WTO Doha Ministerial: "We Take Over"
By Devinder Sharma
The day the World Trade Organisation (WTO) came into existence, on January 1, 1995, the Indian Express had carried a
pocket cartoon on its front page. It showed two people walking amidst high rise buildings with huge billboards for
popular multinational brands like Pepsi Cola, Coke, Philips, and McDonalds. The cartoon depicted one of the person
walking down the street, asking: "What does WTO stand for?" The other man replied: "We Take Over".
The 'explicit' way the QUAD countries -- the United States, the European Union, Canada and Japan -- bludgeoned their way
into gains on virtually every issue on the agenda at the fourth WTO Ministerial, which ended at Doha recently, the world
is certainly up for sale. The greatest tragedy of Doha is that the world's richest economies, which invariably swear in
the name of democracy, used all 'undemocratic' norms and arms to force a 'consensus' down the throat of developing
countries. In the bargain, the autocratic process of takeover of the global economy puts at risk millions of people,
especially women and children, without basic rights and opportunities, and hoping against hope.
Such was the urgency to bypass the WTO rules, repeatedly made since 1999, that the developed countries were not even
remotely concerned at considering, let alone agreeing and first implementing these before launching a new round. Pushing
aggressively on new issues on investment, competition policy, government procurement and trade facilitation, the agenda
was redefined, even if in a limited way for now, to ensure that the economic takeover of the developing world is
complete in the years to come. To achieve this, the QUAD group followed in earnest the principle of 'divide-and-rule',
something that the colonial masters had so successfully used and abused. After all, it was not long ago that the Sun
never set on the British Empire. No wonder, the economic re-colonisation through the WTO paradigm ensures that the Sun
never sets on the multinational companies !
Ever since the Uruguay Round was launched, developing countries have become accustomed to arm-twisting and
high-handedness that comes in the name of trade and investment. Doha Ministerial was no exception. But what surprised
the world, including the civil society, was the defiant and valiant stand taken by the India. In fact, India's Commerce
Minister, Mr Murlisaran Maran, would have alone led to the failure of the Doha Ministerial if it was not for the last
minute 'intervention' from the Prime Minister's Office in New Delhi. That was clever politics and not trade and
economics. On the other hand, it was purely Mr Maran's strong conviction that the 'WTO is a necessary evil', that he
fought like a true soldier. He defied the global community by refusing to submit to unjust demands and pressures only to
relent at the final nerve-rattling moment and that too under strict orders from his General.
For the other developing countries, which could muster enough political courage to stand up to 'undemocratic' pressures,
it was difficult to hold on to the final whistle. One by one they deserted India. Among these were Egypt, Malaysia,
Tanzania and finally Pakistan. Interestingly, the US Commerce Secretary, Grant Aldonis, reportedly offered to lower the
restrictions on the import of bed sheets and pillowcases from Pakistan in return for its signing the draft text. In
addition, he also indicated US willingness to lift a 1998 quota on cotton yarn, even though the WTO had in April ruled
that the US quota on Pakistan's cotton yarn exports was illegal.
As to why no concessions were made on textile trade, the Wall Street Journal reports that in a recent letter to the US
President George Bush, 31 members of the Congress, including four Republicans, had stated that "the U.S. should make no
further concessions in textiles and apparel in future trade agreements". As for America's antidumping rules, which
protect domestic industries -- such as steel -- from foreign products, Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, was
quoted as saying: "Why would we agree to this? What do we gain?" This is true not only for textiles. In fact, everything
that has been negotiated and renegotiated at the successive WTO meetings, without exception, has been to the advantage
of the rich trading countries. For the developing countries, all the WTO leaves behind are promises and promises galore.
Much is being made out about the 'concessions' wrested by developing countries on agriculture and medicines for public
health. In fact, Mr Maran too defends 'the decision to yield some ground on environment to gain substantially in
agriculture'. What has been incorporated now in the final agreed text is nothing new but a mere reiteration of what has
been spelled in the Agreement on Agriculture. By agreeing to "a phase out of agricultural subsidies", and to "take into
account the development needs, including food security and rural development" is like dangling a carrot before the
developing countries. In reality, agricultural subsidies in the QUAD countries are on an upswing. The richest trading
block -- Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) -- provide a phenomenal support of US $ One
billion a day for agriculture. The US, under its new Farm Bill that is pending before Congress, has already promised its
farmers an additional US $ 170 billion in the next ten years.
Developing countries, and also the civil society groups espousing the cause of the farming communities in the South, are
behaving like an ostrich by refusing to read the writing on the wall. The mere mention of 'food security' is no
safeguard against heavily subsidised food imports given the fact that developing countries, including India, have opened
up their trade barriers by lifting the quantitative restrictions whereas the massive subsidies in the west keeping on
mounting. Unless the removal of quantitative restrictions is linked to the removal of agricultural subsidies in the
west, food security in developing countries cannot be ensured.
Equally damaging is the 'landmark' declaration on TRIPs and Public Health. To think that the decision to allow the
production of cheaper generic drugs to meet any health crisis, is 'historic', is to ignore the ground realities. It is
here that even the civil society groups have fumbled. The sordid episode of the HIV/AIDS drugs that were requisitioned
by South Africa from India and which resulted in the drug companies filing a court case against TRIPs infringement, is
in reality a wrong case study. Why the Indian drug company was able to supply cheap generic version of the medicine was
because India still does not have in place the new patent regime, on the lines of TRIPs. Once the patent laws are
amended to conform to the TRIPs Agreement, Indian companies will be forbidden from producing any cheaper version of
generic drugs. And once the production of generic drugs stops, where from will cheaper drugs be procured?
And still, we are being unabashedly told that international trade can play a major role in the promotion of economic
development and the alleviation of poverty. We are being told that the WTO recognises the need for all our peoples to
benefit from the increased opportunities and welfare gains that the multilateral trading system generates. What it does
not tells us is that global trade is being aggressively pursued by the rich industrialised countries to garner more
economic benefits from the poor and marginalised societies. The new trade paradigm will eventually further the economic
divide between the North and the South. It will not only usurp democratic traditions in the name of trade and
sustainable development as Doha has conclusively shown but lead to denial of human rights as well as economic and
political freedom. Perhaps the underprivileged part of the world has to learn from what independent India's first Prime
Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, once said: "Freedom is in peril, defend it with all your might".
(Devinder Sharma is a New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst. His contact address is: dsharma@ndf.vsnl.net.in)