| EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT HEARING                     DISCUSSES SINGAPORE ISSUES  Brussels 12 June 2003 (TWN Service):  European Trade Commissioner Mr. Pascal Lamy has insisted                     that the Singapore issues is part of the single undertaking                     agreed to at the WTO's Doha Ministerial Conference.  He also confirmed that the EC and the US do not agree on                     the scope of a possible WTO investment agreement, with the                     EC wanting to limit it to foreign direct investment and the                     US wanting to also include portfolio investment. Commenting                     that such differences are not unusual, he admitted: "What                     the final result will be I can't say."  Mr. Lamy was speaking on Wednesday at a public hearing at                     the European Parliament on "WTO: Agriculture, TRIPS,                     Singapore Issues", organized by its Committee on Industry,                     External Trade, Research and Energy.  The hearing saw lively debates on the EC position on the                     Singapore issues, intellectual property and agriculture.  Several participants expressed concerns about the negative                     effects on developing countries of the proposed new rules,                     especially investment and competition, being put forward by                     the EC. They were also concerned about the untransparent decision-making                     practices at previous Ministerial Conferences and worried                     that similar tactics may be used at or before Cancun to artificially                     create a "consensus" to begin negotiations.  Mr Lamy initially said he would not like to enter the controversy                     whether the Singapore issues are part of the single undertaking.                     However, when asked by Euopean Parliamentarian Harlem Desir                     to clarify whether the European Commission could revise its                     position on the Singapore issues and whether they were really                     part of the single undertaking agreed to, Lamy said: "Yes                     it is part of the list of issues and is part of the single                     undertaking."  Lamy said multilateral rules on the Singapore issues are                     needed as they give a multilateral dimension to bilateral                     and regional rules. The multilateral rules will enable developing                     countries to "better master their integration in the                     world economy and can protect the weak against the strong,"                     he said, adding that in each area the developing countries                     should be able to keep the room for manouvre they desire to                     have their own development policies.  Desir however pointed out to Lamy that more than 20 developing                     countries had stated the previous day in Geneva that there                     were still many differences among Members on the Singapore                     issues, indicating their lack of interest in negotiating these                     issues. "We are looking here at issues that the EC is                     pushing for but in which the developing countries are not                     interested. Could this lead the EC to revise its position                     on these issues, and do you still think it is part of the                     single undertaking?"  Desir also said that although in Lamy's view a WTO investment                     agreement would only cover foreign direct investment, the                     United States wanted to also include portfolio investment.                     He asked Lamy how he could then be sure that the agreement                     would be restricted to FDI.  Replying, Lamy said that the Doha process was quite tricky,                     the Singapore issues were an important point in the negotiations                     and that they are part of the list and part of the single                     undertaking.  Regarding the scope of investment, Lamy said it was true                     the EU position is different from the US position, but this                     was not unusual. "What the final result will be I cannot                     say. If the EU and US don't agree, it is not my way of seeing                     it that the EU will give in to the US."  To another question whether the EC would support the proposal                     by Burkino Faso and other African countries that the Cancun                     Ministerial resolve to eliminate cotton subsidies, Lamy said                     there was no problem with the EU position on cotton as it                     did not have export subsidies and its support to cotton was                     only 100 million euro a year. "Our proposals on agriculture                     provide for increase in market access and reduction in domestic                     support. It's the Americans who are in the front line (in                     relation to cotton)."  Another European Parliamentarian asked Lamy why the EC was                     demanding developing countries to liberalize water supply                     through the services negotiations, and whether he knew that                     these countries were facing heavy pressures to liberalise                     from both the Bretton Woods institutions and the WTO.  Lamy said in the EC demands on water to developing countries,                     "we leave them a margin of sovereignty to decide on prices                     to charge, and whether services are universally provided,                     and so on." He believed the objectives of increasing                     public access to water cannot be met except through the private                     sector's installation of water supply facilities in developing                     countries, as it was not possible for the public sector to                     do it.  He also criticized the World Bank and IMF for having used                     conditionality for loans to impose trade liberalization on                     developing countries, which is not necessarily consistent                     with the organisations' job descriptions. "Some developing                     countries went through traumatic experiences as this opening                     was imposed on them as part of a financial deal."  Lamy's statement on the status of the Singapore issues merely                     reiterates the EC position in the WTO. The European Communities                     paper to the General Council on the Singapore Issues - The                     Question of Modalities (27 February 2003) states that the                     Singapore issues "are a key element of the Doha Development                     Agenda and part and parcel of the Single Undertaking."  This however is disputed by delegations from developing                     countries. For example, at a seminar on investment in Geneva                     in March, India's permanent representative to the WTO, Amb.                     K.M. Chandrasekhar, said the EC interpretation "is not                     legally correct. Paragraph 47 of the Doha Ministerial Declaration                     says, "With the exception of the improvements and clarifications                     of the Dispute Settlement Understanding, the conduct, conclusion                     and entry into force of the negotiations shall be treated                     as parts of a single undertaking." Thus, only the outcome                     of negotiations can form part of the single undertaking.  "Paragraph 20 of the Singapore Ministerial Declaration                     of 13 December 1996 clearly stipulates as follows: "It                     is clearly understood that future negotiations, if any, regarding                     multilateral disciplines in these areas, will take place only                     after an explicit consensus decision is taken among WTO Members                     regarding such negotiations."  "As we are all aware, no decision of any kind has been                     taken on the basis of explicit consensus at subsequent Ministerial                     Conferences at Geneva (1998), Seattle (1999) and Doha (2001).                     Thus, the status of the discussion remains exactly the same                     as was decided at the Singapore Ministerial Conference. This                     position was reiterated in the Chairman's concluding statement                     at Doha which recognises the right of each Member to "take                     a position on modalities that would prevent negotiations from                     proceeding after the Fifth Ministerial Conference, until that                     Member is prepared to join in an explicit consensus."                     Earlier, in a session on Singapore issues at the hearing,                     James Howard, director of ICFTU (International Confederation                     of Free Trade Unions), said the international trade union                     movement opposed the proposal for Cancun to give a green light                     to WTO investment negotiations.  "We are concerned by the proposal to include national                     treatment provisions, which would eliminate governments' autonomy                     to pursue their chosen economic and social strategies,"                     he said. "We believe that investment agreements must                     exclude any National Treatment provisions, whether pre or                     post establishment.  "It appears clear the current proposals would not aim                     to replace bilateral investment agreements but merely add                     one further layer of investor protections. It would not deprive                     multinational companies of their rights to use the existing                     bilateral treaties to their advantage nor introduce a single                     obligation to regulate the behaviour of those companies."  Howard also said the ICFTU believed a convincing case has                     not been made for negotiating a competition agreement in the                     WTO, with its focus on dispute resolutions and trade liberalisation,                     not consumer protection. "We are particularly concerned                     about the current proposals to base competition policy discussions                     at the WTO on the principle of non-discrimination, which would                     prevent governments from applying different treatment to their                     domestic companies.  "We are also opposed to the proposal to require all                     WTO members to legislate and implement a competition policy-something                     which in our view should be left to any WTO member to decide                     upon, depending on their own choices."  Martin Khor, director of the Third World Network, said that                     many developing countries had for many years been against                     the entry of the Singapore issues into the WTO and it was                     only because of manipulative practices and the lack of transparency                     and proper procedures that the Doha decision was made on negotiating                     these issues on the basis of an explicit consensus on the                     modalities.  He said if all WTO Members were allowed to properly participate                     in the Cancun Ministerial and the process leading to it, it                     was unlikely that negotiations would be launched, as most                     developing countries were against this. He criticized the                     EC approach to "modalities" as an attempt to trivialise                     the concept by defining it as procedures and a categorization                     of issues.  By ignoring the need for substantive agreement on the issues                     and obligations, which are required in any consensus on "modalities",                     as seen in the agriculture negotiations, Khor said the EC                     approach was aimed at making it easier for it to claim that                     there was a consensus on the Singapore issues when in fact                     that was none.  He warned that if negotiations began, the WTO would become                     overloaded with new agreements that were not part of its trade                     mandate, and the organisation's work and rules would become                     distorted and more imbalanced. Developing countries would                     also take on heavier obligations which would severely limit                     their ability to forumulate the policies they require for                     development.  Claus-Dieter Ehlermann, former Chairman of the WTO's Appellate                     Body and a former Director General of the EC's Competition                     division, said the initial EC proposals for a WTO competition                     agreement had been strongly opposed by the US anti-trust community                     for being counter-productive and a threat to the organic development                     of domestic antitrust policies, as well as the WTO being the                     wrong forum for antitrust implementation.  He added that most developing countries had also expressed                     concerns that this proposal was another pretext to help multinationals                     break into their economies.  However, the positions of the parties now show a growing                     degree of convergence as in particular the EU has abandoned                     its initial stance for a broad competition agreement and now                     has limited its requests to a few fairly modest points.  He said although some degree of convergence has been achieved,                     "no consensus has been reached on the launching of negotiations                     in Cancun. Several issues are still open to debate. In particular,                     many developing countries remain to be convinced of the benefits                     that a WTO Competition Law Agreement would bring for their                     development.  "Moreover some developing countries ask for adequate                     and effective special and differential treatment. Thailand                     for instance has proposed that developing countries should                     be allowed to exempt national and international export cartels,                     a request that industrialised countries do not seem willing                     to accept."  Ehlermann said there was however room for optimism, but                     whether competition negotiations start in WTO will depend                     not on competition questions alone as more will depend on                     other issues, especially agriculture.  In response to the presentations, a parliamentarian said                     he was concerned at how the European Commission was overloading                     the WTO agenda and system. The Uruguay Round promises made                     by developed countries to developing countries were not kept,                     the Singapore issues went beyond the mandate of the WTO and                     are generating new risks for developing countries.  Another parliamentarian said she was concerned that the                     process of decision-making at WTO Ministerial Conferences                     was not fair or transparent, as she had personally witnessed                     at Doha. She asked what would happen in Cancun if the developing                     countries could participate more fairly in the decision making?  Khor replied that he believed most developing countries                     were either opposed to or not prepared to begin negotiations.                     This is evident from the position taken at the LDC Trade Ministers'                     Conference earlier this month, that the LDCs were not able                     to take part effectively in the discussions so far, and that                     further discussion is necessary on the Singapore issues.  He said that developing countries were upset at the lack                     of transparency and procedures at Ministerial Conferences,                     and a large number of them had proposed some simple and basic                     rules, for instance that proposals made by them should be                     included in drafts of declarations or decisions, that all                     Ministers or delegations be allowed to attend meetings, and                     that any proposal to extend the Conference should be put to                     all members.  However even such simple procedures had not been accepted                     by the developed countries, he said. This was a sign that                     they wanted the flexibility to use unfair tactics and procedures                     and thus to have their way at the forthcoming Ministerial                     Conference at the expense of those countries that do not agree                     with their views.  Unless these undemocratic and untransparent methods of running                     meetings and making decisions were reformed, any decisions                     taken to negotiate the Singapore issues would lack public                     legitimacy, he concluded. |