Business Standard

TRADE TALK

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y

World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) Director-General Roberto Azevêdo ( left) with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in New Delhi on Monday. Azevêdo said the global trading mechanism was facing significan­t challenges due to protection­ism and other factors

The global trading mechanism is facing significan­t challenges due to protection­ism and other factors, said Roberto Azevêdo, director-general of the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO).

“We are facing many challenges, in and outside. The trade environmen­t globally is very risky,” he said here after an interactiv­e session with India Inc leaders, organised by the Confederat­ion of Indian Industry (CII). He is in

Delhi to attend a mini-ministeria­l meet over two days.

The recent tussle between member-nations over the dispute settlement system (DSS) at the multilater­al body also has to be addressed. “We have a DSS compromise­d by the blockage in the appointmen­t of appellate body members and this would be the focus of the conversati­ons in New Delhi,” he said.

The lack of judges on the body has become a serious concern,as it is the principal body tasked with arbitratio­n between nations on trade disputes, many of which continue to pile up. The Government of India (GOI) had repeatedly raised this issue at the earlier ministeria­l conference at Buenos Aires, with commerce and industry minister Suresh Prabhu urging swift action to resolve the impasse.

Trade expert and Jawaharlal Nehru University professor Biswajit Dhar said the US had single-handedly and consistent­ly blocked the appointmen­t of judges to the seven-member dispute settlement body. “Three members have retired and a fourth is set to retire soon,” he added.

The US continues to be the centre of multiple discussion­s at the ongoing summit, since its current government has been attacking the WTO as an ineffectiv­e mechanism and is threatenin­g a trade war against multiple nations, including India. While saying the US supports the WTO, Azevêdo added it had some concerns in the way the organisati­on functions.

“The US maintains that the world has changed significan­tly since WTO’s inception in 1995 and some upgrades and reforms are in order. The conversati­ons are ongoing and whatever comes out of New Delhi is useful to the conversati­ons we will be having in Geneva,” he said.

After the collapse of the Buenos Aires ministeria­l talks last December, the GOI called this ‘ informal’ meeting of ministers, without a preannounc­ed agenda. Commerce secretary Rita Teaotia has said this second WTO mini-ministeria­l meeting being hosted by India — the first one was in 2009 — was necessitat­ed by challenges such as rising protection­ism.

Azevêdo brought up a proposal to frame a set of rules on e-commerce, a senior CII official said. The proposal has been marked by a tug of war between richer nations, led by the US. The US has backed the idea and others, including India, had been dead against. India says this market is dominated by American majors, a point echoed by majors in the sector here on Monday, the official said.

The DG is also pushing for newer issues such as gender parity in trade and rules for medium and small-scale enterprise­s.

WE HAVE A DSS COMPROMISE­D BY THE BLOCKAGE IN THE APPOINTMEN­T OF APPELLATE BODY MEMBERS AND THIS WOULD BE THE FOCUS OF THE CONVERSATI­ONS IN NEW DELHI” ROBERTO AZEVÊDO WTO director general

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 ?? PHOTO: DALIP KUMAR ?? (From left) Ambassador and Permanent representa­tive of India to the WTO J S Deepak, Director General World Trade Organizati­on Roberto Azevedo and CII President Shobana Kamineni at an interactiv­e session in New Delhi on Monday
PHOTO: DALIP KUMAR (From left) Ambassador and Permanent representa­tive of India to the WTO J S Deepak, Director General World Trade Organizati­on Roberto Azevedo and CII President Shobana Kamineni at an interactiv­e session in New Delhi on Monday

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