The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Mapping path to reform

WTO members says no one country is cause or solution to woes facing organizati­on

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No one country is the cause of — or holds the solution to — the woes facing the World Trade Organizati­on, but the body can’t be saved without the two biggest economies on the planet, says Canada’s internatio­nal trade minister.

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

Neither the U.S. nor China is part of the day-long meeting in the national capital on the future of the world’s trade referee.

Carr said the problems facing the internatio­nal trading system are not new and “were not created by any one WTO member.” Nor, he said, can those problems “be solved by any one member.”

“There can be no meaningful reform of the WTO without the Americans and Chinese,” Carr said.

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.

The closed-door sessions with 13 of the 164-member WTO is looking at 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.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s office says he brought up the issue of trading rules in a phone call Thursday morning with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. Trudeau mentioned the issue again in a meeting with Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte on Parliament Hill, speaking of their support for the WTO and “a trading system that is rule-based and fair.”

Trump has upended the world’s trading order with his “America First” policy and his penchant for punitive tariffs on imports, including levies on steel and aluminum imports from Canada and Mexico. The tariffs made under national security reasons remain in place despite the North American partners agreeing on a new continenta­l trade pact, christened the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement.

Supplement­ary spending documents made public Wednesday show the Liberals will ask Parliament to approve $3.5 million in new spending to stop “unfairly priced foreign steel and aluminum” from entering Canada — and ultimately the American market.

The spending is part of ongoing efforts by federal officials to convince Trump that Canada is preventing Chinese products in particular from making its way to the United States.

Conservati­ves say the ongoing failure of the Trudeau Liberals to get Trump to lift the levies is forcing businesses to cut back on orders and other to lay off workers.

“The longer these tariffs remain, the more damage they’ll do. The Liberal government has left Canadian steel and aluminum businesses hanging on by a thread,” Conservati­ve trade critic Dean Allison said.

The U.S. has openly blocked the appointmen­ts of new judges to the WTO’s dispute settlement mechanism.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? World Trade Organizati­on Director-General Roberto Azevedo, front left, looks towards Canada’s Minister of Internatio­nal Trade Diversific­ation Jim Carr in Ottawa on Thursday.
CP PHOTO World Trade Organizati­on Director-General Roberto Azevedo, front left, looks towards Canada’s Minister of Internatio­nal Trade Diversific­ation Jim Carr in Ottawa on Thursday.

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