The Mercury News

Nigerian economist brings ‘strong will’ as new WTO leader

- By Bryce Baschuk

The new chief of the World Trade Organizati­on has a reputation for shaking up the guardians of wealth and power that will come in handy in her new role.

During Ngozi OkonjoIwea­la’s effort to root out corruption during her first stint as Nigeria’s finance minister, opponents of her plans nicknamed her “Okonjo Wahala” — “Okonjo the troublemak­er.”

The 66-year-old developmen­t economist embraces the moniker and true to form, trouble was what Okonjo-iweala withstood campaignin­g for the WTO job. Finding herself on the wrong side of the Trump administra­tion, her lack of trade-negotiatin­g experience made her the target of a unilateral U.S. veto despite the endorsemen­t of the organizati­on’s selection committee and almost all other member nations.

Now, with President Joe Biden’s administra­tion’s blessing after the only other candidate withdrew, Okonjo-iweala is the first woman and the first African to lead the WTO in its 25-year history. She is also the first American citizen to hold the organizati­on’s top job.

“She is this wonderful, soft, very gentle woman with an authentic approach to problems but, boy, under that soft glove there is a hard hand and a strong will behind it,” European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde said in an interview. “She is going to rock the place.”

Crisis credential­s

The WTO badly needs to be shaken up. All three pillars of the Geneva-based trade body’s work are under threat. Its usefulness has been called into question as China’s brand of state capitalism increases its footprint on the global economy, fomenting criticism from Brussels to Brasilia.

The organizati­on has struggled to produce meaningful multilater­al agreements, its trade-monitoring function consistent­ly underperfo­rms and former President Donald Trump neutralize­d the WTO appellate body in late 2019. With a budget last year totaling $220 million and a staff of more than 600, it has become a toothless bureaucrac­y during the most disruptive period for internatio­nal commerce in generation­s.

Add the pandemic to the turmoil, and the WTO’S most substantiv­e work was ground to a near standstill last year and spurred its previous director-general to quit unexpected­ly.

The WTO plans to hold a meeting in the coming days where its members will consider a final decision on Okonjo-iweala’s candidacy. If none of the WTO’S 164 members oppose her, she will be appointed for a fouryear term, with a possible four-year extension in 2025.

WTO’S lengthy agenda

Okonjo-iweala has pledged to find common ground among the trade body’s disparate membership. She hopes to score some early negotiatin­g wins — such as a multilater­al accord to curb harmful fishing subsidies — as a means to restore trust and build momentum for larger deals.

She’s also optimistic about prospects for an agreement to govern the $26 trillion global e-commerce marketplac­e, which could reduce cross-border hurdles for U.S. technology companies like Facebook, Apple, Amazon.com, Netflix, Alphabet and Microsoft.

During her campaign for the job, Okonjo-iweala portrayed herself as both a trade outsider and a power broker in global finance, pointing to a 2005 agreement she helped secure to write off $18 billion of Nigeria’s debt to the Paris Club, a group of mostly western government creditors.

Okonjo-iweala persuaded skeptics — like former U.S. President George W. Bush — that despite the high price of crude at the time, Nigeria’s $25 billion in oil revenue only amounted to 50 cents a day for each Nigerian, and debt relief was necessary to put Nigeria on the right track.

“The way she brought about the debt deal was incredible,” said David de Ferranti, who worked with her at the World Bank. “Very few people could have done that.”

Okonjo-iweala graduated magna cum laude from Harvard University in 1976 and earned her doctorate in economics from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology in 1981.

After moving to Washington, she quickly rose through the ranks at the World Bank and in 2013 was named managing director — the organizati­on’s highest unelected position.

Until recently, OkonjoIwea­la served as the board chair at the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunizati­on, an experience that could help the WTO navigate the health and economic implicatio­ns of the COVID-19 pandemic.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Nigeria’s Ngozi Okonjoiwea­la, a U.S. citizen, is the new director-general of the World Trade Organizati­on.
GETTY IMAGES Nigeria’s Ngozi Okonjoiwea­la, a U.S. citizen, is the new director-general of the World Trade Organizati­on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States