The Fiji Times

WTO meet seeks modest outcome

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TRADE ministers from around the world gathered in Abu Dhabi on Monday for a World Trade Organizati­on meeting that aims to set new global commerce rules, but its chief Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and delegates sought to curb expectatio­ns.

The almost 30-year-old global watchdog, whose rules underpin 75 per cent of global commerce, tries to strike deals by consensus, but such efforts are becoming more difficult amid signs that the global economy is fragmentin­g into separate blocs.

“Let’s not pretend that any of this will be easy,” Okonjo-Iweala said in her opening speech, describing the atmosphere as “tougher” than the WTO’s last 2022 meeting, citing wars, tensions and elections and signs that trade growth will undershoot the organisati­on’s own estimate.

She called on ministers to “roll up their sleeves” and complete negotiatio­ns, but seemed to rule out any deal in Abu Dhabi on reforming the body’s mothballed appeals court.

“We are not there yet,” she said. Thani Al Zeyoudi, conference chair and UAE’s foreign trade minister said in an opening address: “The multilater­al trading system with the WTO at its core is at a critical juncture; it is confrontin­g many challenges.

“I now ask all of you to show the world that the WTO is alive and well and fully capable to deliver results that matter to people everywhere,” he said.

Some delegates privately voiced concerns that India’s trade minister, seen as the main holdout on some key issues including agricultur­e, was absent on Monday although New Delhi said he would be in Abu Dhabi on Tuesday.

New members

Negotiator­s say they remain hopeful for an agreement that could buoy global fish stocks and protect fishermen by banning government subsidies.

Other outcomes from the fourday meeting that are either definite or achievable are the accession of two new members — Comoros and East Timor — and a deal among around 120 countries to remove developmen­t-hampering investment barriers.

Tougher areas are extending a 25-year moratorium on applying tariffs on digital trade, which South Africa and India oppose, and an agreement on agricultur­e trade rules that has eluded negotiator­s for decades.

Indian Commerce Minister Piyush

Goyal, who was in New Delhi on Monday at a textiles event, repeated in a statement posted to the WTO website India’s insistence on a controvers­ial stand-alone permanent waiver to WTO rules that currently restrict domestic agricultur­e subsidies on food items like rice.

“I think this week is really about trying to consolidat­e progress from two years ago and build on where possible, but I don’t think there’s going to be major new breakthrou­ghs in new areas,” said Simon Conveney, Ireland’s minister for Enterprise, Trade and Employment, referring to the WTO’s 2022 meeting in Geneva.

US Trade Representa­tive Katherine Tai said the meeting was a chance to “chart a future path together” and that success should not be measured by the number of deals.

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