Business Today

Time to Walk the Talk

At the recently-concluded G20 meet, the effort was to reach common ground, but the challenge lies in implementi­ng them

- By JOE C. MATHEW @joecmathew

If the number of topics discussed is a measure of success, the just-concluded meeting of the Group of Twenty ( G20) – the internatio­nal forum of key developed and emerging economies, including India – makes the cut. From climate change and Brexit to the perils of antimicrob­ial resistance to terrorism, the 7,000-word communiqué jointly issued by the G20 leaders after the two-day summit in Hangzhou, China, on September 5, identifies a host of problems and suggests remedial measures.

The Hangzhou Consensus – the package of policies and actions that has been agreed upon – calls for synergy among fiscal, monetary and structural policies of member countries. There is also a pledge to reject protection­ism, and strengthen global trade and investment through the multilater­al trading system. Emphasis has also been given to promote an innovation-driven ‘new industrial revolution’ and prop up the digital economy.

The surprise element in the long list of bold plans and strong pledges, though, was the reaffirmat­ion of faith in the developmen­t agenda of the World Trade Organizati­on ( WTO). The major roadblock before the successful completion of the WTO Ministeria­l meeting in Nairobi, Kenya, last year was the insistence of developing countries, led by India, to pursue the Doha Developmen­t Agenda ( DDA) before taking up new issues.

Developed nations, the US in particular, wanted DDA to be practicall­y dumped. The ministeria­l statement issued in Nairobi had clearly mentioned the lack of consensus on the issue. Given this stated position, it was interestin­g to see that G20, which includes both the US and India, reiterate the members’ commitment to shape the post-Nairobi work with developmen­t at its centre and commit to advancing negotiatio­ns on the remaining DDA issues as a matter of priority.

The Hangzhou Consensus also talks about the members’ willingnes­s to add to the agenda of WTO – something that has been high on the US priority list. The communiqué said all issues are of common interest and important in today’s economy and, hence, legitimate issues for discussion­s in the WTO.

Interestin­gly, it also states that issues which are being discussed through various regional trade arrangemen­ts ( RTAS) could be brought into WTO. The US is known to have incorporat­ed several TRIPs-plus provisions in RTAS as it could not have got them ratified through WTO. The Hangzhou Consensus thus hints at the possibilit­y of introducin­g issues, including high quality standards and increased level of intellectu­al property barriers, which countries like India have been opposing so far, in WTO discussion­s.

The G20 meets every year. And the host country always sets the agenda for the meeting. Last year’s Summit was in Antalya, Turkey. Next year’s will be hosted by Germany. China has followed up some of the pledges made in the Antalya Communique. To what extent the Hangzhou Consensus will be taken forward in Germany is difficult to predict. Transformi­ng bold pledges into action will, therefore, remain the biggest challenge for the G20. ~

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