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    | THE DIFFICULT ART OF CONCLUDING WHAT WAS 
      STARTED: The experience of the Doha Round and the EU-Mercosur negotiations
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    | by Félix PeñaApril 2011
 
 English translation: Isabel Romero Carranza
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    |    | A decade after being launched the Doha Round and the 
        bi-regional negotiations between Mercosur and the European Union (EU) 
        are still not producing any concrete signs of a prompt conclusion.
       Regarding the Doha Round, there is currently a strong 
        impression that the "window of opportunity" that seemed to have 
        opened up at the beginning of he year is now closing down. Several observers 
        and analysts agree in that the existing obstacles could be surmounted 
        by a strong and honest political will that goes beyond the repeated declarations 
        made at the summits of the highest political level. One option would be 
        to procure a less ambitious agreement and, as a trade-off, to initiate 
        a new stage of multilateral negotiations using more innovative methodologies 
        and introducing different multi-speed and variable geometry negotiation 
        modalities.
       There are no signals either of any concrete progress towards the conclusion 
        of the negotiations between Mercosur and the EU this year. A similar situation 
        to that which led to the October 2004 failure seems to be happening again. 
        The political drive has apparently dissipated and, if still present, is 
        not clearly visible. Additionally, there are factors that could introduce 
        an unnecessary rigidity in the negotiations such as, for example, the 
        interpretation of the scope that the free trade commitments should have.With leadership at the highest political level -such as that which led 
        to re-launching the negotiations last year in Madrid- and with flexibility 
        in the interpretation of the requirements of the WTO rules, it would seem 
        feasible to avoid some of the existing obstacles. A less ambitious agreement 
        that opens the door to a long term process with greater strategic intent 
        could prove better than a new failure in the negotiations.
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    | Both the Doha Round and the EU-Mercosur negotiations are dragging their 
        feet. A decade after their launch neither trade negotiation is giving 
        off any concrete signals of moving forward towards a prompt conclusion. 
        They seem to be avoiding success inasmuch as they are resisting failure. 
       Towards mid-April the perspectives for the conclusion of the Doha Round 
        during this year were dismal (on this regard see the article entitled 
        "WTO Negotiators Eye "Soft Landing"", ICTSD, Bridges 
        Weekly Trade News Digest, volume 15, number 13, April 14, 2011, on http://ictsd.org/i/news/bridgesweekly/104413/). 
        The impression that the "window of opportunity" that seemed 
        to have opened up at the beginning of the year is now closing down was 
        accentuated. Among others, a working group from the Evian Group (see the reference 
        in the Recommended Reading Section of this Newsletter) alerted, in its 
        February meeting, of the possible consequences of the failure to fulfill 
        the objective of concluding the negotiations by the end of this year. 
        It pointed out that only a joint effort of all the parties interested 
        in an effective multilateral international trade system would make it 
        possible to successfully conclude the negotiations during this year. This 
        would imply a strong political and business leadership. On this regard, the working group pointed out that "it is important 
        that the business community understand the systemic implications of the 
        framework in which they will evolve if short-term incentives and quarterly 
        balance sheets dominate their approach to the multilateral trade regime". 
        It added that "the private sector has much to lose from the absence 
        of an agreement - with a spiral chain which could take the form of continued 
        export subsidies, no discipline on domestic support, no tariff cuts in 
        manufacturing, no agreement on cotton, no progress on trade facilitation, 
        credibility damage, and an overall unpredictable environment". These 
        would be some of the hidden costs of a scenario in which the Doha Round 
        failed or entered a long period of stagnation -which could be the same 
        or eventually worse-.  The report mentions the risk that the rules of the multilateral international 
        trade system become relatively obsolete, due to the speed of the trend 
        towards preferential trade agreements and the deep changes in world trade 
        caused by the evolution towards multiple modalities of productive articulation, 
        both at a global and regional scale.  The Evian Group working group identified the main sensitivities and obstacles 
        that would hinder the conclusion of the multilateral negotiations this 
        year (on this regard there seems to be certain consensus among observers 
        and analysts). These are: the degree of ambition and the sector priorities 
        with regards to the access of markets, especially among the five main 
        protagonists (the US, the EU, China, India and Brazil); the political 
        assets necessary to present a multilateral agreement to voters and parliaments 
        within a context of unemployment and of the perception of economic vulnerabilities 
        originated by external economic competition; and an insufficient willingness 
        to commit within a prevailing climate of mutual mistrust. However, at 
        the same time, there is a confirmation that countries perceive the benefits 
        that could be reaped from a success in the negotiations or, otherwise, 
        the systemic consequences of their collapse.  Many observers and analysts agree in that the existing obstacles could 
        be overcome by a strong and real political will that goes beyond the repeated 
        declarations by the G20 or, most recently, of the BRICS group that met 
        in Sanya, China, in April (for the final declaration of the Sanya Summit 
        on April 14 2011, go to http://news.xinhuanet.com/). A more reasonable option would be to lower the ambitions of the agreement 
        to be reached and, as a trade-off, to start a new stage of multilateral 
        negotiations that uses more innovative methods and introduces different 
        multi-speed and variable geometry negotiating modalities (refer to our 
        2007 article on http://www.felixpena.com.ar/). With regards to the EU-Mercosur negotiations, no signals that would indicate 
        any concrete progress leading to their conclusion this year could be observed 
        after the March meeting of the Bi-regional Negotiations Committee held 
        in Brussels. At times, it would seem that the situation is similar to 
        that which led to the failure of October 2004. One explanation of this state of affairs could be the insufficiency of 
        the political livelihood required to conclude a complex and unique trade 
        negotiation. This is so because it involves thirty-one countries grouped 
        in two blocks with different institutional densities, relative powers 
        and interests. Additionally, within each block there are diverse economic 
        interests, which sometimes can even be contradictory.  In view of a situation that seems to be repeating itself the question 
        that comes up is why was the negotiation re-launched last year at the 
        Madrid Summit in the first place. It would be safe to say that nobody 
        would voluntarily participate in a negotiating table unless there was 
        an interest of achieving something. A halted negotiation is not willingly 
        resumed knowing that in a short time it will come to a standstill once 
        again.  The answer could be that when the negotiation was re-launched there was 
        sufficient "oxygen" coming from the highest political level. 
        This was brought in by the governments of Argentina and Spain in charge 
        of the respective pro-tempore presidencies of each block. At the same 
        time, there were strong economic interests on the European side in favor 
        of a preferential agreement with a regional space that, in spite of the 
        insufficiencies of its integration process, is attractive for hefty competitors 
        such as China and the US. Moreover, the road towards a bilateral agreement 
        with Brazil was closed, at least at that moment.  The initial political drive seems to have faded on both sides of the 
        Atlantic. Or if it still exists it is imperceptible. For a time it was 
        recaptured by President Lula, who was occupying Mercosur's pro-tempore 
        presidency during the second semester of last year. Yet the main weakening 
        can be observed in Europe which is still -and maybe for a long time- under 
        the effects of the financial shock of 2008. Furthermore, several European 
        governments are plagued by their own internal dilemmas. They are going 
        through a period dominated by uncertain elections and by bewildered, if 
        not outright frightened, public opinions. The events of Northern Africa 
        do not contribute to change this scenario. On the contrary they seem to 
        have accentuated defensive reflexes.  On the European side the negotiation has remained in the hands of officers 
        with an apparent will but with insufficient political weight. Nobody at 
        the highest political level is expressing with conviction "this negotiation 
        interests me". Those making the most noise -this is part of the game- 
        are the agricultural interests opposed to the progress of the negotiation. 
        Or what is practically the same; they subject it to the increasingly uncertain 
        conclusion of the Doha Round.  In our opinion an additional factor is generating an unnecessary rigidity 
        in this bi-regional negotiation. This is the alleged demand that a bi-regional 
        free trade agreement, such as the one that is sought, must contemplate 
        at least ninety percent of reciprocal trade. It is claimed that it is 
        required by article XXIV of the GATT when it prescribes that the coverage 
        of a free trade agreement should comprise "substantially all the 
        trade". For those who support this idea it would be necessary to 
        comply with it so that the resulting agreement is not vulnerable within 
        the scope of the WTO.  However this is not what the GATT article expresses. In any case it is 
        a possible interpretation in view of its ambiguity, an interpretation 
        that seems to prevail in Brussels. It is influenced by the precedent that 
        the smaller percentages could have in other EU trade negotiations (among 
        which one of the most relevant is the one being carried out with India 
        and of which there is scarce information).  However there are other valid interpretations reflected by a long-standing, 
        unfinished debate among member countries and also among experts on the 
        criteria to be used to interpret such an imprecise text. Depending on 
        the interpretation used the percentage of trade could be reduced to seventy 
        percent or even less (for an analysis of the interpretation of the requirements 
        of article XXIV, paragraph 8 of the GATT, consult the work by Kyle W.Bagwell 
        and Petros C. Mavroidis (editors),"Preferential Trade Agreements. 
        A Law and Economics Analysis", Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 
        2011; and by Sangeeta Khorana, Nicholas Perdikis, May T.Yeung and William 
        A.Kerr "Bilateral Trade Agreements in the Era of Globalization. The 
        EU and India in Search of a Partnership", Edward Elgar, Cheltenham-Northampton, 
        2010. Refer also to the report by Robert Scollay and Roman Grynberg cited 
        in the Recommended Reading Section of this Newsletter). This is no trivial issue. A more flexible interpretation of the commitment 
        assumed through the GATT would enable to find a balance in the bi-regional 
        negotiation to contemplate the existing sensitivities on both sides. These 
        are most intense precisely because some European governments are facing 
        election processes in the midst of the perception of a growing economic 
        uncertainty.  This is but one example of an important tangle in the negotiation that 
        will require the involvement of the highest political levels in order 
        to be untied. The necessary "oxygen" could be obtained if a 
        distinction is made between the degree of ambition of the preferential 
        commitments that are to be assumed in the agreement that is signed and 
        that of the long term objectives of the bi-regional association that is 
        established. Evolutionary clauses would later help continue with the following 
        steps when the circumstances and needs allow it. It would thus be a "two 
        step agreement" with a "built-in-agenda" (see a proposal 
        along these lines in the report of the Mercosur Chair entitled "Concluding 
        the EU-Mercosur Agreement", edited by Alfredo Valladäo, Chaire 
        Mercosur, Science-Po, Paris 2004 and, in particular, the Introduction 
        by Félix Peña and Patrick Messerlin, pages 13 to 20, on 
        http://www.chairemercosur.sciences-po.fr/). 
       Formulated when the negotiation was approaching its first standstill 
        -that of October 2004- and the results of the Doha Round were also viewed 
        with uncertainty, the proposal of splitting the bi-regional negotiation 
        drafted within the framework of the Mercosur Chair seems to preserve its 
        validity in spite of the time elapsed and, at the very least, as a sort 
        of "Plan B". In fact the current scenario, even when different, 
        can also be characterized by the convergence of a bi-regional negotiation 
        lured by paralysis and a Doha Round negotiation that sails, yet one more 
        time, in the midst of a strong uncertainty regarding its outcome.  Concluding what was started ten years ago continues to pose a challenge 
        for these negotiations. In both cases a failure could still be prevented 
        by a strong political drive, flexibility and technical creativity. Confirming 
        a failure would have high costs in both cases.  |  
   
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    | Félix Peña Director 
        of the Institute of International Trade at the ICBC Foundation. Director 
        of the Masters Degree in International Trade Relations at Tres de Febrero 
        National University (UNTREF). Member of the Executive Committee of the 
        Argentine Council for International Relations (CARI). Member of the Evian 
        Group Brains Trust. More 
        information. |  
 
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