| Multilateralism and regionalism: Two key dimensions of Argentina's 
        international trade and development strategy As a medium size country - in terms of its economic dimension, relative 
        power and participation in world trade of goods and services - for Argentina 
        the emerging international reality could be perceived as an opportunity 
        window. Its regional role -both in South America and in the South Atlantic 
        -, and its potential in relation with some of the most critical issues 
        of the future global agenda - i.e. food, energy, environment, water - 
        are some of the reasons that could explain why it is possible to have 
        a reasonable optimistic view about the future of Argentina as a relevant 
        actor in the global arena. A strong and effective multilateral trade system is one of the key dimensions 
        of its international strategy. That's one of the reasons why Argentina 
        has been an active protagonist in the World Trade Organization (WTO) negotiations, 
        including the Doha Round. It has a strong interest in a successful conclusion 
        of the actual trade negotiations, provided the results are balanced and 
        ambitious, especially in its agriculture issues and its main development 
        goals. Another main dimension is the implementation of a sustainable framework 
        for social and economic development and integration at the regional level. 
        That is the reason why Argentina is engaged in working together with its 
        neighbors especially at Mercosur and also at LAIA and UNASUR, both conceived 
        as long term and development oriented processes.  In order to build a friendly environment for its own social and economic 
        development, multilateralism and regionalism are two complementary levels 
        of Argentina's commercial policy strategy. For that reason, we can assume 
        then that Argentina will continue to engage in an active policy to support 
        in the future the necessary complementary of those key dimensions of its 
        international relations [1].  WTO and some possible impacts of the new international realities As Fareed Zakaria [2] has noted, tectonic power shifts - the third one 
        in five hundred years - indicates that more countries are now emerging 
        as key players at the global arena changing the conditions of power relations 
        and international economic competition.  What is becoming increasingly evident is the emerging of a global systemic 
        transformation, with deep roots and long term impacts, which will have 
        also its effects on the way multilateral international institutions are 
        conducted. It is difficult to imagine that these new international realities will 
        not have an impact in the WTO as the main institutional framework of global 
        trade. Most probably it will have a strong effect in the way future global 
        multilateral trade negotiations are conducted and in the ability to achieve 
        equilibrium among the national interests of its main member countries. 
        And it will also have an impact on its capacity to achieve those Doha 
        goals concerning the development dimension of international trade. One of the most notorious aspects of the new international realities 
        is the actual global economic and financial crisis. Its full effects are 
        yet uncertain. The first signs of contagion to the political arena can 
        be perceived already in some countries. History indicates that this is 
        what happens in moments of deep crisis.  The impact on world trade has already become evident, both at the exchange 
        level and in the trends towards protectionism. Even the term "de-globalization" 
        has been frequently mentioned in some of the analysis. There is still 
        a long road ahead before we can observe a sustainable recovery of the 
        world economy and for the main elements of a new global reality can become 
        clear. As a matter of course, unforeseen situations bring about bewilderment 
        together with conflicting expectations. The positive expectations focus 
        on the impact of the new American leadership and on the survival incentives 
        that emerge when at the brink of a precipice. The negative ones feed on 
        the fear of the proliferation of unexpected events [3]; a possible inadequacy 
        of what may be called the "Obama factor" -that is, the ability 
        of the new US President to sustain those initiatives necessary to recover 
        the economy - and, in particular, the future evolution of China's economy. 
       The effects of the crisis on world trade and on the trade policies of 
        the leading countries will take time to become clearer as well. But the 
        fact is that the crisis has had already a strong impact on international 
        trade and that protectionism has returned as a relevant problem to the 
        world trade agenda.  Differences with the 30's and some lessons for today On a deep crisis, bewilderment leads to elicit historic precedents either 
        to provide an understanding of the situation or to undertake possible 
        solutions. One of such precedents may be found in the recurring image 
        of a scenario with similar elements to those of the 1930's, that is, of 
        a chain reaction of structural protectionist policies. However, the differences 
        with the current situation are quite evident and the following three should 
        be highlighted. The first one of these differences is that, at the time there were no 
        multilateral trade institutions such as the WTO. Its rules and joint regulations 
        entail a limitation to the discretionary power of the countries to restrict 
        or distort commercial flows. As stated by Pascal Lamy, they constitute 
        a safety net against protectionism [4]. 
 Today there would be no place for such thing as the Smoot-Hawley Tariff 
        Act. Yet the problem is that, in many cases, the multilateral system establishes 
        such steep ceilings that several modalities of protectionism could find 
        a cover. In particular, those subtle and difficult to detect new-generation 
        modalities, which result from a wide range of restrictions unrelated to 
        tariffs. Some of them even originate in the very same business sectors 
        in alliance with consumers -private rules that have a bearing, for example, 
        in the commercialization of food products. Others may be a direct effect 
        of the measures being applied by countries in their attempts to offset 
        the impacts of the crisis on the level of economic activity and employment. The second difference results from the internationalization of production 
        that has increasingly developed during the last decades. Many companies 
        in several countries -and not just from the most industrialized ones- 
        function within the scope of global and regional value chains. An uncontrolled 
        protectionism would mean a costly complication in the production processes 
        spanning several countries and regions. The orchestration of transnational 
        production networks (for example, in the sense referred to by Victor Fung 
        in his recent book [5]) would be strongly affected in the case of an endemic 
        protectionism and even in the case of the filibustering that may result 
        from apparently harmless measures. To undo the global production web by 
        returning to a scenario of fragmented markets does not seem to be an effective 
        contribution to overcome the current global crisis; not even to preserve 
        the sources of employment, least to prevent the effects on peace and political 
        stability given the chain reactions that might follow. The third difference is that it is presumed that nations learn from their 
        errors. Those of the 1930's were dramatic enough to overlook the lessons 
        gained for present times. One of these important lessons is related to 
        the cost that entails the absence of institutions that enable some order 
        among nations and help face collective problems as a whole. It was this 
        lesson that led to the creation of the current multilateral trade system 
        within a wider network of international cooperation institutions. Despite 
        their current lacks, they constitute a dense network of global and regional 
        public goods that should be preserved and strengthened.  Precisely, other frequently cited historic precedent for the actual international 
        situation are the agreements reached at the United Nations Monetary and 
        Financial Conference, held in Bretton Woods on July of 1944. These agreements 
        marked the origin of the process that led, after the Havana Conference, 
        to the creation of the GATT. The ideal situation would be that nations 
        - i.e. at the current G20 - could agree on actions focused on renewing 
        the present institutions of international cooperation by adapting them 
        to the challenges of the 21st Century. However, it is unlikely that this 
        will happen, at least in the short or even the medium term. The reason 
        is quite simple: Bretton Woods was possible because, at that time, it 
        was clear where world power resided. It was the outcome of a war which, 
        even before it ended, clearly prepared the ground for an undisputable 
        USA leadership. Nothing similar exists today. All signs indicate that the new realities 
        of world power will take time to settle. Only then it will be possible 
        to know for certain which number to append to the letter G, in order to 
        gage a global institutional environment with sufficient critical mass 
        to translate decisions into actions. This is no an easy task. The only 
        certainty is that the numbers 2, 7 or 8 no longer suffice. What criteria 
        should be used to determine which are the nations that working together 
        can generate a power cluster considerable enough to guarantee that their 
        decisions permeate into reality? This poses an efficacy challenge but, 
        above all, a legitimacy one.  To begin with, only two types of countries meet the requirements needed 
        to become the engines of the new global governance: those large enough 
        and those that have the influence to haul along other nations and especially 
        their neighbors. The larger nations stand out due to their current or 
        potential indicators, especially those related to their population, gross 
        product, and participation in world trade (they are the monsters countries 
        in the sense of the well known term coined by George Kennan). United States, 
        China, India and Russia are the main examples. And those countries that 
        have the power to haul along others are those that have shown the ability 
        to group, for example neighboring countries in permanent and sustainable 
        alliances. Commonly, they reflect collective leaderships with a determined 
        degree of institutionalization in a regional geographic area. Such is 
        the case of the larger European nations that lead and are part of the 
        European Union. There may be some cases of countries that aspire to become 
        leaders in other regions. But they still lack the characteristics of nations 
        such as Germany, France or Great Britain.  Looking forward to the development of conditions for a possible Bretton 
        Woods II, in regards to world trade it is still advisable to keep on doing 
        whatever is necessary to strengthen the WTO. This involves concluding 
        the Doha Round, even the less ambitious version of it. It requires, above 
        all, a working agenda that enables to provide urgent and efficient responses 
        to the effects of the global crisis on world trade and development. Some main future challenges for the WTO Monitoring the impact of the global crisis on world trade and the drift 
        towards protectionism, as well as the conclusion of the Doha Round, are 
        still some of the main points on the G20 agenda as was observed both at 
        the recent Washington and London Summits. As already mentioned the problem 
        in relation to these issues, however, is to know if the G20 will be able 
        to agree in the future on actions that will effectively permeate into 
        reality. As a result of the new international realities and of the actual global 
        crisis the WTO faces three major challenges. They should be faced simultaneously. 
        The first one is to preserve the system against the impacts of the global 
        economic and financial crisis and, at the same time, to become the institutional 
        space in which member countries examine the impact of the current economic 
        crisis on world trade, particularly of the protectionists measures adopted 
        to face it and that could greatly affect trade flows.
 A second major challenge is to bring the Doha Round to its conclusion. 
        The Doha Round continues to be a priority for the WTO. Last December, 
        negotiators were unable to comply with the G20 Washington Summit mandate, 
        which had been very clear. In some way this fact undermines the credibility 
        of other commitments assumed on both occasions.
 The forecasts predicting that such goal may be attained in 2010 - as 
        proposed at the L'Aquila Summit, July 2009 (http://www.g8italia2009.it) 
        - are cautious. The new USA government is expected to provide believable 
        signals for a more precise outlook on this issue. However, it is obvious 
        that a successful conclusion of the Doha Round will not depend only on 
        the position adopted by the USA or even by India, the two main protagonists 
        of last year's collapse of the multilateral trade negotiations. 
 What is becoming clear enough is that in the arena of international trade, 
        as with the current economic crisis in general, a collective leadership 
        is require. This leadership may even transcend the actual G20. Perhaps 
        it will be the result of effective collective leaderships at each of the 
        main regional levels. Is this possible? This is probably one of the question 
        marks about the future of the world trade system and, even, of the stability 
        and peace at the global level. 
 Concluding the current trade negotiations would send positive signals 
        to governments, citizens and businessmen of the efficiency of the system, 
        even when the actual results fail to bring together all the ambitious 
        goals imagined in Doha in 2001. In any case, it would be advisable that, 
        without weakening such goals, countries enhance the WTO future agenda. 
        Emphasizing the emphasis on measures to facilitate and aid trade, even 
        when necessary, may prove insufficient if the world economic situation 
        continues to deteriorate. 
 And the third challenge for the WTO is to launch the process of adaptation 
        of its working methods and some of its rules to the new realities of power 
        distribution among nations and of the global economic competition. The need for a debate about the future of the global trade system 
        and of the WTO As mentioned before, the WTO agenda including that related with the Doha 
        Round, will be strongly conditioned by the evolution of global trade in 
        the following months. If the idea of recession and deflation scenarios 
        prevails in the main economies, there could be a tendency towards an increase 
        of certain forms of protectionism that have already become manifest. These 
        would complicate the current global situation even further.  It is in such a context that the warning signals regarding different 
        forms of protectionism tend to emerge. Some of these protectionist modalities 
        would take advantage of the margin of action offered by the limitations 
        to discretionary commercial policies assumed by countries in the WTO. 
        In many cases, the current ceilings are too high as a result of the difference 
        between consolidated and applied tariffs, and between current agricultural 
        subsidies and those that may be granted without violating existing commitments.
 The most negative effect of the successive failures in concluding the 
        Doha Round is, perhaps, that the opportunities to lower such ceilings 
        were lost. Other forms of protectionism may result as a consequence -not 
        necessarily a desired one- of the measures that are being applied in many 
        countries to counteract the recessive effects of the current economic 
        crisis. They originate in public policies but also in the defensive strategies 
        applied by those companies with simultaneous production in different countries. 
        The automotive sector is a clear example, but it is not the only one. 
        If recession deepens, the effects of a "run for your life" outlook 
        may have, as it was in the past, dangerous consequences for world trade. 
        These may even result in unsettling political impacts on countries and 
        even whole regions.
 The mere fact that such a scenario may be feasible makes it altogether 
        more important to preserve and strengthen the WTO system. Since its creation, 
        together with the GATT, seventy years ago, one of its main contributions 
        has been to add a certain degree of discipline to the trade policies of 
        member countries. It bestows predictability to the rules that influence 
        the global exchange of services and goods. It benefits those countries 
        with the greatest real economic power, as well as those with a small relative 
        share in world trade, such as Argentina and other members of Mercosur. 
        
 The combined effects of a probable and complex scenario in which the 
        Doha Round is unable to reach its conclusion; where, at the same time, 
        the trends towards new and existing forms of protectionism are deepened; 
        and where preferential commercial agreements -which are discriminating 
        due to their potential impact on the rest of the countries- tend to multiply, 
        should be analyzed and discussed by member countries in an active forum 
        within the WTO.
 For that purpose, two existing work mechanisms should be fully engaged. 
        These would enable to harness the potential for collective action that 
        results from the current legal and institutional system of the WTO, without 
        the need of any formal innovation.
 The first of these mechanisms is the Ministerial Conference, which will 
        meet next December. It was held for the last time in 2005, even though 
        it was scheduled to take place every two years. Although not explicitly 
        including the Doha Round, its agenda should not be too comprehensive either. 
        However, it should enable to approach the general picture of the impacts 
        of the actual crisis on world trade, including those originated by member 
        countries public policies. Eventually its preparation should be channeled 
        through different types of informal ministerial meetings. The active participation 
        of those countries with greatest incidence on the global exchange of services 
        and goods would be essential, especially considering that thirty countries 
        represent approximately 90 percent of world trade. 
 One of the main points on the Ministerial Conference agenda should focus 
        on how to reconcile, within the commitments that are assumed, the elements 
        of flexibility with the much needed collective discipline, particularly 
        in the responses given to the current crisis and to the special requirements 
        of the least developed countries.  One modality that could be implemented at the Conference could be to 
        organize a set of parallel seminars to examine the core issues that will 
        determine the future functioning of the multilateral global commercial 
        system. These seminars might be prepared by regional multi-stake holders 
        meetings.
 The other existing work mechanism is the general review of the evolution 
        of the international trade environment, foreseen in item G, Annex III, 
        of the Marrakesh Agreement. Three monitoring reports were already published 
        by the WTO DG, the last one on July 1st of this year [6].
 But however the monitoring of protectionist tendencies by the WTO is 
        stinted by the fact that governments not always provide the official information 
        - at least not on time - and by the particular characteristics of the 
        measures once they are effectively applied. The fact that the new protectionism 
        sometimes results from business decisions -eventually fostered by public 
        policies- complicates the monitoring task by the WTO even further.
 An effective monitoring mechanism should keep an eye over protectionist 
        tendencies. This would include measures that are compatible with the current 
        WTO regulations. Given the limitations of the Secretariat to accomplish 
        the monitoring task, it might be convenient to explore ideas that might 
        allow for the new system to use information provided by non-governmental 
        sources. This system could eventually be parallel to the official one. 
        This capacity could be strengthen through a non-governmental online database 
        that could be freely created and edited with the active participation 
        of all interested parties, a kind of Wiki-trade surveillance facility.
 The combination of both mentioned work mechanisms may offer a framework 
        within the scope of the WTO that would help search for systemic answers 
        to those issues of world trade that have become collective problems.
 In any case, it would be important for future G20 Summits to recognize 
        that effective cooperation on trade-related issues can only be achieved 
        through the collective capacity and mobilization of as many countries 
        as possible. As is true for the EU members of the G20, it should be assumed 
        that other participating emerging countries are, at least to some degree, 
        expressing points of view that stem from consultations with non-participating 
        developing countries from the same region. This would contribute to the 
        international legitimacy of the G20 and strengthen its capacity to impact 
        global realities. Relevance of regional governance for stability at the global level
 The attention of protagonists and analysts -and increasingly the citizens 
        of the involved countries- is focusing as well on the impact of the global 
        crisis on their corresponding geographic areas. History reminds us that 
        the scenarios for political collapse, and even for its most negative consequences 
        in terms of armed confrontations, have, in general, started out as regional 
        conflicts [7]. Attention to the adjacent contexts is especially relevant in those integration 
        processes aiming to ensure reasonable governance conditions -such as peace 
        and stability- for the respective region. They also offer the potential 
        for strengthening the ability of each of the member countries to achieve 
        their own goals in terms of productive transformation and insertion in 
        the global economy. This is the case of the European Union, the ASEAN 
        and the Mercosur. These processes normally have a political origin which, 
        if its fundamental motivations are preserved or renewed, may account for 
        the long term vitality of its economic content [8].
 It is well known that regional integration processes are constantly submitted 
        to the dialectic tension between factors that drive towards fragmentation 
        and those required as conditions for greater cooperation and integration, 
        at least of the respective economic systems.
 It is also a known fact that there is not one unique model that preserves 
        and strengthens the political will of working together among sovereign 
        states. This means that each regional geographic space needs to develop 
        its own methods to articulate national interests. This task is often a 
        complex one when trying to reconcile the sometimes very deep differences 
        in relative power, economic dimensions and level of development, among 
        participating countries. 
 As a result of the current global crisis, such methods of regional integration 
        are now being tested in at least three fronts. One of these is the protectionist 
        trends in the mutual relations of participating countries, the second 
        is related to the ability to articulate common positions in response to 
        the effects of the crisis, and the third one is that of the exercise of 
        an effective collective leadership in the corresponding regional space. 
        
 Ultimately, the issue of an effective collective leadership within Mercosur 
        or South America is reflected in the foreign perception of the role of 
        Brazil. Due to its economic dimensions, the President Lula's image and 
        its institutional strength, Brazil is perceived as a country that is able 
        to assume the leadership of the South American region as well as of the 
        Mercosur. It had been previously evinced in the strategic partnership 
        that was agreed between Brazil and the European Union. 
 However, the experiences of other regional geographic spaces indicate 
        that efficient leaderships are those which result in the creation of shared 
        positions among different countries that have the capacity, at the same 
        time, to be relevant protagonists and leaders themselves. 
 Looking into the future, the challenge for the Mercosur countries and 
        for the South American region is still to achieve what other regions, 
        in particular Europe, have already accomplished: to provide an institutional 
        framework for collective leaderships based on mechanisms that may prove 
        efficient to build consensus and coordinate positions in times as such 
        as the current global economic crisis.  Considering this was not achieved yet, we might question about the existence 
        of other countries -perhaps not relevant enough in terms of economic or 
        political power- aiming to bear regional positions to forums such as the 
        G20 Summits. Some requirements for improving the participation of developing countries 
        in the multilateral global trade system Reforms in the governance of global trade and the multilateral trading 
        system will be a long term and non-lineal process. They will largely depend 
        on the future power distribution among nations. This will take some time 
        to stabilize. The G20 Summits could be, in the best scenario, a driving 
        force towards the development of a more friendly multilateral trade system. 
        But, being in the eye of the storm, perhaps it is yet too soon to have 
        an idea of what kind of results could be obtained by for example 2015. 
       Meanwhile, the following could be some of the more immediate steps that 
        could be adopted at the multilateral global trade system and that could 
        be relevant for developing countries:  
        1. To obtain from developed nations concrete and certain compromises 
          concerning market access and the reduction of the negative impact of 
          those economic and trade policies (i.e. agriculture subsidies) that 
          could introduce distortions on global trade. 2. To promote greater flexibility in the interpretation of WTO rules, 
          that would allow developing countries with long term national development 
          strategies to temporarily adopt limited emergency trade measures, on 
          the lines of the opt-out schemes suggested by Professor Dani Rodrik 
          [9]. 3. To develop an aid for trade strategy - understanding aid as an instrument 
          to promote through international cooperation the systemic up-grade of 
          developing countries ability to compete at the global level -, with 
          a significant allowance of financial resources, and that could be managed, 
          for example, through aid for trade consortia's with the participation 
          of the main development oriented agencies (i.e. UNIDO, UNCTAD, ITC and 
          multilateral development financial institutions) through WTO leadership. Also, some specific institutional reforms could contribute to strengthen 
        the multilateral trade system and the WTO and to improve the conditions 
        for an active participation of developing countries. G20 Summits and the 
        2009 WTO Ministerial Conference could be functional to launch a debate 
        that could later lead to concrete action towards those reforms.  Some of those reforms could be the following:  
        1. To promote the evaluation and proposal capacity of the WTO Secretariat, 
          concerning the evolution of global trade and its relation with development 
          goals (eventually through joint reports with other relevant development 
          international institutions and agencies). 2. To strengthen the WTO capacity to evaluate all kind of trade preferential 
          agreements, protectionist and trade distortion measures and practices 
          (including those originated at the business sector). The idea of a body 
          integrated by high level independent experts, on the lines of the DSU, 
          could eventually be explored. A kind of global trade and development 
          Ombudsman within the WTO structure could be an idea to explore. 3. To develop mechanisms - jointly with other relevant development 
          international institutions and agencies -, to enhance the capacity of 
          interested least developed countries to take full advantage of all the 
          instruments provided by the multilateral global trade system, particularly 
          of its DSU. Those mechanisms could include the idea of trilateral cooperation 
          programs with the participation of emerging economies, for example of 
          those in the same region of the beneficiary country. And finally, from the developing countries points of view, the following 
        are some of the most critical requirements related to their participation 
        in the multilateral trade system and with their views about global governance 
        goals that could be convenient for their development interests:  
        1. To have reliable and up-to-date diagnosis on the evolution of global 
          economic competition, and about its impact on their actual or potential 
          competitive advantages. This could require the development of "competitive 
          intelligence" networks with the participation of academic and business 
          institutions of groups of like-minded developing countries. 2. To mobilize, through national social cohesion, all the energies 
          and capacities of their societies to compete at the global level and 
          to attract productive investments - both national and foreign from as 
          many sources as possible - and to improve the participation of their 
          small and medium size firms in global and regional industrial networks. 3. To draw national strategies based on their own particular conditions 
          and allowing them to take as much advantages as possible, both from 
          the multilateral trade system and from the opportunities presented by 
          the global and regional markets. 4. To promote at the regional and sub-regional level, flexible, sustainable 
          and WTO consistent economic integration processes. They should contribute 
          to the improvement of their conditions to promote productive investments, 
          to have better access to technical progress and to increase their capacity 
          to negotiate at the international level, and to have an influence on 
          the definition of global governance goals and mechanisms. |