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Sep 8th 2012 | from the print edition
TRADE and growth go hand in hand. When the economic crisis first hit in 2008,
world trade and growth collapsed together. In 2009 both recovered, and did
reasonably well until this year, when both slipped again (see article). Cutting
tariffs and red tape would boost trade, and support the faltering recovery.
This should spur efforts to replace the failed Doha trade talks with a new
effort to do a multilateral deal.
The aims of the Doha round, launched by the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in
2001, were laudable. It deliberately put poor countries first, placing
particular priority on improving the access of their farmers to rich-country
markets. It was ambitious too, covering not only trade in manufactured goods,
agriculture and services, but also a host of things more indirectly related to
trade (antitrust, intellectual property and foreign-investment rules, for
example). According to the Peterson Institute, a think-tank, the potential
gains were around $280 billion a year. Its failure is a tragedy.
The villains are powerful lobbies, notably in agriculture, such as America s
cotton and sugar industries and Japan s rice farmers and fishermen. But there
were also two structural problems with Doha. One was the number of countries.
At the end of the first world-trade talks in 1947, 23 countries were involved.
When Doha started, 155 were. Second, the idea was to achieve a grand bargain in
which agriculture, manufacturing and services would all be liberalised. But
reaching agreement on some areas was so difficult that the WTO s mantra
Nothing is agreed until everything is agreed proved fatal.
Less ambition, more achievement
After many missed chances to conclude a deal, an absolute deadline was set
for December 31st 2011. That too, was missed. Since then, protectionism has
been intensifying. In the past two weeks Argentina has lodged complaints
against America over lemons and beef and against Spain over biofuels.
Altogether, tit-for-tat actions mean that new restrictions cover 4% of global
trade, more than Africa s exports. On the plus side, disputes over these are
being adjudicated by the WTO system.
With Doha paralysed, regional alternatives to a multilateral deal are springing
up. They are not all bad, but regional deals tend to benefit insiders at the
expense of outsiders, so that global gains will be achieved only if they can be
fitted together. And the small deals often enshrine rules such as electrical
and emissions standards which vary from region to region, so they make global
deals harder to forge.
Instead of allowing the Doha round to be replaced with a patchwork of regional
deals, the WTO s boss, Pascal Lamy, should close it and resurrect the best bits
in a Global Recovery Round . He should drop the all-or-nothing single
undertaking rule that helped kill Doha. Instead, talks would be broken up into
small chunks and allowed to progress independently of one another. Negotiations
would be open, so that any member could leave or join. Some deals, therefore,
would not include everyone. But another of the WTO s guiding principles the
most-favoured-nation clause must apply. This rule means that any deal between
a smaller group must be applied to all WTO members, even if they do not
reciprocate. WTO-brokered regionalism would thus lower trade barriers for all.
The Global Recovery Round should focus on manufacturing and services.
Manufacturing represents around 55% of total trade. There is much to be gained:
tariffs on cars, buses and bicycles are still high. Even low-tariff countries
maintain a selection of high ones. In America ski boots attract a zero tariff,
but golf shoes can face a 10% rate, and steel-toe-capped boots 37.5%. Services,
which account for only 20% of world trade but are more important on a
value-added basis, have hardly been liberalised at all.
If progress on agriculture is slower, so be it. Farm protectionism, which this
newspaper was founded to oppose, still starves millions. New madnesses appear
by the day: Russia has blocked the import of pigs from the EU because of a
virus that affects cows and sheep. But an industry that makes up only 7% of
world trade cannot hold everything else hostage.
The timing should be as tight as possible. When G20 finance ministers meet in
Mexico City in November 2012, they should ask the WTO to launch the Global
Recovery Round, and to finish it by the time of the WTO s next big meeting, in
Bali in December 2013. It would be the best thing to happen to the world
economy for five years.
from the print edition | Leaders