The
Least Developed Countries and world trade
In
a way, the real surprise is that more vociferous protests
from smaller countries have not come sooner. The Uruguay
Round negotiations resulted in an agreement that had
little or nothing to offer smaller developing countries,
and especially the Least Developed Countries. This was
even officially acknowledged, in the form of a special
clause promising "special and differential treatment"
to Least Developed Countries and giving them some concessions
in the matter of opening up their own economies.
However, the practice turns out to have been even worse
than the written agreement. The LDCs in particular are
caught in a cleft stick : if they stay out of GATT and
WTO membership, they would be forced into costly and
unbalanced bilateral negotiations which they cannot
afford and in which they would be severely disadvantaged.
But inside the WTO, they find that none of their legitimate
concerns are met; that the process of implementation
of the various agreements is time-consuming, costly
and leads to massive domestic dislocation, that they
may have to go in for expensive legal advice simply
to counteract allegations in disputes; and that in general
the system makes no real allowance for the very different
contexts of small countries without the financial and
human resources to devote to the Geneva organisation.
In addition, some of the most well-publicised promises
of the Uruguay Round have failed to materialise; indeed,
the reality has been completely opposite. Even as the
growth in value of world trade has decelerated and even
turned negative since 1995, the situation of smaller
and less developed countries has worsened within the
overall deceleration. The inequalities of the international
trading system appear to have been strengthened, rather
than diminished.
There were supposed to be very large increases in the
volumes and prices of developing country exports. The
WTO came into existence on 1 January 1995. In the four
years that followed, the average rate of export growth
of developing countries was actually lower than in the
previous four-year period. The prices of the principal
exports of developing countries, which were buoyant
between 1993 and 1995, have since fallen very sharply.
While this is true of many important manufacturing exports
of developing countries, it is especially so for primary
commodities, except for some food and beverages which
are dominantly exported by developed countries.
Chart 1, which shows the annual rate of change of prices
of non-oil primary commodities, indicates that after
1995 the dominant tendency has been that of decline.
While this is bad news for all primary commodity exporters,
it is particularly bad for those who are dominantly
dependent upon not just primary exports in general,
but on exports of a single commodity.
Chart
1 >> Click
to Enlarge
This is a typical feature of the Least Developed Countries,
whose lack of development essentially means that they
have not been able to diversify their domestic production
structures, not just to manufactured goods, but even
to other primary goods. It renders them especially vulnerable
to international market volatility. The disconcerting
fact is that such dependence has hardly changed over
nearly twenty years, the period when globalisation was
supposed to transform economies all over the world.
As Chart 2 indicates, the export concentration ratios
(defined as the share of only one item of exports in
total export value) have remained high and broadly stable
since 1980 for all LDCs, after rising somewhat over
the 1980s and coming down slightly thereafter. Table
1 gives some idea of the very great dependence of several
countries on particular primary commodity exports. What
makes the situation even worse for many of them is that,
while such exports (of any single item) may dominate
their own export basket, they count for relatively little
in terms of the international supply, so that they are
also unable to influence world prices in a way beneficial
to themselves.
Chart
2 >> Click
to Enlarge
Table
1 >> Click
to Enlarge
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