Timely warning

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| What the argument boils down to is that global trade needs to be fair and free of distortion, besides being on a level playing field between developed and developing countries. In other words, half-hearted liberalisation can harm the poor in the developing countries while total liberalisation and elimination of protection and support (in the developed countries) can be a real bonanza for them. This much is perhaps self-evident; still, it is a timely warning against coming away from Doha with an imperfect agreement that causes more problems than it solves. |
| Taking that to be so, it would seem that the developing countries are doing the right thing in being fastidious while viewing the offers made, and the demands raised, at the Doha negotiation table. Of course, the anxiety of the WTO director-general, Pascal Lamy, to bring the protracted parleys to an early conclusion is understandable because, otherwise, they will have to be put on hold till the US presidential election is over and a new administration assumes office next January. But this urgency should not push the developing countries into agreeing to a half-baked deal which might ultimately boomerang on them, as earlier deals under the auspices of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) have done. The conditional offer made by the US president late last week, to consider serious concessions in agriculture in return for other countries opening up their markets to more US exports of manufactures and services, is in line with similar signals from other developed countries, and they do not indicate much headway in the talks or any softening of positions. Though India and several other developing countries may gain from liberalisation of trade in the services sector, this cannot be at the cost of the core issues that have so far prevented a deal in the Doha Round. In that sense, the Escap warning is a timely one. |
First Published: Apr 04 2008 | 12:00 AM IST