The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Why Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala is fit to head WTO

- Mills Soko and Mzukisi Qobo Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala

THE next director-general of the World Trade Organisati­on ( WTO) will replace Brazilian Roberto de Azevedo, who has served since 2013 and plans to step down at the end of August, a year before the conclusion of his term.

Of the eight candidates who have thrown their hats into the ring, three are from Africa.

They are former Nigerian finance minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala; former Kenyan foreign minister Amina Mohamed, who also previously served as chairperso­n of the WTO General Council and Abdel-Hamid Mamdouhm, an Egyptian lawyer who is also an erstwhile WTO official.

The WTO does not operate on the basis of a regional rotation principle. But there is recognitio­n that it has never been led by an African since its creation in 1995. Africa represents a key bloc within the WTO.

It accounts for nearly 27 percent of membership and 35 percent of members from developing countries.

Past directors-general have come from Europe, Oceania, Asia and South America.

Challenges facing the WTO are numerous and complex. Since the collapse of the Doha Round of trade talks, the multilater­al trade system has stalled and needs to be revived.

Launched in 2001, the Doha Round failed to respond to the developmen­t interests of poor countries, most of which are African.

The organisati­on has also been at the receiving end of persistent attacks from the Trump administra­tion, which has accused it of failing to protect American interests.

This has been aggravated by trade wars between the US and China. And the organisati­on’s dispute settlement system has been paralysed by the refusal of the US

to approve appointmen­ts of judges to its appellate body.

Concerns have also been voiced by the

US, Japan and the European Union ( EU)

about the WTO’s rules. There’s a strong lobby to have them modernised to take account of the impact of the rise of developing countries and Chinese industrial subsidies.

The EU, in particular, has protested against the overuse of the “special and differenti­al treatment” rules designed to afford poor nations more favourable trade terms, regarding this as creating a second tier membership.

What’s more, Washington, Brussels and Tokyo have jointly formulated proposals to curtail state support to businesses and industries.

Also, the WTO has had to grapple with massive dislocatio­ns in internatio­nal trade brought about by the coronaviru­s global pandemic.

In our view, of the three African contenders, none is better qualified than Okonjo-Iweala to lead the WTO in the next phase of its 25-year history, which is poised to be the most fractious and challengin­g.

The WTO plays an important confidence-building role in the global economy and the interests of poor countries will be best served in a stronger multilater­al trading system that is responsive to their developmen­t concerns.

What’s needed

The nature of the institutio­n requires a leader with significan­t political heft, who commands the respect of all member countries, rich and poor.

The WTO’s director-general and secretaria­t wield very limited executive power.

They can inform, manage, coax and oversee but they cannot decide.

Decision-making in the WTO is consensus-driven, and any member country can scupper a trade deal.

This is unlike the World Bank and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, where decision-making is based on shareholdi­ng, which is dominated by industrial­ised nations.

Okonjo-Iweala is suitably qualified to serve at the helm of the institutio­n. She is a Harvard-educated political heavy-hitter with the skill and experience to cajole, knock heads together and break logjams.

She is regarded as a consensus builder who enjoys the confidence of government­s, business and multilater­al institutio­ns. As Nigeria’s finance minister, she successful­ly spearheade­d the negotiatio­n of an US$ 18 billion debt write-off for the country with the Paris Club creditor nations.

Her political acumen and extensive negotiatin­g skills could contribute towards restoring the multilater­al trade agenda.

This has collapsed amid the Trump administra­tion’s hostility towards multilater­alism.

With her origins from a neutral developing country, she could be the right candidate the embattled WTO needs to broker a truce between the US and China and end their trade conflict, which has led to institutio­nal collapse.

Okonjo-Iweala also boasts a credible track record of economic reform and political sway. Following a long stint as a senior executive at the World Bank, she twice served as Nigeria’s finance minister between 2003 and 2015.

During this period, she took on vested interests and implemente­d far-reaching reforms. These included overhaulin­g a corrupt fuel-subsidy scheme, cutting delays at the country’s ports, creating an oil fund to stabilise the economy, increasing transparen­cy by publishing the government’s monthly finances, and introducin­g an electronic tax system that curbed illegal diversion of funds.

Okonjo-Iweala does not have WTO experience. But she knows and understand­s the workings of multilater­al institutio­ns, honed over many years as an internatio­nal public servant.

She is a seasoned global finance expert, economist and developmen­t practition­er with decades of internatio­nal experience.

Her global finance expertise, in particular, would serve the WTO well given the nexus between trade and finance in the world economy, accentuate­d by the current economic crisis.

By not being a WTO insider, she would bring a much-needed fresh perspectiv­e to the institutio­n.

Crossroads

The WTO is at a crossroads. Since the launch of the Doha developmen­t agenda, it has been buffeted by one crisis after another. This has occurred at a time when the drivers of world trade have been undergoing seismic transforma­tions, stemming from the ascent of new actors, notably China, the advent of new technologi­es and production methods, and changes in global demographi­cs.

Compoundin­g the institutio­nal sclerosis has been the growing rivalry between the US and China, which has brought the institutio­n to a halt. In the absence of a multilater­al architectu­re to govern trade, there has been a surge in tit-for-tat economic policies, which have disrupted supply chains and stifled trade and investment flows.

These are desperate and perilous times for the WTO and they call for a credible and effective leader who is qualified to lead the institutio­n at this critical point in its history. Okonjo-Iweala fits the bill.

African countries must coalesce around and actively champion her candidacy.

◆ Mills Soko is a Professor of Internatio­nal Business & Strategy at Wits Business School and Mzukisi Qobo is the head of Wits’ School of Governance.

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