Business Day

Will SA continue to be a good internatio­nal citizen?

-

JOHN Maynard Keynes’s ghost casts a shadow over the present financial crisis. His prescripti­ons for the Great Depression consisted essentiall­y of sustained fiscal stimulus and protection from imports in order to retain that stimulus within the domestic market. They were badly suited to the economic crisis of the 1970s, which was characteri­sed by inflation and stagnation, with the former aggravated by Keynesian demand stimulus.

That crisis generated two connected intellectu­al responses: Milton Friedman’s monetarist revolution and Mancur Olson’s theory of special interest groups. Friedman’s intellectu­al revolution seems to be in the most trouble, as western central banks pump liquidity into their economies seemingly with little effect on growth or inflation. Convention­al wisdom about what constitute­s “good” monetary policy is consequent­ly in flux.

But Olson’s seminal ideas retain their vitality. For example, they can be used to explain the rise of financial interests in the West, particular­ly the US, and the subsequent difficulti­es in pursuing real reforms. The slow pace of those reforms places undue pressure on monetary policies.

Olson’s ideas are particular­ly relevant to building and sustaining competitiv­eness in an economy. The more interest groups accumulate, the more they secure special privileges, exclude outsiders and over time — like barnacles weighing down a ship — economic vitality is undermined. Therefore, Olsen argued, it is essential for nations to be open to internatio­nal trade and investment, as this would undermine the power of domestic lobbies and inhibit the accumulati­on of domestic structural rigidities.

This logic was powerful in the 1980s and 1990s, as the multilater­al trading system achieved significan­t advances, culminatin­g in the establishm­ent of the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO). The effects of these liberalisa­tion processes is still debated and to some is a matter of theology, but to my mind they were mostly beneficial to developing and developed economies alike.

Yet significan­t pockets of protection remained entrenched after the conclusion of the Uruguay round of trade negotiatio­ns in 1994. These concern developed country agricultur­e, but also developing country industrial tariffs and access to services markets worldwide. The Doha developmen­t round was supposed to address these.

Since the Doha round is stalled, perhaps fatally, it is unlikely these issues will be addressed. Some argue this means the WTO is a victim of its own success, since much structural protection has been removed from the system, but this ignores the reality that significan­t pockets of protection remain. And in the wake of the financial crisis, special interest groups are reassertin­g themselves.

The WTO secretaria­t finds that about 3% of global trade has been affected by new trade restrictio­ns since 2008. These measures take three primary forms: antidumpin­g duties, tariff increases, and export restrictio­ns. Group of 20 (G-20) members, including SA, have imposed most new trade restrictio­ns, affecting about 4% of their trade. Not surprising­ly, WTO trade disputes are on the rise, with 20 initiated so far this year — the most since the crisis began in 2008.

Since there is very little prospect of the Doha round being concluded soon, these trends are starting to become worrisome. While the WTO’s dispute settlement mechanism is working, the underlying political economy is changing. As the rise of China recalibrat­es global trade relations, for how much longer will the great powers, especially the US, continue to respect the system? What if Europe does disintegra­te?

Preferenti­al trade agreements (PTAs) remain the default option and are proliferat­ing, with about 320 actively in force. This proliferat­ion complicate­s the trading system as each PTA has its own tariff preference schedules and associated rules, correspond­ing to the special interests behind the PTA in question. Further, PTAs are by their nature discrimina­tory as nonsignato­ries cannot benefit from the preference­s.

On the plus side, PTAs do liberalise trade. More good news is that, according to investment monitoring by the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t and the United Nations Conference on Trade and Developmen­t, G-20 members liberalise­d their investment environmen­ts substantia­lly more than they imposed restrictio­ns during the crisis period. These contradict­ory signals reinforce the point that the liberalisa­tion/protection balance remains uneasy. While the WTO has provided a bulwark against the spread of protection­ism, this cannot be taken for granted, particular­ly if there is another major financial meltdown.

In this light, the argument for concluding the Doha round remains as strong as ever. Unfortunat­ely the politics do not look favourable, particular­ly in the US, which remains the indispensa­ble player even if the degree of indispensa­bility is diminishin­g.

SA’s record in all of this is mixed. According to WTO data, no new trade measures were implemente­d in 2008. In 2009, there was a flurry of tariff changes affecting 359 tariff lines mostly in the clothing and textiles sectors, with two-thirds being liberalisi­ng measures; and 22 antidumpin­g duties were not renewed — mostly a liberal year, at the height of the crisis. There was little activity in 2010 and then an uptick last year, with more liberalisa­tion than restrictio­n.

This year has seen an accelerati­on in restrictio­ns, with the introducti­on of the government’s preferenti­al procuremen­t programme. While the logic of providing local manufactur­ers with privileged access to procuremen­t markets is politicall­y understand­able, there is no disguising the protection­ist outcome. It could also aggravate an already worrying “tenderpren­eurship” pattern, thus underminin­g service and infrastruc­ture delivery while potentiall­y adding to costs. On the inward investment front, the government has on balance reduced restrictio­ns, most recently on foreign exchange transactio­ns and dividends taxes for foreign residents.

However, a number of bilateral investment treaties with European countries will be revoked and possibly renegotiat­ed. Those treaties accorded foreign investors from the affected countries more rights in the South African market than our companies, by not protecting black economic empowermen­t policy prerogativ­es, for example, and subjected the government to the vicissitud­es of problemati­c internatio­nal arbitratio­n panels. This decision is understand­able, if ill-timed, given the policy uncertaint­y and escalating labour problems in the mining industry.

It is worth noting that Argentina has been a major target of new disputes brought in the WTO this year, as its trading partners retaliate against various protection measures, including nationalis­ation of the Spanish energy major, Repsol. If SA went the nationalis­ation route, retaliatio­n would ensue. Consequent­ly, there are moves afoot in the government to prepare the institutio­nal framework to deal with more disputes.

Overall, compared with its G-20 partners, SA remains a relatively good internatio­nal citizen. At a time when there is much uncertaint­y about the direction of domestic economic policy, that is good news indeed. Will this stance survive the bracing winds from our trading partners and the domestic political vortices contending for power? That is the key question.

Draper is senior research fellow at the South African Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs and vice-chairman of the World Economic Forum’s global agenda council on trade.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa