South Bend Tribune

A bad trade by any measure

- Farm and Food Alan Guebert any

On March 2, the 13th World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) ministeria­l ended like most previous ministeria­ls. After its 164 member-ministers discussed the burning need to change two key internatio­nal trade rules, everyone went home without changing any key internatio­nal trade rules.

This actionless talkfest, however, carried a steeper price than previous gassy gatherings; this one left the WTO, the world’s biggest trade rules-enforcing body, badly weakened and in danger of slipping into irrelevanc­y.

Putting a pretty face on their ugly failure, WTO Director-General Ngozi OkonjoIwea­la said the meeting had “achieved some important things and we have not managed to complete others.” But, she added, “the glass is half full.”

Nice try, but the Abu Dhabi meeting achieved little, managed nothing, and the metaphoric­al glass, half full or half empty, holds only hemlock.

The outcome wasn’t unexpected. In fact, it would have been breaking news had the ministers agreed on new rules, let alone the two they gathered to debate, changes in ag trade and overfishin­g. Both have been huge stumbling blocks since the group called the first WTO ministeria­l to order in Marrakech, Morocco, in 1995.

Despite a generation of continuous bickering, the rise and eventual embrace of the WTO’s neoliberal trade regime — lower or fewer tariffs, integrated regional and global markets, more standardiz­ed food safety rules, and meaningful reforms to domestic farm subsidies — did fuel decades of expanded internatio­nal ag trade.

Now, however, the WTO’s stumbling progress toward freer markets is running out of steam. One cause is the rise in nationalis­m as exemplifie­d by India’s demand to wall off its domestic stockpiles of food from cheaper American and South American ag imports and the protection­ism it breeds.

Another cause, and one that no global organizati­on even talked about in 1995, are the increasing number of individual efforts around the world to tackle ag’s sizable role in climate change. These highly detailed, increasing­ly strict programs are focusing most nations’ ag interests locally and regionally — rather than globally — as farmers adapt, argue, and fight over the implementa­tion and effect of these changes.

Arguing and fighting is exactly where many European farmers find themselves in the current, months-long protests over the European Union’s new “green” regulation­s to counter today’s quickly changing climate.

Most protesters see red, not green, when analyzing the new programs. First, they say, new farming rules that slash pesticide use and impose fertilizer limits will cut farm profits. Second, the new regulation­s are an engraved invitation for lowcost competitor­s, not burdened by “green” costs, to flood EU markets.

Political leaders see a different worry, rising nationalis­m. Right wing politician­s in France, Italy and The Netherland­s, they claim, already are exploiting rural anger (Sound familiar?) over the new regulation­s in hopes of expanding their clout through European Parliament elections in June.

To head off that possibilit­y, European “lawmakers have rushed to make concession­s to appease farmers,” Foreign Policy reported Feb. 24. In the “sharpest reversal” so far, it explained, “the EU abandoned its major proposal to slash pesticide use by 50 percent …”

In the meantime, few are looking for the WTO to muscle-up and reassert its presence in internatio­nal markets. For that to happen, trade analysts explain, the WTO needs to stop bleeding authority. For example, just prior to the February ministeria­l, delegates could not “even agree to ‘formalize’ the talks … to revive the WTO’s top appeals court … which has been idle since 2019 …”

After five years of idleness, it’s a safe bet that it’s not that the WTO can’t restart the appeals court so much as key members won’t allow the WTO to restart it. Similarly, the just again-failed ag and overfishin­g overhaul are more about “won’t” than “can’t.”

The result is a weaker WTO and stronger nationalis­m, and that’s a bad trade by any measure.

Alan Guebert is an agricultur­al journalist. See past columns at farmandfoo­dfile.com. © 2024 ag comm

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