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<DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2><FONT face="Courier New" size=3>Hi for
today,<BR><BR>I've run this to pass on a 'dose of reality' in this world.
ZNet carries quite a lot of articles that the WTO and its ilk for what
they in reality are. Will the fine words of James Wolfensohn result in
changes for the better? You'd have to see them to believe
it.<BR><BR>Paul<BR><BR><BR>Commentaries are a premium sent to Sustainer
Donors<BR>of Z/ZNet and that to learn more about the project folks can
consult<BR>ZNet at <FONT color=#0000ff><U>http://www.zmag.org</U></FONT> or the
ZNet Sustainer Pages at<BR></FONT><FONT size=3><FONT face="Courier New"><FONT
color=#0000ff><U>http://www.zmag.org/Commentaries/donorform.htm<BR></U></FONT><BR>====<BR><BR>Empty
promises don't feed poor children<BR><BR>BY SEAN HEALY<BR><BR>A funny thing
happened on the way to the Third United Nations Conference<BR>on Least Developed
Countries in Brussels: the representatives of rich<BR>country governments
suddenly discovered that their restrictions on<BR>market access for poor
countries' goods are stifling growth in the Third<BR>World and promised to do
better next time.<BR><BR>In the two weeks before the conference began on May 14,
World Trade<BR>Organisation director-general Mike Moore, European trade
commissioner<BR>Pascal Lamy, even the pointed-headed US trade representative
Robert<BR>Zoellick all decried the miserable access that the 48 poorest nations
on<BR>Earth have to Northern markets.<BR><BR>The World Bank released a specially
commissioned report proving the<BR>point and a spokesperson said its president,
James Wolfensohn, had the<BR>view ``that debt relief without market access is a
sham''.<BR><BR>Opening the conference itself, UN secretary-general Kofi Annan
said that<BR>the current set-up of trade, finance and investment had caught the
48<BR>least developed countries in a ``vicious circle'' and
criticised<BR>Northern inaction on lowering tariffs for LDC imports. In
Washington,<BR>DC, Australian Treasurer Peter Costello said that restricted
market<BR>access ``continues to limit significantly the ability of
developing<BR>countries to grow further and reduce poverty''.<BR><BR>And in
Paris, the annual ministerial meeting of the club of rich<BR>countries, the
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development,<BR>felt so strongly about
the issue that it included a call for greater<BR>market access for LDCs in its
final statement. But that's not the joke.<BR><BR>The joke is that these people
thought that they were fooling someone,<BR>that no-one would notice that, tacked
on to their statements oozing<BR>sympathy for the unfairness of the global trade
system, was the<BR>oh-so-subtle use of leverage (``And the most effective way to
achieve<BR>these openings is by launching a new round [of WTO trade talks]''),
that<BR>no-one would twig that their promises are as empty as their
souls.<BR><BR>When rich country representatives stump for the WTO's next
ministerial,<BR>to be held in the Persian Gulf emirate of Qatar in November, to
formally<BR>launch a new round of comprehensive trade talks, they proclaim
the<BR>necessity for ``free trade'', for liberating all countries rich and
poor<BR>from any restrictions on what, how and when to trade and for
allowing<BR>them to go about their business unimpeded, freely and equally.
That<BR>would be bad enough: the equivalent of throwing a goldfish into a
tank<BR>of sharks and telling it to compete.<BR><BR>But it's worse than that.
While enforcing market-opening measures on the<BR>weak, World Trade Organisation
agreements allow the strong to do pretty<BR>much whatever they like. ``Free
trade'' is only the catchcry when it<BR>advances the interests of the rich
nations and the giant corporations;<BR>when it doesn't, the WTO legalises, even
entrenches, Northern<BR>protectionism.<BR><BR>Rigged<BR><BR>A report by the
British charity Oxfam, released immediately before the<BR>UN's LDC conference in
Brussels, lifts the lid on the scale of this<BR>WTO-sanctioned protectionism.
Entitled Rigged Trade and Not Much Aid,<BR>the study shows how ``rich countries
help to keep the least developed<BR>countries poor''.<BR><BR>Many LDCs have
undergone extraordinarily rapid trade liberalisation in<BR>the last decade,
lowering import tariffs and scrapping non-tariff<BR>barriers, both as a result
of negotiations in the WTO and as a result of<BR>pressure from the World Bank
and International Monetary Fund.<BR><BR>Cambodia, for example, is halving its
average tariff, from 30% to 15% in<BR>the next year, while Haiti now has 800
product lines which have no<BR>tariffs on them and has scrapped all import
quotas.<BR><BR>In contrast, through various tricks, all of which are perfectly
legal<BR>under the WTO's Agreement on Agriculture, both the European Union
and<BR>the United States spend more on agricultural subsidies today than
they<BR>were spending at the start of the Uruguay Round of world trade talks
in<BR>1986.<BR><BR>The OECD nations currently spend US$1 billion each day on
agricultural<BR>subsidies. Over a year, the spending is about the same as the
combined<BR>gross domestic products of the LDCs.<BR><BR>Most of this assistance
goes to the biggest companies and farms: in the<BR>US, 61% of the US$22 billion
a year given out in direct payments goes to<BR>10% of farmers, according to the
Environmental Working Group.<BR><BR>The result, the report notes, is that ``some
of the world's most<BR>vulnerable rural producers [are] competing against the
treasuries of<BR>Europe and North America, with heavily subsidised imports
driving down<BR>local prices and destroying markets''.<BR><BR>In 1995, under
pressure from the US, Haiti reduced import tariffs on<BR>rice from over 50% to
less than 3%. This prompted an immediate, and<BR>entirely predictable, surge of
subsidised US rice imports. Unable to<BR>compete, local farmers were driven out
of business and, from a position<BR>of near self-sufficiency in 1990, Haiti's
imports now account for over<BR>half of national consumption.<BR><BR>Some
Northern policies even deliberately discriminate against imports<BR>from the
LDCs. The exports of the least developed countries are almost<BR>three times as
likely as those of the major trading powers to face<BR>``tariff peaks'' of more
than 15%, for instance.<BR><BR>In some product lines, ``tariff escalation''
discourages countries from<BR>exporting goods further up the value chain.
Fully-processed manufactured<BR>food products face tariffs twice as high as
products in the first stage<BR>of processing in both the EU and Japan, rising to
12 times as high in<BR>Canada.<BR><BR>The study makes no estimate of the total
dollar figure impact of<BR>Northern protectionism on Southern economies,
although Oxfam has<BR>previously put it at US$700 billion a year. But whatever
the monetary<BR>cost, the social cost <197> in lost food security, in even
more extreme<BR>rural poverty, in worsened child malnutrition, in people forced
into the<BR>slums of the cities to look for work <197> is far
greater.<BR><BR>Fraudulent<BR><BR>The promise made to LDCs at the UN conference
was that Northern<BR>countries would expand existing Generalised Systems of
Preferences and<BR>allow LDC exports to enter duty- and quota-free.<BR><BR>The
promise is fraudulent.<BR><BR>As Oxfam's report notes, ``Most [such schemes]
have been carefully<BR>designed to maximise the public relations benefits
for<BR>industrialised-country governments, and to minimise the real
trade<BR>benefits for the LDCs''.<BR><BR>The ``Africa Growth and Opportunity
Act'', passed by the US Congress in<BR>2000, which promises completely
unrestricted access to US markets for<BR>all sub-Saharan exports, offers those
countries nothing they don't<BR>already have.<BR><BR>Under the
US-Africa-Caribbean trade bill, African exporters of apparel<BR>are required to
use yarn and fabrics imported from the US to benefit<BR>from duty-free access.
The Japanese offer of free market access focussed<BR>on industrial goods not
exported by LDCs and explicitly excluded those<BR>agricultural products in which
poor countries might have a competitive<BR>edge.<BR><BR>As for the poster-child
of such schemes, the EU's ``Everything but<BR>Arms'' policy, such are the
loopholes and exceptions in it that critics<BR>have dubbed it ``Everything but
Farms''.<BR><BR>The plan, first put forward by the EU Commission in October,
would have<BR>granted duty- and quota-free access to European markets for all
LDC<BR>exports except armaments. Financially, however, the benefits for
the<BR>LDCs would have been meagre, as they already have such access
through<BR>various preference arrangements and they have limited capacity
to<BR>greatly increase production to meet new market openings.<BR><BR>According
to one World Bank estimate, the dollar figure impact of<BR>``Everything but
Arms'' would have been in the region of US$185 million<BR>a year, a 1% increase
in LDC export earnings.<BR><BR>Even that benefit, however, has now been done
away with, thanks to the<BR>European Commission buckling under pressure from
powerful, cashed-up<BR>farm lobby groups. Howling that Europe would be flooded
by cheap sugar,<BR>the British sugar beet industry was able to force back
liberalisation of<BR>the sugar and rice markets, the two products of most
interest to LDC<BR>exporters, to 2008 at the earliest.<BR><BR>The Commission
also put in place a system to prevent ``serious<BR>disturbances to EU markets'',
meaning, to stop LDCs actually increasing<BR>their market share. If this is the
carrot that is supposed to entice<BR>poor country governments into a new round
of trade talks, it's a pretty<BR>wilted and bedraggled carrot. And the least
developed countries might be<BR>poor, but they're not
bunnies.<BR><BR><BR><BR></FONT></FONT><FONT size=2><FONT
face="Times New Roman">-- <BR>Paul de Burgh-Day
<paul@deburghday.com><BR>Box 132 Sheffield Tasmania 7306
Australia<BR>Tel: 61(0)3 6363 5060 Fax: 61 (0)3 6363
5065<BR>or 61 (0)3 8660 2166
(FaxBank)</FONT><BR></FONT></FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>