The Borneo Post

US trade chief hails WTO splinter groups as a success

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WASHINGTON: The World Trade Organisati­on failed to conclude any new agreements at its biennial meeting this week, but US President Donald Trump’s trade chief is hailing as a victory the formation of factions by some WTO countries to push their own interests.

US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer said in a statement on Thursday that the ministeria­l conference in Buenos Aires “will be remembered as the moment when the impasse at the WTO was broken.”

The assessment was in contrast to dejected fellow WTO trade ministers who lamented the 164-member trade body’s inability to reach new agreements on electronic commerce, agricultur­e and curbs to fisheries subsidies.

Despite his sharp criticism of the 164-member trade body’s inability to negotiate new agreements, Lighthizer managed to attract enough allies at the meeting to form smaller groups of countries to pursue new rules for open electronic commerce and to break down unreasonab­le trade barriers on food safety.

The US also agreed to team up with the European Union and Japan to work within the WTO to combat the kinds of market-distorting trade polices practiced by China, such as subsidies to stateowned enterprise­s and technology transfer requiremen­ts.

“Many members recognized that the WTO must pursue a fresh start in key areas so that like-minded WTO members and their constitu-

Many members recognized that the WTO must pursue a fresh start in key areas so that like-minded WTO members and their constituen­ts are not held back by the few members that are not ready to act. Robert Lighthizer, US Trade Representa­tive

ents are not held back by the few members that are not ready to act,” added Lighthizer, who left Buenos Aires the night before the conference concluded on Wednesday.

Lighthizer’s endorsemen­t of a new direction for the WTO talks may ease fears that Trump will pull out of the trade body, as he once suggested during his election campaign last year.

But the statement made no mention of US actions to block WTO judicial appointmen­ts, widely seen as a gambit to win reforms in its dispute settlement system.

The US trade agency and India’s Ministry of Commerce and Industry traded thinly veiled barbs at each other for holding up progress in Buenos Aires.

Lighthizer blamed “one WTO member with an extreme position” for blocking a short ministeria­l declaratio­n expressing the shared views of 164 members.

A source familiar with the WTO negotiatio­ns said that India would not agree to the statement’s final wording. US officials had previously refused to include references to the ‘centrality’ of the global trading system and the need for trade to drive developmen­t.

India has long insisted that the WTO follow through on the developmen­t mandates of the previous Doha round of negotiatio­ns before moving on to new areas such as e-commerce.

New Delhi also nearly blocked a routine renewal of the WTO’s 1998 tariff moratorium on crossborde­r digital downloads, meeting participan­ts said.

India’s post-conference statement singled out US opposition to a deal on agricultur­e, specifical­ly India’s demands for permanent tariff rules to promote food security for developing countries.

“Unfortunat­ely, the strong position of one member against agricultur­al reform based on current WTO mandates and rules led to a deadlock without any outcome on agricultur­e or even a work program for the next two years,” India’s Commerce ministry said.

Lighthizer added that he was “proud to defend the interests of US stakeholde­rs at the WTO, including our farmers and ranchers.”

He said that US agricultur­e interests needed WTO rules based on today’s market realities, rather than the ‘outdated and unworkable’ negotiatin­g framework set when the Doha round was launched in 2001. — Reuters

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