With the collapse of the Doha round, disappointment is turning to recrimination. But what did poor countries have to gain anyway?
When the World Trade Organisation talks collapsed in Seattle in 1999, there were parties in the streets, and a wailing and renting of clothes in the corridors of power. The failure of the Doha round of WTO talks in Geneva this week has drawn a more muted reaction from both its boosters and critics. In Seattle, it was possible to tell a story in which the voices of people on the streets mattered, and in which the disenfranchised had scored a victory against an unaccountable front company for international capital. This week's failure had less to do with global justice, and much more to do with the growing pains of international capitalism.
To the untrained eye, it's hard to tell that anything's different. Today's ducks of international capital still look, walk and quack the same as they did yesterday. The financial markets didn't seem to care, with major indexes untroubled by the bottom falling out of the talks. In part, this is because the contribution that the Doha round would have made to a global economy of $54 trillion, by the WTO's own generous figures, was $50bn.
Yet some countries clearly lament the collapse. In a press conference yesterday, Burkina Faso's trade minister Mamadou Sanou said, that "We can hardly control our anger." And he's right to be annoyed at the rules of international trade. As a cotton-exporting country, his farmers are being wiped out by the multimillion dollar support that the US gives its cotton exporters, but which Burkina Faso is prohibited, under WTO rules, from doing anything about. "They wanted me to be here to negotiate on cotton. I have been here for 10 days and I haven't been able to discuss cotton," Sanou said.
For its part, the US was particularly keen to blame India and China for failing to enter into the spirit of the negotiations. Beneath the sighed pronouncements of United States trade representative Susan Schwab, was a thinly veiled lament of "when will they learn?" To be clear, the historical spirit of the WTO has been for developing countries to shut up and do what they're told and, if they're very good or very big, they'll get a scrap or two from the EU and US's table.
On that table was a tentative agreement between the main negotiating parties reached in the dark of Friday night. The EU and US had given some ground to demands that skilled workers from Asia be allowed entry to the EU and US markets, and more visas were promised, and it looked as if the deal might be sealed.
Over the weekend, though, India squirmed. Winning visas for the IT industry would certainly keep a slice of the middle class happy. But the majority of Indians are poor, live in rural areas and depend on agriculture. While the country's politicians are often happy to genuflect before a rural Mother India and then bankroll her urban sons, with an election looming, they needed to do a little more. The Indian government has already this year promised to cancel a slice of farmers' debt in a spectacular and utterly cosmetic pre-election stunt.
But this isn't enough. And a sell-out at the WTO wouldn't play well in the fields at home. So the Indian delegation insisted that there be some protections for their farmers from the surge in imports that inevitably follow tariff cuts. It's a serious concern: in Ghana in 1998, for example, local rice production accounted for over 80% of domestic consumption. By 2003, after liberalisation, that figure was less than 20%. What India wanted was the right to protect farmers if this happened. The US and EU proposed a threshold for support that was too high to be meaningful. India, backed by a range of other countries, held its ground.
So the talks collapsed.
Now, to be clear, this doesn't flag an end to US and EU hegemony. It merely confirms the arrival of more big players into the international trade arena, and the re-configuration of that hegemony. India, China and Brazil can no longer be taken for granted, and the EU and US will need to learn to negotiate accordingly. But it would be foolish to think that, as poorer cousins, the ascending developing countries might become a voice for the disenfranchised. When China joined the WTO back in 2001, fingers were crossed and double-crossed in the "global south" with the hope that China might fight the good fight for all poor countries.
That hasn't happened. And it's no surprise. The most successful beggars around the international trade club have now graduated. Oliver has become Fagin. The Indian, Chinese and Brazilian negotiators at the WTO, like those of the EU and US, represent the interests not of the majority, but of a certain bloc of capitalists. After the elections pass, business will return to normal.
After all, none of the main parties have walked away from the WTO altogether. The institution remains a useful instrument in service of the interests they represent. No one has given up on multilateralism either. With a wave of elections this year and next, the WTO isn't the only international negotiating venue where diplomacy has turned into thumb-twiddling while everyone waits for Bush to leave.
Trade talks are diplomacy's most rugged zombies, able to rise despite a thousand deaths. We can expect to be reading about the tentative resumption of the WTO talks next year. In the meantime, of course, farmers in developing countries will still be exposed to the inequities of the current world trade system. Those inequities haven't worsened, but the failure of the talks is a small whoop. When the poor are so comprehensively pinioned by international economics, it's a slim victory that the screw hasn't turned further.
Raj Patel is the author of Stuffed and Starved: Markets, Power and the Hidden Battle for the World's Food System.
© Guardian News and Media Limited 2008
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7 Comments so far
Show AllOK guys, here's a thought. What about making US rejection of WTO, etc. a real campaign issue? That would throw a monkey wrench into the works, now wouldn't it?
Hey Sioux. It is a case of the lesser lice imitating the bigger lice. Someone in every People dominating government follows the way of avarice.
Corruption and greed drive more regular people into early graves than all the religions and war machines put together.
This brings back memories of WTO-Seattle 8-1/2 years ago. Except of course things are much worse and resistance organizing which depended on email....
Excuse me LUCKY LEFTY but the metaphors you usually use work here. Looks like master's house has expanded so that the new slave paradigm allots to the US/Europe the main house, and the 3rd world people get stuck in the fields allowed to pick what they are told to pick, too much of it headed for the tables of bounty inside those big white houses... with the poor slaves left outside to subsist on whatever crumbs are "generously" left to them.
The indigenous understood something vital, spiritual and powerful: that the LAND does not belong to us, we belong to the land. The concept of private property and so-called profit has moved too many from sustainable agricultural models to those that literally mean starvation for the many, so that a few can claim what even kings of former times had neither the imagination nor power to claim.
We should rename these the "D'oh!" round of WTO talks.
Increased wealth for the few results in increased death for the many. This is the U.S. policy rejected by India and China. A new form of trade genocide against the poor was avoided this round.
"The Indian, Chinese and Brazilian negotiators at the WTO, like those of the EU and US, represent the interests not of the majority, but of a certain bloc of capitalists. After the elections pass, business will return to normal."
We can only hope this doesnt happen but unfortunately Raj Patel is right. Once the Great Indian Elections scheduled for next year are complete and the new government is sworn in, a new WTO round will be initiated and the drama will begin all over again with even more concessions given.