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* Strategy paper on commodities (489kb)

Developing Countries & WTO

Developing countries have much to gain from trade. The available evidence suggests that open economies have faster growth rates than closed economies. Although the precise figures obtained from studies may be open to challenge, there is no evidence to suggest that closed economies grow faster than open ones.

Gains for developing countries do not come solely through improved access for their exports. Liberalisation by developing countries themselves is just as, if not more, important. Competitive domestic markets are a necessary condition for improving their rate of growth.

Trade liberalisation does not automatically imply higher growth. It will have little benefit if the domestic policy environment is inadequate. Weak economies need to build simultaneously the institutional and human infrastructure to take advantage of trade opportunities. Hence, the need for a coherent approach amongst the international organisations to best enable them to do that.

Developing countries have much to gain from further liberalisation. On average, manufacturing exports from developing countries to developed countries face an effective tariff 4 times higher than that on exports between developed countries. They would also gain from lower tariffs on trade between themselves, which are currently far higher than those in developed countries. In a study published by the EU Commission, of the $400 billion gains from liberalisation, developing countries would gain $140bn a year; more than the EU ($92bn) and the US ($45bn).

Research shows that trade liberalisation generally helps to alleviate poverty. In East Asia increased openness led to higher wages and lower poverty. In general, trade openness has beneficial effects on productivity, the adoption and use of new technology and investment. It is through these channels that trade stimulates economic growth and provides the resources necessary for reducing poverty. If poverty increases after trade liberalisation, it is because of failures in the domestic market and the best policy is to correct those. The virtue of trade liberalisation is as part of a package of measures to strengthen markets - promoting greater use of the market, more stable and less arbitrary policy intervention, stronger competition and macro-economic stability. Studies acknowledge that some can lose in the short run from liberalisation. The plight of the losers should not be ignored, but the right way to alleviate their hardship is through social safety nets and job retraining rather than abandoning reforms that benefit most people.

WTO

Trade Ministers from 142 countries successfully secured the launch of a new Round of world trade negotiations at the 4th WTO Ministerial Conference, in Doha, in November. The ‘Doha Development Agenda’ combines the launch of a broad new round of trade negotiations with a package of measures specifically focused on the needs of developing countries

Developing countries stand to benefit the most from successful WTO negotiations launched at Doha. It has been estimated that halving protection in agriculture, industrial goods and services could boost developing country incomes by around $150bn a year - three times the value of all aid budgets put together. According to the World Bank, substantial trade liberalisation could reduce the number of people living in poverty by over 300m by 2015. That is why the UK Government continues to believe that free and fair trade offers one of the best means of helping the poorest people in the poorest countries.

A development focused trade round offers the best opportunity for many people in developing countries to escape from poverty. We believe that the Doha Development Agenda could mark a major step forward in the war on poverty. The lowering of trade barriers of particular significance to developing country exporters should help to stimulate their economic growth.

The package that we have agreed can bring real, and in some areas brings immediate, benefits to developing countries. The clarification of existing WTO intellectual property rules, has reassured developing countries that they can take action to protect public health during crises, without compromising the incentives required to ensure that new drugs are developed for the future. We have agreed on steps, both immediately and in the next year, that address developing countries' concerns over the implementation of the existing WTO agreements. Of enormous concern to more that 50 of our WTO colleagues, including some of the poorest countries in the world, we have ensured that the European Union can continue to give preferential treatment to imports from African, Caribbean and Pacific countries under the Cotonou Agreement.

The Declaration, responding to the requests of developing countries, commits WTO Members to taking development needs into account, both in policy terms (such as flexibility and commitments commensurate to level of development) and also concerning capacity building and technical assistance.

Implementation

In the run up to the WTO Ministerial in Seattle, a number of developing countries tabled proposals to tackle what they saw as the imbalances in the outcome of the Uruguay Round. Although many of the proposals tabled involve changes to existing Agreements, which would necessarily require re-negotiation, they were tabled under the heading of implementing the outcome of the Uruguay Round and have therefore been referred to ever since as the "implementation" proposals.

Post-Seattle, more issues were added until well over a hundred separate proposals were under discussion. Although a few proposals were agreed in the summer of 2001, it was only at the WTO Ministerial in Doha where substantial progress was made. Nearly fifty proposals were addressed in the Doha Ministerial Decision on Implementation-Related Issues and Concerns, either agreed outright or subject to some specific further work. The Doha Declaration (paragraph 12) remitted the other fifty or so proposals to WTO committees for further work.

Special and Differential Treatment

Special and Differential Treatment is the term used for the way in which developing countries are treated differently to developed countries within the WTO system.

Examples of Special and Differential Treatment include giving developing countries longer time periods than developed countries in which to implement WTO Agreements, providing technical assistance to developing countries to implement specific WTO Agreements and providing preferential market access (through such schemes as the Generalised System of Preferences or the Everything But Arms initiative) which is non-reciprocal and available to many developing countries but not to developed countries.

The Doha Ministerial (in paragraph 44 of the Ministerial Declaration, cross-referenced to paragraph 12(i.-iii.) of the Ministerial Decision on Implementation-Related Issues and Concerns) mandated further work on Special and Differential Treatment, specifically a review of existing provisions with a view to strengthening them and making them more precise, effective and operational.

Technical Assistance and Capacity-Building

The Doha Ministerial stressed the importance of technical assistance and capacity building for developing countries in order to ensure that developing countries can participate fully in the WTO and take full advantage of the opportunities offered to them by their membership of the WTO.

Post-Doha, the WTO Secretariat prepared and WTO Members have agreed a Technical Assistance Plan for 2002, which is intended to begin addressing developing countries' concerns. The Plan includes such activities as visits by members of the WTO Secretariat and regional seminars on WTO issues. Much of the work being carried out under the Technical Assistance Plan is funded by contributions made at a Pledging Conference on 11 March 2002 to the Doha Development Agenda Global Trust Fund (DDA GTF). The UK pledged £1m to the DDA GTF at this conference.

More broadly, the UK has committed £45m to trade-related technical assistance and capacity building activities.

TRIPS and Public Health

In the run up to Doha, the issue of access to medicines emerged as a trade issue, given concerns in some quarters that the WTO Agreement on Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights (the TRIPS Agreement) was raising the prices of medicines available to developing countries.

At Doha, agreement was reached on a Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health, in which WTO Ministers agreed that the TRIPS Agreement neither does nor should prevent WTO Members from taking measures to protect public health and affirmed that the TRIPS Agreement can and should be interpreted and implemented in a manner supportive of WTO Members' right to protect public health and to promote access to medicines for all. Moreover, the Declaration reaffirmed the right of WTO Members to use, to the full, the flexibilities within the TRIPS Agreement for this purpose.

Beyond this, WTO Ministers also instructed the TRIPS Council to find a solution to the problems faced by WTO Members with insufficient or no manufacturing capacities in the pharmaceutical sector in making effective use of compulsory licensing under the TRIPS Agreement.

Intellectual Property Rights and Development

Following publication of the White Paper of December 2000 entitled Eliminating World Poverty - Making Globalisation Work for the Poor, the Government set up a Commission to investigate the issues relating to intellectual property rights and development more generally. The Commission reported in September 2002 and the Government response was published in May 2003. Both the Commission's report, entitled Integrating Intellectual Property Rights and Development Policy and the Government's response to that report can be accessed on the DFID website.

Trade Debt and Finance

At the Doha Ministerial it was agreed that the WTO would set up a working group to examine the relationship between Trade, Debt and Finance and to report findings to the Fifth Session of the Ministerial Conference.

Issues relating to Trade, Debt and Finance cover several policy areas and fall under the mandate of different institutions. The key role of the WTO in this is to ensure coherence and promote information exchange.

The U.K. is supportive of this initiative but is keen to ensure that the group concentrate on coherence across international body agreements.

Transfer of Technology

At the Doha Ministerial it was agreed that the WTO would set up a working group to examine the relationship between Trade and Transfer of Technology and to report findings to the Fifth Session of the Ministerial Conference.

Technology transfer has been an issue in some parts of the WTO (such as TRIPS), and before that in the GATT and in a great many other international negotiations (especially environmental negotiations) for many years. The key issue is essentially the difference of approach to technology transfer taken by developed and developing countries. Some see technology transfer as taking place implicitly through routine trade relations, and especially through foreign direct investment (FDI) - countries should therefore create the conditions in which FDI can take place (stable regulatory environment, intellectual property protection etc) and technology will follow trade. Others would prefer a more explicit approach with companies being pushed into transferring technology (rather than pulled to a suitable location for FDI) on concessional terms. How we bridge this gap is the key to a positive outcome.

Small economies

At the Doha Ministerial it was agreed to establish a work programme to examine issues relating to the trade of small economies with the intention of promoting fuller integration of small, vulnerable economies into the multilateral trading system.

The work programme on small economies will be a standing item on the General Council agenda and recommendations for action are to be made to the Fifth Session of the Ministerial Conference.

Least Developed Countries

The Doha Ministerial instructed the sub committee for Least Developed Countries (LDCs) to report on an agreed work programme. This was presented to the General Council in February 2002 and commits the Committee to focus on:

  • Market access;
  • Trade related technical assistance and capacity building;
  • Providing support to agencies assisting with diversification;
  • Mainstreaming trade;
  • Participation of LDCs in the multilateral trading system:
  • Accession of LDCs to the WTO; and
  • Follow up to Ministerial decisions/declarations.

The UK is also party to a number of other non WTO initiatives aimed at promoting better integration of developing countries into the world trading system.

For further information on all of the above, please contact:

Andrew Dey
Tel. 020 7215 4435
Fax. 020 7215 4539
E-mail. andrew.dey@dti.gov.uk

Economic Partnership Agreements (EPA)

EPAs will be at the heart of the economic and trade cooperation pillar of the Cotonou Agreement (an international agreement, between the EU and the African, Caribbean and Pacific countries).

EPAs will come into force by 2008 and will progressively remove barriers to trade between the EU and 77 African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) countries. EPAs will be fully WTO compatible and will therefore put trade relations with the ACP countries on a secure and sustainable footing, as well as contributiong to regional integration.

The aim of economic and trade cooperation is to foster the smooth and gradual integration of the ACP countries into the world economy, thereby promoting sustainable development and contributing to poverty eradication in ACP countries.

For further information on all of the above, please contact:

Zhada Bibi
Tel. 020 7215 4552
Fax. 020 7215 4539
E-mail. zhada.bibi@dti.gov.uk

GSP

The Generalised System of Preferences (GSP) aims to encourage developing countries exports by allowing their products preferential access to the markets of developed countries. Although donor countries are under no obligation in international law to give preferences, almost all developed countries operate GSP schemes; however, the schemes they offer vary significantly. The UK is party to the EC GSP which is operated by all EC Member States. The current scheme was agreed on 10 December 2001, the Regulation published in the Official Journal on 31 December 2001 and came into force on 1 January 2002.

The GSP allows non-sensitive goods into the EU duty free. In the "sensitive" category a flat 3.5% percentage point reduction in tariff rates is applied to the Most Favoured Nation (MFN) rate. There are additional preferences for ANDEAN, Central American countries and Pakistan to encourage alternative business opportunities that will allow them to diversify out of drugs. Special incentive arrangements are also available for countries complying with certain labour and environmental standards.

For further information on all of the above, please contact:

Pam Brown
Tel. 020 7215 4542
Fax. 020 7215 4539
E-mail. pamela.brown@dti.gov.uk

EBA

The Everything But Arms initiative allows all goods, except for arms from the 49 Least Developed Countries (LDCs) to enter into the EU duty and tariff free. Three categories of goods – rice, bananas and sugar - were given longer implementation periods, but this means that the LDCs now have duty free access to the EU market for goods they produce. The EBA initiative is an integral part of the GSP regulation.

For further information on all of the above, please contact:

Zhada Bibi
Tel. 020 7215 4552
Fax. 020 7215 4539
E-mail. zhada.bibi@dti.gov.uk

Commodities

Commodity dependence is a key factor in the economies of a significant number of developing countries with more than 50 developing countries depending on 3 or fewer commodities for over half of their export earnings. Many commodities are experiencing their lowest price for many years and this is resulting in immense hardship in these producing countries.

In response to this situation Patricia Hewitt, Secretary of State for Trade and Industry hosted a high level meeting with industry, NGOs, Government Departments and International Organisations. This has resulted in the formation of an Industry/Government working group that will contribute to the Government strategy paper on commodities.

Strategy paper on commodities (489kb)

The UK is actively involved in the work of the Common Fund of Commodities, and DTI provides the UK Governor and Alternate. The UK also plays a part in a range of commodity bodies either as an individual member or through EC membership.

Zhada Bibi
Tel. 020 7215 4552
Fax. 020 7215 4539
E-mail. zhada.bibi@dti.gov.uk

Last revised on 23 October 2003

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