| Geneva Update and Geneva Action Alert!June 23, 2002
 Trade Information Project
 IATP Geneva
  Japan to Present Fast Track Approach to Negotiating                     Singapore Issues in the WTO  According to a few sources in Geneva today, it is rumored                     that Japan is preparing a paper for the General Council meeting                     of July 24 where it will present its « modalities paper                     » on the four Singapore Issues (Investment, Competition,                     Government Procurement and Trade Facilitation). According                     to sources, Japan will acknowledge that the clarification                     exercise regarding issues such Investment and Competition                     is « over » and that members must now take decisions                     for the launch of the negotiations.  According to these sources, Japan will propose « procedural                     » modalities (already proposed by the European Communities                     in the Spring). These «procedural modalities»                     will be proposed to sidestep the deadlock that exists on each                     of the substantive issues regarding the negotiations. It is                     evident to all including the chairs of these working groups                     that no consensus, explicit or otherwise, exists on any substantive                     area of the 4 issues amongst the membership. Procedural modalities                     refer to drafting a framework for an agreement that only outlines                     the timing of the negotiations. For instance, the Japanese                     paper is said to mention three time periods for the beginning                     and ending of negotiations: Tabling of proposals by December                     2003, First Draft by Summer of 2004 and the Final Revision                     of the Agreements by end of 2004. By doing this, Japan will                     challenge the majority of the membership that believe that                     «modalities» must be of a substantive nature if                     they are to be agreed upon at all.  The process leading to the General Council meeting will                     entail small group consultations by each of the four chairs                     of the Working Groups in conjunction with the General Council                     Chair (none of these chairs have been given express authority                     by the membership to consult). The membership was not in agreement                     that the work of the four working groups is taken over by                     the General Council, but the General Council Chair announced                     that this would be done. The « friends of the Chair»,                     as the four chairs are being referred to, are to meet with                     the General Council Chair this week to further clarify the                     process.  Ambassadors have just begun to arrive from Sharm El Sheikh,                     Egypt where a mini-ministerial was held to the exclusion of                     all but 31 WTO members. Early reports state that « no                     progress » was made on any issues, including the Singapore                     Issues. But informal consultations were held today at the                     WTO and will continue tomorrow on the issue of Competition.  WTO Multilateral process for Cancun in Chairpersons’                     Control New Zealand says that delegations must rely on Chairmen’s                     judgment “based on meetings and private contacts.”  Thursday, June 19, Ambassadors to the WTO met with the Director                     General as Chair of the Trade Negotiating Committee (TNC)                     and General Council Chair, Uruguayan Carlos Perez del Castillo.                     Driven by these Chairs, the process of informal negotiations                     has begun for a draft text for Ministers in Cancun. In fact,                     some members are complaining that unlike pre-Doha where at                     least the General Council Chair consulted with the membership                     on the preparatory process, for Cancun the Chairs themselves                     are dictating the process. The draft text for Cancun will                     include all of the elements of the checklist that was distributed                     to the membership on May 27th. The checklist includes all                     of the areas currently in negotiations at the WTO and those                     areas that the Doha Ministerial Declaration cites for action                     by Ministers at the 5th Ministerial Conference in Cancun.  According to ambassadors present in the room, Malaysia made                     a strong statement about the need to reflect differences of                     positions in any draft texts for Cancun. Among other things,                     Malaysia said that the process should be transparent and inclusive                     and any draft document to be transmitted should be multilaterally                     agreed upon. Where fundamental differences remain, they should                     be reflected in the text and alternatives should be suggested.                     This statement had support from the floor from countries such                     as India and China. To this Canada responded that the process                     should not be “over-prescriptive” and said attempts                     to create rules for transparency failed to reach any agreement                     in the General Council last December. This refers to the ongoing                     debate over the Like Minded Group of Countries’ submission                     for creating accountable preparatory processes for Ministerials                     and decision-making at the Ministerial itself. (The Like Minded                     Group is a loose affiliation of developing countries, whose                     membership varies somewhat with different issues).  Speaking to the two Chairs, New Zealand’s Deputy Permanent                     Secretary said, “We need to rely on your judgment as                     chairmen based on meetings and private contacts with delegations”                     with regards to texts for Cancun. Thus firmly supporting the                     idea that texts for Ministers in Cancun should be drafted                     on the Chair’s own responsibility and through non transparent                     “private contacts.”  China responded after New Zealand with a short but powerful                     statement saying that the process must be inclusive and transparent.                     According to sources, these Heads of Delegation (HOD) meetings                     (where only Ambassadors attend or HOD plus one where an ambassador                     plus someone else from the mission attends) are well attended                     but they are entirely informal, thus these critical debates                     are held without any written record to show the vast disagreement                     on this crucial decision making process. However this process                     will significantly shape the entire outcome in Cancun and                     the lack of transparency will render it vulnerable to power                     politics. Advocates of this process claim that 146 members                     cannot come to decisions together, and that it is not feasible                     to reflect differences in written texts.  However, as a multilateral institution with sweeping implications                     for domestic policies, the WTO, if it is to remain a multilateral                     institution, MUST create formal records and work through concrete                     texts with differences that work towards consensus. Under                     no circumstances should Ministers receive texts based on unelected                     chairs viewpoints with little indication of where the fault                     lines lie. It is false to assume that Ministers know the debates                     in Geneva and the arguments that have led to the positions                     drafted by Chairs. Especially since delegations have been                     testifying since prior to Doha that Chairmen’s texts                     do not reflect important differences.  To reinforce the Chairmen process, the DG who also serves                     as the TNC Chair reported that the reports of the negotiating                     bodies will be factual innature and thus will provide little guidance for Ministers                     in Cancun. He said the reports will be prepared keeping in                     mind paragraph 45 of the Doha Declaration (take stock of progress,                     or provide political guidance or make
 decisions) and that a “brief note will be attached to                     them by the Chairpersons of the various negotiating bodies                     on their own responsibility”.
 He said that the TNC guidelines would be kept in mind. Currently,                     the TNC is overseeing the bulk of the contentious negotiations                     for Cancun i.e. Draft
 modalities for agriculture, modalities for industrial products,                     services etc.
  According to delegations, the small group consultations                     that are currently being held on various issues are composed                     primarily of developed countries with about 3-4 developing                     countries. Some developing countries that may be invited are                     at times unable to attend because of meeting overload. The                     General Council Chair suggested that a draft text for Cancun                     would come at the end of July. Many governments objected saying                     that the end of July is too late to influence the process.                     The General Council chair responded that he would attempt                     to draft something by the next TNC meeting on July 14 15.                     According to other sources, there was “consensus”                     on the need to produce “something less” than an                     official declaration as a draft text to Cancun. However, others                     feel that for developing countries, perhaps a ministerial                     declaration is what is needed to show how little progress                     has been made on the so-called development agenda.  There are two extremely problematic elements to this process                      The WTO is in effect avoiding its obligation to conduct                       its business in a multilateral and transparent manner. Allowing                       Chairmen to draft texts for ministerial approval on their                       own responsibility side steps the need to reflect differences                       between governments and also side steps the entire process                       of consensus. The small group consultations and heads of delegations                       process is entirely undocumented, so that absent delegations,                       officials in national capitals and the wider public cannot                       follow what is going on. This means that Chairpersons have                       no accountability or obligation to represent in a balanced                       manner the viewpoints of the delegations. The Chairmen themselves have no legal authority to draft                       anything on their own responsibility. Nor are they chosen                       in an open forum whereby a majority elects them. Chairmen                       themselves are chosen through a non-transparent process                       of informal consultations. Many members believe that they                       are “pre-selected” by the most influential members                       of the WTO and the Secretariat.  While many members see this as problematic and while this                     has been raised in past debates in the WTO, it is currently                     not being addressed openly in the WTO. Currently the WTO countries                     such as Canada, New Zealand, backed by influential members                     such as the US and the EC refuse to create a transparent process                     for selecting these chairs in the name of “over-prescription”                     or lack of efficiency.  This formula achieved results in Doha for member states                     such as the EU and the US who were able to launch a round,                     include environmental issues, avoid strong commitments on                     agriculture, and include the possibility of negotiations on                     Singapore Issues. All developing countries got was empty rhetoric                     about development needs and technical assistance. This process                     was opposed in Geneva and is well documented by now. The key                     difference in the Cancun process is that the drafting is starting                     with a Chairman’s text where during the Doha Process                     various members were engaged in drafting, but ultimately the                     General Council Chair put forward a text that many developing                     countries felt was illegitimate.  Governments must put an immediate halt to the Chairmen’s                     text process and ask that Head of delegation meetings be made                     formal with minutes. Also, a procedure for consensus must                     be put on place whereby drafts exhibit differences between                     members so that Ministers are aware what positions their government                     has been arguing for in Geneva during the last two years since                     Doha.  Finally, under no circumstances should facilitators for                     Cancun be announced in Cancun at the last minute. This facilitators                     must be chosen in Geneva through an open process whereby the                     facilitator is NOT a demandeur of group he/she is facilitating                     i.e. a Cairns Group member should not facilitate the group                     on Agriculture. These three elements are a minimum pre-requisite                     for a transparent and a legitimate process of decision-making. |