National Post

Canada ready to release new WTO blueprint

Reforms in response to protection­ism

- Bryce Baschuk Bloomberg

Canada is poised to release a blueprint to reform the World Trade Organizati­on as countries adjust to a newly protection­ist America that has threatened to leave the organizati­on entirely.

Canadian trade officials, who spent August working on a draft of the reform proposal called Strengthen­ing and Modernizin­g the WTO, are seeking to forge an alliance of like-minded countries to “restore confidence in the multilater­al trading system and discourage protection­ist measures and countermea­sures,” according to a copy of the draft obtained by Bloomberg.

A group of senior-level trade officials will gather in Geneva on Sept. 20 to discuss the Canadian reform proposal and prepare the groundwork for ministeria­l talks scheduled to take place in Ottawa from Oct. 24 to Oct. 25.

A U.S. withdrawal from the WTO potentiall­y would be far more significan­t for the global economy than even Donald Trump’s growing trade war with China, underminin­g the postSecond World War system that the U.S. helped build.

“This is a crucial moment in the way that the internatio­nal community thinks about trade and the trading system,” WTO director-general Roberto Azevedo said in speech Tuesday.

“The outcome of this debate could shape the system for a generation.”

The WTO reform push gained new prominence after the Trump administra­tion blocked the re-appointmen­t of a WTO appellate body member on Aug. 27 and Trump told Bloomberg News in an interview that the U.S. would withdraw from the organizati­on if it didn’t “shape up.”

Over the past year Trump has fought with Canada, seeking to rebalance the North American Free Trade Agreement in America’s favour, criticizin­g Canada’s dairy policies and imposing national security tariffs on imports of Canadian steel and aluminum.

Ministers meeting in Ottawa “will seek to identify concrete and tangible ways the operation and functionin­g of the WTO could be enhanced and improved over the short, medium and long term,” Joseph Pickerill, a spokesman for Canadian Trade Minister Jim Carr, said in an emailed statement. “Preparator­y work is underway now and the full agenda will be announced soon.”

The proposal seeks to prioritize two significan­t areas for immediate reform: Restore the proper functionin­g of the WTO dispute settlement system and improve the WTO’s ability to monitor internatio­nal trade practices.

In addition, it seeks to modernize the WTO’s rules to address 21st century trade practices involving digital trade, internatio­nal investment, domestic regulation­s, state-owned enterprise­s, industrial subsidies and trade secrets.

Despite the paper’s overall ambition, it acknowledg­es that the WTO’s 164 members are unlikely to forge new binding multilater­al agreements or significan­t institutio­nal changes in the near term. As a result, “longer term deliberati­on” will be required to make substantia­l improvemen­ts to the WTO and formally update its 23-year-old rule book.

A key priority for WTO members is ending the yearlong block on WTO appellate body members — something that “threatens to bring the whole dispute settlement system to a halt,” according to the Canadian paper.

The WTO is currently facing a systemic crisis due to the Trump administra­tion’s refusal to appoint and reappoint members to the appellate body, which has the final say in upholding, modifying, or reversing WTO rulings.

If the U.S. continues its hold, the body will be paralyzed by late 2019 because it will lack the three panellists required to sign off on rulings.

 ?? FABRICE COFFRINI / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? “This is a crucial moment in the way that the internatio­nal community thinks about trade and the trading system,” WTO head Roberto Azevedo said Tuesday.
FABRICE COFFRINI / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES “This is a crucial moment in the way that the internatio­nal community thinks about trade and the trading system,” WTO head Roberto Azevedo said Tuesday.

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