out in the negotiations, a position also supported by Japan.                     The EU also said it was the job of the working group merely                     to clarify issues not to agree on them, the source said. Six other WTO members expressed their support for the beginning                     of negotiations on investment at Cancun this week; Australia,                     Hungary, Norway, Taiwan, Switzerland and Hong Kong. The U.S. has long advocated a building block approach to                     an investment agreement, meaning an agreement could cover                     transparency and non-discrimination. The U.S. has insisted                     that the elements detailed in the Doha Declaration on investment                     are not necessarily elements for an eventual investment agreement. Paragraph 22 of the Doha declaration calls on countries to                     focus on the clarification of: scope and definition; transparency;                     non-discrimination; modalities for establishing commitments                     based on a GATS-type, positive list approach, development                     provisions; exceptions and balance-of-payments safeguards;                     consultation and the settlement of disputes between members. Division on these issues was apparent at this week's meeting                     of the working group on the relationship between trade and                     investment when the U.S. challenged China on two elements                     contained in the Doha Declaration. On transparency, the U.S. challenged China on its assertion                     that transparency need only be defined as the simple notification                     of new laws. The U.S. advocated that investment transparency                     should include provisions for judicial review and prior notification                     of proposed new laws relevant to investors. The U.S. also challenged China on non-discrimination provisions                     saying that the same level of treatment must be afforded to                     foreign and domestic investors. Inside US Trade  |