Weekend Times


The Times

Business News

Divided and paralysed, can the WTO negotiate a pandemic recovery plan that is fair for all?

  • Written by Jane Kelsey, Professor of Law, University of Auckland
Divided and paralysed, can the WTO negotiate a pandemic recovery plan that is fair for all?

Hard on the heels of the political deal-making by major powers and corporate lobbyists at the COP26 climate conference, similar manoeuvres are shaping the World Trade Organization’s (WTO) 12th Ministerial Conference (MC12[1]), scheduled to begin on November 30 in Geneva.

The decision to hold an in-person negotiating conference of ministers from 164 countries in the midst of a pandemic, and as Europe undergoes another surge, is controversial.

Aside from concerns about safety, there are serious questions about the legitimacy of decisions that will be made under these conditions, including the expected absence of a number of trade ministers, mainly from developing countries.

Ministers with no commercial flights operating from their countries may be unable to travel. Those who can attend face onerous and expensive transit and quarantine arrangements. The size of delegations has been severely limited to facilitate social distancing and reduce processing queues.

At present, only certain vaccines, mainly those used in richer countries, will secure a pass for automatic entry into meeting venues. Ministers and officials who used non-EU-approved vaccines will be subject to periodic testing.

There is also a clampdown on dissent. Swiss authorities have refused authorisation – sought by one of their own parliamentarians – for five protesters to hold placards calling for action on COVID-19 in front of the WTO building. Non-government organisations, an important resource for many developing country delegations, have been denied space[2] at the main venue.

WTO in crisis

All this is bad enough for a “member-driven organisation” that makes decisions by consensus. But this conference is shaping up as the most important in the WTO’s 26 years. It is widely agreed the organisation faces an existential crisis. Every one of its core functions – negotiations, dispute settlement, notifications – has broken down.

The Doha “development” round[3] of negotiations, launched in 2001, promised poorer countries a rebalancing of global trade rules that were designed by and for powerful countries and their corporations. But the Doha round has been moribund for over a decade.

Read more: Old wine in new bottles – why the NZ-UK free trade agreement fails to confront the challenges of a post-COVID world[4]

At the last ministerial conference four years ago, self-selected groups of members, led by rich countries including New Zealand and Australia, announced they were launching alternative “plurilateral” processes to bypass the WTO’s consensus-based multilateral process – without any mandate to do so. They plan to legitimise those processes at the MC12.

Furthermore, the WTO’s dispute settlement system, considered the jewel in its crown, is paralysed. The US refuses to approve[5] new appointments to the WTO’s Appellate Body until other members agree to its demands for reform. The last judge’s appointment expired in November 2020.

The more powerful WTO members have a raft of other demands. These include severely reducing the number of “developing” countries entitled to special and differential treatment, changes to the mechanism to monitor compliance, and other institutional arrangements.

A Washington protest against the visiting German chancellor’s opposition to an emergency WTO waiver for vaccine patents. GettyImages

The pandemic factor

These fractures have become fissures in recent years and COVID-19 has brought matters to a head.

Sixty-four developing countries have proposed a temporary waiver of rules in the WTO’s Agreement on Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS[6]) that guarantee Big Pharma’s rights over COVID-related vaccines and technologies. The waiver is essential to supply affordable generic versions to the 98% of people in low-income countries who are not yet fully vaccinated.

A recent Oxfam report[7] estimated Pfizer and Moderna are expected to take in a combined US$93 billion next year on sales of the vaccines they developed with significant public subsidies.

Read more: New Zealand is overdue for an open and honest debate about 21st-century trade relations[8]

The EU, UK and Switzerland are leading the opposition, supported by their pharmaceutical industries. New Zealand supports a limited version of the waiver, but its ambassador to the WTO, David Walker, is leading a parallel initiative that undermines it.

Walker was tasked by the director-general, not the WTO members, with facilitating a COVID-19 recovery plan. The “Walker process” has been heavily criticised[9] for marginalising the priorities of the least-developed and developing countries. There is a real potential for this to negatively affect New Zealand’s reputation with those nations at the WTO.

The proposed Declaration and Action Plan, prepared on Walker’s “own responsibility[10]”, have not been developed through the WTO’s normal process of negotiations. Extraordinarily, the text was not tabled in the General Council meeting on November 22. This meant members could not discuss (or reject) it, although it has since been leaked.

Hope for a better regime

Critics object that Walker’s proposal is heavily skewed towards the interests of richer countries and that it uses COVID-19 as a back door to promote more liberalisation, reflecting the agenda for WTO reform being advanced by the “Ottawa Group” of countries, including New Zealand and Australia. Walker has ruled out including the waiver or other changes to WTO intellectual property rules.

Read more: The big barriers to global vaccination: patent rights, national self-interest and the wealth gap[11]

As the MC12 heads for a showdown on all these and other issues, the strategies being pursued by the New Zealand and Australian governments to keep the WTO on life support are counterproductive.

Even if those attending the conference manage to reach agreement on some final declaration – which eluded them at the last ministerial conference in 2017 – the refusal of its more powerful members to address the organisation’s systemic failings ensures it will continue its spiralling decline.

Longtime critics of the WTO hope this may finally open the door to re-envisioning a new, more equitable international trading regime that can address the challenges of the 21st century highlighted by the pandemic.

Authors: Jane Kelsey, Professor of Law, University of Auckland

Read more https://theconversation.com/divided-and-paralysed-can-the-wto-negotiate-a-pandemic-recovery-plan-that-is-fair-for-all-172484

The Weekend Times Magazine

4 Simple Tips To Help You Relax This Weekend

After a long week of hard work, a relaxing weekend is much needed. Often, some people just don't know how to lay back and enjoy their weekend without getting stressed...

What to do in Canada during your holiday?

Canada has over 1.6 million square kilometers of protected natural land offering a world-class national park system. The country is one of the first in the world to establish a...

Catering Boxes: Practical Packaging That Supports Food Quality and Presentation

Reliable Catering boxes are essential for food businesses that need to transport, store, and present meals safely and professionally. From cafés and bakeries to large-scale caterers and event organisers, catering boxes...

Unit and construction market looks towards a new era of stability

The peak strata industry body in New South Wales representing the interests of all strata industry stakeholders says it is confident the era of construction and certifier cowboys will come...

When AEC IT breaks, It Rarely Looks Like IT

AEC businesses rarely lose time to one dramatic outage. What hurts more are the small, repeat delays that show up right when pressure is highest. The drawing set stalls, the...

The Psychology of Your Floor Plan: How Layout Shapes the Way You Live

When most people think about designing a new home, they focus on finishes, colours, or even the kitchen benchtop. But the quiet hero of liveability is the floor plan. A...

All the Things You Need to Know Before Flying to Cairns

Cairns is the gateway to Queensland, offering a tropical climate and a relaxing atmosphere, making it an ideal destination for outdoor activities. The city has iconic destinations, charming cafes, lively...

Evaporative Cooling Cleaning Melbourne for Fresh Air and Reliable Cooling

Regular Evaporative Cooling Cleaning Melbourne is essential for maintaining clean air, consistent cooling performance, and the overall reliability of evaporative cooling systems. These systems are widely used across Melbourne due to...

Heating and Cooling Services That Keep Your Home Comfortable Year-Round

Australia’s climate is unpredictable. Sweltering summers and chilly winters can make indoor life uncomfortable without the right temperature control. That’s why professional heating and cooling services are no longer a luxury...

hacklink hack forum hacklink film izle hacklink testpadişahbetgalabetNon GAMSTOP Casinosbeste online casinonon GamStop casinos UKNon GamStop Sitesjojobetonline casinos australiaonline casinosonline casino australiacasinos not on GamStopzlybrarypadişahbet güncelcasibomjojobetjojobetbetparkjojobetDeneme bonusu veren siteler 2026jojobet