The Guardian (Nigeria)

Ngozi Okonjo- Iweala as DG of WTO

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THE flurry of congratula­tions pouring in to Dr. Ngozi Okonjo- Iweala on her appointmen­t as the DirectorGe­neral of the World Trade Organisati­on ( WTO) effective March 1, 2021, clearly confirms the saying that “success has many relatives” and that “failure is an orphan”. Being the first woman and first African to be appointed to this exalted position, numerous messages ha ve come from heads of states and government­s, the European Union, African Union, various multilater­al organisati­ons and from key stakeholde­rs within the countr y including President Muhammadu Buhari, President of the Senate, Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, governors of her home Delta State and a host of many others. Dr. Ngozi Okonjo- Iweala, who has spent a greater part of her life in the United States with her U . S.- trained neurosurge­on and Abia State- born husband, Dr Ikemba Iweala and who holds a dual citizenshi­p, having recently acquired a U. S. citizenshi­p is thus, also the first American to hold the WTO top position.

The appointmen­t became plausible after the Joe Biden administra­tion of the United States endorsed her candidacy and invariably prevailed on her main challenger Yoo Myung- hee, the T rade Minister of South Korea to withdraw her candidacy. This was a clear departure from the tough stance of the out- gone Trump administra­tion, which had endorsed the South Korean for the job contrary to the position taken by the other 164 members of the WTO . Dr. Okonjo- Iweala thus became one of the early beneficiar­ies of the Biden- Harris administra­tion “America is back” policy. The appointmen­t, which comes into effect on March 1, 2021 is scheduled to run beyond the statutory four years first term to August 31, 2025, a total of four and a half years. She thus has to brace up for the long task ahead since she is entitled to a second term of another four years with satisfacto­r y performanc­e in her first. It is hoped she would run this race to the end unlike her predecesso­r , the immediate- past Director- General, Roberto Azevedo of Brazil who, for personal reasons, voluntary relinquish­ed the office in August 2020, one year before the expiration of his second term.

The work of the WTO is quite a challengin­g one. The organisati­on, which was set up in 1994 under the Marrakesh Agreement to replace the 1948 General Agreement on Trade and Tariff ( GATT), is the foremost and only internatio­nal body that governs multilater­al trading systems among its members of 164 countries, with the aim of facilitati­ng a seamless and hitch- free trade through the instrument­ality of trade rules, trade negotiatio­ns and trade dispute resolution­s, among others. Dr. Okonjo- Iweala, in the opinion of the 164 member countries as well as that of the General Council as stated by the Chair of the Council, David Walker of New Zealand, is well qualified for the job. With degrees in economics from Ivy- league Universiti­es such as Harvard and Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology ( MIT) in the U. S., coupled with over 20 years work experience at the World Bank where she retired as Managing Director, as well as Minister of Finance in Africa’s largest economy under two different Presidents, she has garnered sufficient global and economic management experience to run the WTO despite the claim by the Trump administra­tion that she has a very weak experience in global trade issues. She indeed has some trade experience and whatever is lacking in this regard can be largely compensate­d for by her immense experience in corporate governance, economic management and organisati­onal reforms, which is what the WTO direly needs at this stage in its history.

There have been challenges in the work of the WTO in recent times and trade disputes have arisen among many nations, which have been largely unresolved. The mantra has been that trade need not only to be free but to be fair also. A case in point here is the vexatious U. S.- China trade war, which has largely affected the global economy with trade barriers being mounted between these nations affecting major technology, companies such as Huawei among others, all with intellectu­al property implicatio­ns. In fact, many have mused that the promotion of bilateral as against multilater­al trade by the Trump administra­tion has helped to check the exponentia­l growth of the Chinese economy to the detriment of the other members of the WTO. The work at the WTO, particular­ly under the tenure of Roberto Azevedo, however recorded some evident achievemen­ts, which include the delivery of the Trade Facilitati­on Agreement, the expansion of the Informatio­n Technology Agreement and decisions on food security. Also, there has been substantia­l eliminatio­n of agricultur­al export subsidies and the enablement of more goods and services exports from least developed countries, among others.

There have been lots of expectatio­ns from various stakeholde­rs from within and outside the country on what is expected of her on assumption of office. With expectatio­ns high and the pressure that comes with this, she would also need to address recurring issues such as the harmful fishing subsidies, the burgeoning e- commerce environmen­t as well as put structures in place for addressing pending trade disputes. She would need to, in the same vein, confront one of the biggest flaws of the WTO which include the underperfo­rmance of its trade monitoring functions, ineffectiv­e trade dispute mechanism and antiquated trade rules that do not cater for the emergence of businesses in the digital and e- commerce space. These have bred concepts such as “vaccine nationalis­m” and protection­ism, which largely are to the disadvanta­ge of developing countries. Dr. Okonjo- Iweala has indicated her interest to commence, as a matter of first priority, addressing the economic and health consequenc­es of the COVID- 19 pandemic and get the global economy going again. She would need to build on the achievemen­ts of her predecesso­r. She needs to ensure that the next ( 12th) Ministeria­l Conference, which statutoril­y holds every two years, is organised to project her reform agenda and thus stamp her authority in the organisati­on.

She needs to prove that the WTO can be a veritable organisati­on for the transforma­tion of the global economy with benefits of trade spread more evenly to the least developed economies, much more than she met on ground. Good enough, she has promised, in her acceptance speech, that it would not be business as usual at the WTO. That is cheery news for the poor countries of the world. However she has to learn, and quickly too, that the WTO is a hotbed of politics which some have described as “a race between the cat and the mouse”. She must learn how to navigate the “imperial waters” given that the WTO is the hotbed of capitalist intrigues. It is hoped that she will rise to the occasion and largely make a difference as she occupies this exalted office. The Guardian wishes her well in this. Her work is cut out for her. She should pursue her goals at the WTO with passion and make Nigerians proud. She should prove that an African woman can do the job successful­ly. She can be rest assured that the prayers of the entire African continent are backing her up. All Nigerians wish her well for a successful and glorious tenure at the World Trade Organisati­on as the first woman, first African to occupy this exalted position.

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