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G20 trade ministers insist on urgent need for WTO reform

MINISTERS ARE ‘STEPPING UP THE DIALOGUE’ ON DISPUTES AS NEW TRUMP TARIFFS LOOM

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Trade and investment ministers from G20 countries meeting in Argentina said there was an “urgent need” to improve the World Trade Organisati­on, a joint statement said on Friday.

With US President Donald Trump readying tariffs on another $200 billion (Dh734.6 billion) in Chinese goods, the ministers said they were “stepping up the dialogue” on internatio­nal trade disputes, according to the statement issued at the summit.

It did not provide any details of possible WTO reforms or how dialogue on trade was being increased.

“Obviously the new tariff measures are not positive,” Argentina’s Production and Labour Minister, Dante Sica, said in a news conference at the end of the one-day meeting. “But we need to see how things evolve.”

German Deputy Economy Minister Oliver Wittke said the joint declaratio­n sent a powerful signal about the importance of strengthen­ing WTO “especially in times of ‘America first’ and increasing global protection­ism,” with next steps to follow when G20 leaders meet in Argentina at the end of November.

“We have to use this momentum,” Wittke said in a statement released by the ministry after the summit.

Protesters target Trump

Outside the meeting, smoke filled the air in the normally tranquil seaside city of Mar del Plata where the conference is being held. Protesters burnt makeshift American flags and chanted against free trade orthodoxy and Trump’s support of Argentina’s cash-strapped President Mauricio Macri, whose fiscal belt-tightening has garnered a backlash from the country’s working-class.

“We’re standing here in solidarity with the workers of Latin America. While those politician­s sleep in fancy beds, communitie­s starve because of trade and adjustment policies that hurt the most vulnerable,” protester Maralin Cornil, 30, said.

Argentina holds the G20’s rotating presidency this year, and is re-negotiatin­g a $50 billion standby financing deal with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF), cutting its fiscal deficit targets and reducing costs to ensure it can continue paying its internatio­nal debts.

Trump has said he would attend the summit’s final meeting with other heads of state, in Buenos Aires on November 30.

The Trump administra­tion has demanded that China cut its $375 billion trade surplus with the United States, end policies aimed at acquiring US technologi­es and intellectu­al property, and roll back hightech industrial subsidies. While Trump has threatened to pull the US from the WTO, China has called for WTO reform to make the global trade system fairer and more effective.

The 23-year-old trading club is run on the basis of consensus, meaning that every one of its 164 members has an effective veto and it is almost impossible to get agreement on any change to the rules.

Sica also said that talks on a free trade deal between the European Union and the Mercosur trade bloc of Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay were wrapping up, with an agreement likely by the end of the year.

“We are in the final stages regarding the most delicate aspects of an EU-Mercosur agreement and we are concluding with the political and technical details,” Sica said.

 ?? Reuters ?? Maria Reyes Maroto (right), Spain’s Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism, and Jose Luis ■ Kaiser Moreiras, Spain’s director-general for Internatio­nal Trade and Investment, during G20 Trade Ministers’ Meeting in Mar del Plata, Argentina, on Friday.
Reuters Maria Reyes Maroto (right), Spain’s Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism, and Jose Luis ■ Kaiser Moreiras, Spain’s director-general for Internatio­nal Trade and Investment, during G20 Trade Ministers’ Meeting in Mar del Plata, Argentina, on Friday.

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