Robert
Zoellick, freshman appointee to the post of United States' Trade
Representative, is a man with a mission. Early into his tenure, he has
been assigned the challenging job of winning universal support for the
highly controversial new Round of world trade negotiations. He has a tight
deadline too: the next ministerial meeting at Doha, Qatar in November.
Success in this effort depends on his ability to soften two principal
targets. One is the European Union, that is unwilling to cutback
significantly on its support to agriculture, and is willing to even talk
about the matter only if a whole range of new issues ranging from
protecting the environment to reducing foreign investment regulations and
implementing a competition policy are implemented. The other is the group
of developing countries, led by the "like-minded five", which includes
India, Pakistan, Egypt and Malaysia, that has held that no new Round
should be considered before a review of the impact of the Uruguay Round
(UR) agreement is made and a number of inadequacies in its implementation
are addressed.
Of these
targets, the EU appeared the more difficult nut to crack. Getting it to
budge on agricultural support would be difficult, given the crucial role
of such support for its farming community. What is more, with the US
having provided the lead, the EU has been reforming its Common
Agricultural Policy to shift from forms of support that obviously affect
prices and trade, to other ostensibly "decoupled" forms of support, such
as income transfers and "deficiency payments". In the UR, the US and the EU had come together and manoeuvred to keep such forms of support out of
the definition of "trade-distorting" subsidies. Thus, though the total
subsidy provided to American and European farmers, a figure captured in
the OECD's computations of the "producer subsidy equivalent", has remained
high and even increased over the 1990s, these countries claimed to be
meeting their Uruguay Round commitments with regarding to reducing tariff
support and subsidies provided to their agricultural sector. Further, in
an effort to completely legitimise such support to agriculture, the US and EU had ensured the inclusion of a
"peace clause" in the Uruguay Round
Agreement on Agriculture (AoA) that decreed that no disputes could be
raised regarding the "green-box policies" and other AoA conforming support
and subsidy measures, during the phase when the agreement was being
implemented.
The results
of these features of the UR, are now proving a thorn in the flesh of Mr.
Zoellick. The American farming community is unhappy over the high support
afforded to European farmers, despite the massive support it receives from
its own government. And the Cairns group of agricultural exporters, which
includes Australia and Argentina among others, is keen on enforcing its
one point programme when it comes to world trade: the complete freeing of
trade in agricultural products. The end-July meet of trade officials in
Geneva, was the occasion chosen by Zoellick to try and convince the EU
that it must give on this matter. In this effort he found an ally in
Pascal Lamy, EU Trade Commissioner and reported long term friend, who is
busy working out the quid pro quo needed to win the support of EU
members for progress on agricultural trade front. In the event Lamy has
come up with a long list of issues that need to be discussed along with
reduction of support for agriculture. These include regulation to protect
the environment, competition policies and multilateral rules governing
investment. Thus the next stage in world trade negotiations should, in its
view, not be just about reducing tariffs on manufactures further and
reducing trade-limiting forms of support to agriculture, but rather a
comprehensive new Round that brings in issues that have hitherto been
substantially delinked from trade.
The EU
stance is both a loss and a gain for Zoellick. A loss because it seeks to
bring in issues such as competition policy and environmental protection,
that are unlikely to be popular at home. Giant American corporations, that
straddle world markets and zealously guard their turf through means fair
and foul, as Microsoft has done, would not be too happy if regulations
that limit their spread into Europe through mergers and acquisitions are
to be discussed. The EU's notion of environmental protection, which
includes ensuring food safety, by keeping out genetically modified foods
for instance, has already upset American farmers who account for a large
share of acreage under GM crops. And these fresh demands to use such
grounds to limit trade come at time when US farmers would have to give in
to the Cairns group's call to reduce income support.
But this
loss is no unmixed blessing, since it brings with it the assurance that if
some at least of these issues are included in the negotiating agenda, the
all-important EU would be willing to go along with the American desire for
a new round of trade negotiations. Having registered this gain, Zoellick
set out on a whirlwind tour, that brought him to India, with the aim of
neutralising the developing country block opposed to a new round before UR
implementation issues are discussed. In this effort, Zoellick has three
grounds on which to bargain. The first is the claim that any advance on
the agricultural front could be of benefit to developing countries that
can also demand that some of the other inadequacies of the UR should be
addressed in the new round. The second is that with him having won EU
support, it is unlikely that the new round can be stalled for long. This
would condemn opponents of the round to isolation. In an address to
industrialists at New Delhi, he in fact warned that India is likely to be
left behind and would lose out at the coming Doha ministerial conference,
if it stuck to its opposition to a new trade round. Finally, in New Delhi,
he combined the demand for support for a new round with the promise of
cooperation on sensitive issues like counter-terrorism, nuclear
non-proliferation and human rights. This is nothing but a veiled threat of
political boycott if India did not fall in line.