2005/12/16
NGOs CALL RICH COUNTRIES TO STOP IMPOSING EXTREME DEMANDS AT THE WTO SIXTH MINISTERIAL CONFERENCE
Social Watch
Several NGOs attending the Hong Kong Ministerial are taking the initiative of a joint NGO statement expressing our concerns about the negotiations in which the developed countries are intent on piling pressure on developing countries to accept extreme liberalization policies. The current proposals of developed countries particularly on NAMA, Services and Agriculture, do not have development content and are in fact anti-developmental.
Thus we are
seeking the endorsement of a broad range of NGOs to strongly put forward demands
on the rich-country governments to back off from pressurizing developing
countries to accept a very bad deal.
To make an
impact on the negotiations, we hope to highlight these concerns to the media on
Friday evening (16 Dec). We hope that your organization will be able to sign -on
to the statement. Could you please inform us by the afternoon of 16 Dec (3 pm)
by replying to this email and stating the name of your organization, if you wish
to endorse.
Please do
circulate this statement to other groups that may be interested to sign on to
this statement.
Thank you
Martin Khor and
Sangeeta
Third World Network
NGOs CALL RICH
COUNTRIES TO STOP IMPOSING EXTREME DEMANDS AT THE WTO SIXTH MINISTERIAL
CONFERENCE
16th
December 2005
We the
undersigned civil society organizations are concerned that the positions taken
by major developed countries at the Hong Kong Ministerial conference are
undermining development interests.
We are outraged
by how the developed countries, particularly the United States and the European
Union, are trying to use
the Ministerial
to aggressively push forward their agenda to open the markets in developing
countries for the interests of their corporations.
At the same
time the major developed countries are not making meaningful concessions to stop
the dumping of their agricultural products in developing countries nor are they
offering to increase imports of agricultural products from developing countries.
This would be a very bad deal for development and no deal is better than a bad
deal.
The demands and
concerns of developing countries in this round have repeatedly been sidelined.
In fact it appears that pressures are being put on some developing countries
during the Ministerial not to resist the market-opening proposals of the
developed countries.
The WTO rules
have perpetuated an unfair trading system which favour rich countries and their
corporations, while laying developing countries open to ever more pressures to
liberalise when their farmers and firms are not in a position to compete in the
global economy. This is because the rules are unfair, and because the local
firms are too weak to face the onslaught of giant foreign firms.
The results of
the unfair trading system include the loss of livelihoods and incomes of small
farmers, loss of jobs due to de-industrialisation in many countries, continued
obstacles to access to markets in rich countries and continuous decline in
commodity prices and the poverty that is linked to that. Particularly affected
are women in farming and working communities in developing countries.
The Hong Kong
Ministerial meeting, coming at a strategically important moment in the Doha
negotiations, might have had the potential to correct some of the imbalances and
turn the corner towards development. But it looks as if the potential for doing
something positive has faded or disappeared.
-
Agriculture
remains the sector containing most trade distortions and the Uruguay Round’s
promise of liberalisation in the rich countries has yet to be fulfilled. In
the current negotiations the offers by the US, EU and other developed
countries proposals are grossly inadequate and unless these offers are
improved significantly, there will be little (if any) real cuts in domestic
support. The end date for export subsidies is yet to be fixed, though they
should have been eliminated long ago. While developed countries stubbornly
refuse to deal with dumping or end their protection, developing countries are
being pressured to reduce drastically their own agricultural tariffs, thus
laying their small farmers open to more unfair competition from artificially
cheapened import.
-
The inclusion
of trade in services in the Uruguay Round came about because of the promise by
the developed countries to the developing countries that they would reduce
their protectionist measures in the Agriculture. This promise has not been
fulfilled. However the EU is leading the charge of developed countries by
making outrageous demands on developing countries to further open their
markets in industrial goods and services. Developed countries, led by the EU,
have made unacceptable proposals on services that would fundamentally change
the GATS architecture to remove the flexibilities and policy space currently
available to developing countries. These include qualitative benchmarking,
sectoral initatives, and mandatory participation in plurilateral negotiations.
These changes would lead to conditions where developing countries will be less
and less able to choose whether to liberalise and if so in which sectors, to
what extent and at which time. The viability of local services firms will be
threatened.
-
In NAMA (non
agricultural market access), developing countries are being asked to accept
the drastic “Swiss formula” with a low coefficient of 10 to 15, implying that
all tariffs will drop to below 10%. This will cut the industrial tariffs of
developing countries very steeply. It will threaten the survival of domestic
industries and the jobs of millions of workers. It will also threaten the
prospects of domestic industrial development in affected developing countries,
with massive job losses and unemployment.
To make matters
worse, attempts are also being made by the major developed countries to offset
the embarrassment of not achieving progress in modalities, by putting on a
“spin” that the developing countries, or at least the LDCs, are getting some
benefits in advance through a “development package.” This package looks unlikely
to contain any real benefits of significance to developing countries, most of
them containing promises of aid which is in the form of loans. This is a “face
saving” exercise to disguise the fact that the Doha negotiations have not lived
up to their “development” name but instead have taken an anti-development turn.
We therefore
demand that the major developed countries:
Ø
Stop pressuring the developing countries to further liberalise their
agriculture, industrial goods and services sectors and withdraw their demands to
do the same;
Ø
Allow developing countries to take necessary measures to protect their domestic
firms and farms so as to enable the developing countries to have their own
policy space to meet their sustainable development objectives.
Ø
Substantially increase their offers in agriculture by committing to cut total
trade-distorting domestic subsidies to levels below the current or planned
applied levels, and agree to serious disciplines on the Green Box subsidies so
that overall domestic support is really decreased; agree to end all export
subsidies by 1 January 2010 or earlier; immediately end cotton export subsidies
and eliminate domestic support for cotton by 2006.
Ø
Permanently withdraw proposals for numerical targets and benchmarking in
services and withdraw Annex C on services, especially its clause on mandatory
participation in plurilateral negotiations, and its clauses on modal and
sectoral negotiations and the framework on government procurement.
Ø
Allow developing countries the flexibility to choose whether and to what extent
to liberaliser their industrial sectors.
Ø
Agree to genuine development measures, including resolving the Special and
Differential proposals and the implementation proposals of developing countries
as soon as possible and at least before the settlement of the market access
issues; and the inclusion of genuine and effective SDT provisions in the
negotiations in agriculture, NAMA and services.
Ø
Agree to an assessment of the impact of their proposals on employment, gender,
environment and natural resources, poverty and equity.
If there is
failure in Hong Kong, this will be because developed countries have not shown
willingness to deliver on the above demands and it will have to be these
countries that have to take responsibility for the failure of the WTO once again
to make the necessary changes to the unequal world trading regime. In any case,
the developing countries should not be asked once again to sacrifice their
development by accepting the inadequate offers and extreme demands of developed
countries. We are of the view that no deal in Hong Kong is better then a bad
deal.
Endorsed By:
1) Third World
Network (TWN)
2) Africa Trade Network (ATN)
3) Arab NGO Network for Development (ANND)
4) Global Action Against Poverty (GCAP)
5) Oxfam International
6) Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU)
7) SEATINI
8) Action Aid International
9) IBON (Philippines)
10) Trade Justice Movement, UK
11) Instituto del Tercer Mundo, Montevideo, Uruguay
12) The Mexican Action Network on Free Trade (RMALC)
13) Unnayan Onneshan - The Innovators, Bangladesh
14) Coalition against Water Privatization, Ghana
15) Focus on the Global South
16) Kenya Human Rights
17) Econews Africa
18) Trade for Development Centre, Pakistan
19) Consumers Association of Penang, Malaysia
20) Friends of the Earth, Malaysia
21) Friends of the Earth, Germany
22) CIVICUS (World Alliance for Citizen Participation )
23) Mwengo, Zimbabwe
24) Economic Justice Coalition, Mozambique
25) ENDA
26) INESC, Brazil
27) National Association of Nigerian Traders, Nigeria
28) CONTAG, Brazil
29) General Agricultural Workers Union of Trade Union Congress, Ghana
30) Centre pour le Commerce International et Development (CECIDE), Guinea
31) Economic Justice Network, South Africa
32) Institute for Global Dialogue (IGD), South Africa
33) Alternative Information and Development Centre, South Africa
34) Gender and Economic Recovery in Africa (GERA), Ghana
35) Justice and Peace (The Southern African Catholic Bishops Conference)
36) African Agenda
37) Gender and Trade Network in Africa (GENTA)
38) African Initiative on Mining, Environment and Society (AIMES), Ghana
39) Sustainable Agriculture Network for Timor-Leste (HASATIL)
40) Oikos – Cooperação e Desenvolvimento, Portugal
41) Council of Canadians
42) UBUNTU FORUM Secretariat
43) A SEED JAPAN (Action for Solidarity, Equality, Environment and Development)
44) The Oakland Institute, CA, USA
45) Rusa Jeremic KAIROS Canada
46) Canadian Council for International Co-operation
47) Forum Syd, Sweden
48) Public Services International (PSI)
49) REDGE (Red de Género y Economía), Mexico
50) FAT (Frente Auténtico del Trabajo), Mexico
51) UNT (Unión Nacional de Trabajadores), Mexico
52) ANEC(Asociación Nacional Empresas Comercializadoras de Producción del Campo)
53) CIECA (Centro de Investigación Económica para el Caribe), Dominican Republic
54) Foro Ciudadano, Dominican Republic
55) Institute for Global Justice, Indonesia
56) Consumers Union of Japan
57) ATTAC-Denmark
58) ATTAC-Norway
59) ATTAC - Japan
60) Federation Syndicale Unitaire, France
61) DAWN
62) REPEM
63) Peace Boat, Japan
64) Washington Biotechnology Action Council
65) CHANCE ! pono2, Japan
66) Altermonde, Japan
67) World Development Movement (WDM)
68) Comhlámh
69) Australia Fair Trade and Investment Network
70) URFIG
71) WIDE (Network Women in Development
72) Norwegian Council for Africa
73) Diakonia, Sweden
74) Tearfund, UK
75) JDHR (Shafqat), Pakistan
76) WTO Watch Group, Pakistan
77) Tebtebba Foundation, Philippines
78) Millennium Solidarity Geneva Group
79) Asian Indigenous Women’s Network
80) Centre for Environmental Concerns
81) War on Want
82) 49th Parallel Biotechnology Consortium
83) Social Watch Italy
84) International Metal Workers Federation
85) Global Exchange
86) Attac Sweden
87) Social Watch
88) Iraqi Al-Amal Association, Iraq
89) NGO Strategy, Latvia
90) MiTi Foundation, Latvia
91) Kopin, Koperazzjoni Internazzjonali, Malta
92) Center for Environmental and Social Developmental, Syria
93) EL-Amel Association for Social Development, Algeria
94) CLADEM, Área DESC y Globalización
95) Women and Law in Southern Africa Mozambique (WLSA/MOZ)
96) Civil Society Development Foundation, Romania
97) Espace Associatif, Morocco
98) BHRS, Bahrain
99) BSS, Bahrain
100) Awal Women Society, Bahrain
101) Nahda Women Society, Bahrain
For
interviews and further comment:
Sangeeta Shashikant: +852 96465229
For further
information:
Amy Barry on +852 95164660
To download
a copy of the full 3 page statement:
http://www.twnside.org.sg or
www.choike.org
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