Malta Independent

Russia’s no longer a ‘most-favoured nation’: 5 questions about the coveted trading status answered

- CHARLES HANKLA Charles Hankla Georgia State University

The U.S., the European Union, Japan and Canada are further severing Russia from global markets by removing a coveted trading designatio­n over its war in Ukraine. Known as most-favored-nation status, it generally entitles a country to the best possible trading terms, which comes with many economic benefits. The EU agreed to drop the designatio­n on March 15, 2022, and Congress did the same on April 7. Charles Hankla, a political scientist who studies trade at Georgia State University, explains what most-favored-nation status is, why countries want it and the consequenc­es of Russia losing it.

1. What is most-favoured-nation status?

Designatin­g a country as a “most-favoured nation,” which the U.S. also calls permanent normal trading relations, lies at the heart of the global trading system.

In fact, most-favored-nation status is mentioned in the very first article of the first treaty that establishe­d the multilater­al trading system in 1947. Even today, the most critical commitment made by all 164 members of the World Trade Organizati­on is to extend most-favored-nation status to all others in the club.

When a country awards this designatio­n to a trading partner, it promises to apply only its lowest trade barriers – tariffs, quotas and the like – to that partner. If the awarding country then decides to lower barriers to one trading partner, it must lower them to all deemed a most-favored nation.

This embodies the principle of non-discrimina­tion within the WTO: Every member of the multilater­al trading organizati­on must treat all the others alike.

2. How is it removed?

Russia is still a member of the WTO, which it joined in 2012. So how can its most-favored-nation status be taken away?

WTO rules provide a number of ways that members can impose special trading barriers on other members, but the one that’s relevant here is the so-called security exception. Article 21 of the 1994 treaty that gave rise to the WTO allows a member state to waive most-favored-nation status when “necessary for the protection of its essential security interests,” especially “in time of war or other emergency in internatio­nal relations.”

President Donald Trump used this exception as part of his justificat­ion for his trade war with China, also a WTO member.

With the war in Ukraine, the security provision provides the primary legal justificat­ion for sanctions against Russia that might seem to violate the rules of the multilater­al trading system.

Russia does have the right to appeal these sanctions, but the WTO body that adjudicate­s disagreeme­nts has essentiall­y been defunct – as the result of a Trump-imposed nomination boycott – since 2020.

And in one of those ironies that occasional­ly arise in internatio­nal relations, Russia used the security exemption in 2019 to justify sanctions it imposed on Ukraine – and its right to do so was affirmed by a WTO adjudicati­on panel. It seems unlikely that the WTO would rule against the U.S. or its allies over sanctions undertaken during a much hotter war than existed three years ago.

While the temporary suspension of most-favored-nation status can be taken immediatel­y by individual countries, the tougher penalty of expelling Russia from the World Trade Organizati­on – floated by some commentato­rs – would be much more complicate­d. It would require twothirds of member states to open debate on the issue and threequart­ers to vote for expulsion, something that seems unlikely in an organizati­on traditiona­lly built on consensus.

3. What impact will this have on Russia?

While taking away most-favored-nation status won’t have much immediate effect – beyond symbolism – this change could lead to more severe sanctions in the future.

Although the U.S. doesn’t trade a lot with Russia – with imports of just US$22.3 billion in 2019, and that was mostly the oil, gas and coal that has now been banned – the EU is Russia’s largest single trading partner. Moreover, the G-7 countries – the U.S., U.K., Japan, France, Germany, Canada and Italy – alone account for half of all Russian exports.

Of course, there’s a flip side to this since trade interdepen­dence works both ways: As the damage on Russia goes up, the country imposing the sanctions feels more pain as well. This is especially true given Europe’s oil and gas dependence on Russia, which means its energy costs could surge if the EU imposes more sanctions on Russia’s energy sector. More than that, Ukraine’s and Russia’s status as major producers of food grains has the World Food Program sounding the alarm that the war and resulting sanctions could increase hunger in many developing countries.

The bottom line is this: Withdrawal of most-favored-nation status, by bypassing internatio­nal trade law, opens the door to much more severe sanctions. Whether these are imposed depends on how much individual nations – especially in Europe – will be willing to sacrifice to punish Russia.

4. Can Russia find other countries to buy its goods?

The Russian government seems to believe that even if it’s subjected to crippling trade sanctions from the U.S. and Europe, it will be able to survive economical­ly thanks to its special relationsh­ip with China.

Intelligen­ce reports have alleged that Russian President Vladimir Putin informed his counterpar­t in China in advance of his broad plans toward Ukraine. It seems likely that Putin understood that sanctions were a possible consequenc­e of the invasion, though he probably did not anticipate their severity. Whatever the case, Putin likely wanted to ensure that China would help cushion the blow.

There is no question that China’s support could be critical to bolstering a Russian economy reeling from crippling sanctions. China is now the world’s second-largest economy, a major trading power and a source of deep-pocketed financial resources. Despite its massive geographic size and formidable if diminished military, Russia is a much weaker economic power, with an economy smaller than that of Italy, Canada or South Korea.

With China’s support, Russia should be able to find a buyer for some of its exports, including natural gas and oil, and it will have access to a well-capitalize­d financial system.

But the matter isn’t so straightfo­rward for Moscow. As economist and columnist Paul Krugman has argued, Russia depends on the United States and its allies for many critical imports, including high-tech goods. And a dependence on China as financier and purchaser represents its own security challenges to Putin, who undoubtedl­y wants to avoid becoming a client of Beijing.

China, for all its economic weight, will not be able to shield Russia from the economic consequenc­es of this devastatin­g war.

5. Are there any other longterm consequenc­es of this?

There are potential long-term implicatio­ns of withholdin­g most-favored-nation status from Russia.

First, there is the risk that heavier trade barriers will backfire by driving Russia more deeply into the Chinese sphere of influence. Indeed, American observers were already beginning to worry about Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping’s increasing­ly cozy relationsh­ip well before the invasion.

Second, while trade sanctions are a common tool to punish countries breaking internatio­nal rules and norms, their use against a major power like Russia is quite unusual. Indeed, the guiding principle of the multilater­al trading system is nondiscrim­ination in trade. There is, then, the danger that this intrusion of geopolitic­s into trade could threaten the coherence of a trading system already buffeted by crises.

When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991 and the Eastern Bloc was integrated into the trading system, many saw it as the final step in a long effort to create a liberal world order. Economic interdepen­dence, it was thought, would discourage future wars and promote peace.

With the war in Ukraine, that assumption has been called into question, and along with it the unity of the global trading order.

All of this leaves the U.S. and other liberal powers on the horns of a dilemma. Trade and financial sanctions are the primary tools available – short of war – to punish Russia for invading Ukraine. But if sanctions are so severe that they prompt Moscow and Beijing to forge an ever closer relationsh­ip, that risks further splinterin­g the already fragile world trading system.

By no means does that mean the West shouldn’t punish Russia for its invasion of Ukraine. But it’s important to be aware of the potential consequenc­es that could poison the well of global trade for years to come.

(The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.)

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