The Guardian (USA)

The WTO, with its ‘market knows best’ ideology, has failed. It’s time to bury it

- Nick Dearden

When delegates arrive in Geneva today for the long delayed World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) summit, they will find an institutio­n in the middle of an existentia­l crisis. For 18 long months, the WTO has been debating a moderate proposal from South Africa and India which would have allowed countries to temporaril­y override the property rights of pharmaceut­ical corporatio­ns so they could produce patented Covid-19 vaccines. Opposition by Britain, Switzerlan­d and other European countries has kept it from progressin­g. Even a global pandemic, it seems, isn’t sufficient cause to prompt a temporary rethink of the WTO’s pro-business approach.

Just as bad, the WTO cannot agree a common approach to the food crisis fast spreading across the globe, or the invasion of one of its members by another, or, most serious of all, the climate catastroph­e facing humanity. All it can do is fall back on the mantra of more free trade. Unable to break with a “market knows best” ideology which is actively exacerbati­ng the world’s problems, the WTO is now a failed institutio­n. It’s time to bury it.

The WTO’s crisis is part and parcel of the greater crisis of free-market globalisat­ion as a whole. It was formed in the mid-1990s, the high point of freemarket capitalism, when the answer to every problem was more markets, more private sector, less government red tape. There was, we were told, simply no alternativ­e. Summing up the feeling a few years later, Tony Blair told the Labour party conference, “I hear people say we have to stop and debate globalisat­ion. You might as well debate whether autumn should follow summer.”

But it hadn’t always been that way. Before the WTO, there had been a much looser set of internatio­nal trade rules created at the end of the second world war. This system was also based on the idea that trade was a good thing and high tariffs were usually a bad idea. But to the extent that free-trade policies didn’t achieve those goals, countries had a fair bit of freedom to ignore them. There was no enforcemen­t mechanism, and plenty of room for developing countries, in particular, to design policies they thought worked best for their own developmen­t.

The WTO changed all that. Radical free trade became an end in itself. WTO treaties laid the basis for a set of hard global economic rules, embedded in internatio­nal law. At their core, they removed power from the state to interfere with the supposed rights of big business and big finance, underminin­g the ability of government­s to protect their farmers and infant industries, and to regulate big finance and big business. Unlike its predecesso­r, the WTO incorporat­ed a dispute system with real teeth which made the whole system enforceabl­e.

We can see the results all around us. Far from creating a global version of a farmers’ market, it has encouraged the growth of agricultur­al monopolies practising intensive farming, which dominate our food system at huge cost to the environmen­t. It has encouraged manufactur­ers to “offshore” production to wherever labour is cheapest and regulation­s are lowest, creating political resentment and fuelling rightwing populism in the west.

It has created staggering­ly complex and vulnerable supply chains, best symbolised by an oversized container ship becoming stuck in the Suez canal and bringing global trade to a halt. And it has allowed a handful of multinatio­nal corporatio­ns to dictate the world’s ability to produce the vaccines needed to end a global pandemic, because they owned the – often publicly funded – research behind those medicines.

None of this should surprise us. The great theorist of capitalism, Karl Polanyi, warned us 75 years ago that trying to turn the whole world into a gigantic marketplac­e would end in the “demolition of society”. The fascism of the 1930s was the nightmare reaction that Polanyi lived through, but we see our own version of that social breakdown today.

This system cannot cope well with crisis. But crises are now a defining feature of our era. Which is why many government­s, including Joe Biden’s administra­tion in the US, are moving gradually away from the WTO’s freetrade system. It’s a process initiated, perhaps unwittingl­y, by Donald Trump. Seeing which way the wind was blowing, Biden has continued in this direction – with less bullying and bluster – eschewing free trade deals and standing up to the corporate monopolies that globalisat­ion has created.

This is to be welcomed. But we’ll need to go further and faster if we don’t want to replace a global freemarket system with one of nationalis­t competitio­n in which the strongest player wins. We need a fundamenta­lly different global trade system, which helps rather than hinders government action in protecting their people and the planet. The WTO cannot play that role. It is not reformable, as the Covid waiver debacle proves.

Developing states have always been especially constraine­d by this system. If we want change, these countries will have to work together to begin creating change on the ground: building up their own industries, supporting their small farmers, regulating and taxing big business and big finance, and using the proceeds to build up public services to remove people’s basic needs from the market.

There are hopeful signs – from South Africa’s creation of “open source” medical research to Indian farmers successful­ly refusing to be further liberalise­d. The globalisat­ion project cut short the developing world’s experiment with economic decolonisa­tion. It’s time to return to it. Any attempt by the US and Europe to punish these countries will have to be met with resistance, there and here.

From this point, we can begin rebuilding an internatio­nal architectu­re for actual fair and free trade. None of the problems we face will be solved by the WTO’s “market knows best” proposals, which will only accelerate social and environmen­tal breakdown. It would be no loss to the vast majority of the world if this WTO summit was the last. It’s long past time for something else.

Nick Dearden is director of Global Justice Now

 ?? Robin Millard/AFP/Getty Images ?? ‘Even a global pandemic, it seems, isn’t sufficient cause to prompt a temporary rethink of the WTO’s pro-business approach.’ Photograph:
Robin Millard/AFP/Getty Images ‘Even a global pandemic, it seems, isn’t sufficient cause to prompt a temporary rethink of the WTO’s pro-business approach.’ Photograph:

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