Journal Pioneer

Countries look to convince Trump to buy into WTO reforms

- BY JORDAN PRESS

Canada’s trade minister says a small group from the World Trade Organizati­on hope to convince the two biggest economies on the planet to save the beleaguere­d body, but gave no timeline to bring China and the United States into the talks. Neither country took part in the day-long meeting in Ottawa on the future of the world’s trade referee.

Building consensus on specific reforms will take time and will be impossible without approval from China and the United States, Internatio­nal Trade Minister Jim Carr said Thursday.

Carr didn’t have an answer for when or how he expected to bring the Chinese and Americans into the conversati­on, and hoped that “force of argument” and the determinat­ion of a “very important, small group” of WTO members would win over the countries. Reforms have been largely elusive for the 23-year-old WTO, but hostile rhetoric towards the organizati­on from U.S. President Donald Trump - whose country wasn’t invited to Thursday’s gathering - is giving the meeting added urgency.

“We want to make the WTO more effective than it has been. It is in need of renewal,” Carr said. “We believe that there are many, many nations in the world, including the United States and China, who will see value in looking at new ways to approach old problems. It’s time for this reform and this is a good place to start.” Trump’s shadow loomed large over the sunlit room where 13 of the 164-member WTO talked about safeguardi­ng and strengthen­ing the dispute settlement system, improving the efficiency and effectiven­ess of the WTO monitoring function and modernizin­g trade rules for the 21st century. Speaking in Winnipeg, Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said Thursday the government believed talks would be easier without the U.S. and China in the room.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has spoken in recent days with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Argentine President Mauricio Macri about rulesbased trade.

Trudeau also mentioned the issue alongside Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte on Parliament Hill, saying both support the WTO and “a trading system that is rules-based and fair.” Trump has upended the world’s trading order with his penchant for punitive tariffs on imports, including levies on steel and aluminum from Canada and Mexico.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada