Berliner Boersenzeitung - WTO must 'reform or die': talks facilitator

EUR -
AED 4.360189
AFN 75.384238
ALL 96.450627
AMD 447.457939
ANG 2.124552
AOA 1088.55164
ARS 1660.04154
AUD 1.678562
AWG 2.136742
AZN 2.022747
BAM 1.957802
BBD 2.391105
BDT 145.188449
BGN 1.955886
BHD 0.445423
BIF 3519.688461
BMD 1.187079
BND 1.500547
BOB 8.203906
BRL 6.195844
BSD 1.187144
BTN 107.534838
BWP 15.657339
BYN 3.402279
BYR 23266.743286
BZD 2.387591
CAD 1.616268
CDF 2676.862986
CHF 0.911418
CLF 0.025942
CLP 1024.334888
CNY 8.201112
CNH 8.192048
COP 4352.305489
CRC 575.796003
CUC 1.187079
CUP 31.457587
CVE 110.759069
CZK 24.269873
DJF 210.968101
DKK 7.470885
DOP 73.925376
DZD 153.889374
EGP 55.336678
ERN 17.806181
ETB 184.239219
FJD 2.625866
FKP 0.87094
GBP 0.869591
GEL 3.175483
GGP 0.87094
GHS 13.07572
GIP 0.87094
GMD 87.254859
GNF 10422.551751
GTQ 9.10531
GYD 248.379651
HKD 9.281235
HNL 31.469918
HRK 7.536293
HTG 155.657186
HUF 379.189022
IDR 19981.859
ILS 3.66894
IMP 0.87094
INR 107.503085
IQD 1555.666688
IRR 50005.692072
ISK 145.025867
JEP 0.87094
JMD 185.789963
JOD 0.841686
JPY 181.274093
KES 153.133574
KGS 103.810492
KHR 4774.431105
KMF 492.638092
KPW 1068.305848
KRW 1710.236665
KWD 0.363971
KYD 0.989332
KZT 587.478096
LAK 25456.903974
LBP 106302.9015
LKR 367.075319
LRD 221.275955
LSL 18.928017
LTL 3.505135
LVL 0.718053
LYD 7.490919
MAD 10.851133
MDL 20.158035
MGA 5217.21147
MKD 61.626369
MMK 2492.360346
MNT 4251.605448
MOP 9.560699
MRU 47.388633
MUR 54.522976
MVR 18.286994
MWK 2061.366666
MXN 20.375435
MYR 4.638515
MZN 75.86665
NAD 18.946224
NGN 1606.596787
NIO 43.578107
NOK 11.284494
NPR 172.04591
NZD 1.965037
OMR 0.454306
PAB 1.187254
PEN 3.980321
PGK 5.096175
PHP 68.670729
PKR 331.911609
PLN 4.211459
PYG 7785.960824
QAR 4.322451
RON 5.094234
RSD 118.039594
RUB 90.545065
RWF 1727.199565
SAR 4.451852
SBD 9.550265
SCR 16.001431
SDG 714.032225
SEK 10.591715
SGD 1.499997
SHP 0.890617
SLE 29.024515
SLL 24892.446849
SOS 678.419847
SRD 44.817016
STD 24570.133197
STN 24.750592
SVC 10.387621
SYP 13128.586221
SZL 18.922473
THB 36.894845
TJS 11.201166
TMT 4.154776
TND 3.375756
TOP 2.858201
TRY 51.815754
TTD 8.058341
TWD 37.255324
TZS 3086.405119
UAH 51.196847
UGX 4202.296675
USD 1.187079
UYU 45.766988
UZS 14423.007076
VES 466.201517
VND 30828.434854
VUV 141.648267
WST 3.20747
XAF 656.633913
XAG 0.015357
XAU 0.000236
XCD 3.20814
XCG 2.139515
XDR 0.816084
XOF 656.454936
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.940648
ZAR 18.934979
ZMK 10685.137401
ZMW 21.577425
ZWL 382.23887
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    0.0647

    23.64

    +0.27%

  • BCC

    -1.5600

    86.5

    -1.8%

  • BCE

    -0.1200

    25.71

    -0.47%

  • RELX

    2.2500

    31.06

    +7.24%

  • GSK

    0.3900

    58.93

    +0.66%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    23.75

    +0.21%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    15.57

    -0.32%

  • NGG

    1.1800

    92.4

    +1.28%

  • RYCEF

    0.2300

    17.1

    +1.35%

  • JRI

    0.2135

    13.24

    +1.61%

  • RIO

    0.1600

    98.07

    +0.16%

  • AZN

    1.0300

    205.55

    +0.5%

  • BTI

    -1.1100

    59.5

    -1.87%

  • BP

    0.4700

    37.66

    +1.25%

WTO must 'reform or die': talks facilitator
WTO must 'reform or die': talks facilitator / Photo: Fabrice COFFRINI - AFP

WTO must 'reform or die': talks facilitator

Successfully reforming the WTO is a matter of life and death for the organisation, warns the facilitator of talks on revamping the global trade body.

Text size:

The World Trade Organization regulates large swathes of global trade but is handicapped by a rule requiring full consensus among members, and a dispute settlement system crippled by the United States.

Reform will be at the heart of the WTO's ministerial meeting in Cameroon next month.

The Geneva-based organisation faced structural and geopolitical obstacles long before US President Donald Trump returned to the White House last year, dramatically ratcheting up global trade tensions.

"We need to reform," Norway's ambassador to the WTO Petter Olberg told AFP in a recent interview.

"Reform or die."

Olberg said he was preparing a "reform work plan, which we will ask (trade ministers) to endorse" in Yaounde during the March 26-29 meeting.

Many of the WTO's 166 members agree with Olberg on the importance of significantly overhauling the organisation.

"The WTO is at a critical and, in fact, an existential juncture," he warned at the end of January.

The WTO was created in 1995 but is based on a trading system established shortly after the end of World War II.

The need for a revamp has been discussed for years, and was formally recognised by the organisation's 2022 ministerial conference.

- 'Sense of urgency' -

But the discussions have intensified significantly since Trump returned to power, snubbing agreed trade rules and wielding giant tariffs against foes and friends alike.

"Everyone realises there's a sense of urgency that wasn't there before," Olberg said.

"This time... we have to do it."

The tariff issue, he stressed, "is not the whole story, but it certainly contributes to this sense of urgency".

"Many, if not all countries are affected by this, small or big."

At the World Economic Forum in Davos last month, WTO chief Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala pointed out that the trade agreements announced by the Trump administration have not been notified to the WTO, as required to ensure they conform with the organisation's rules.

This has raised concern that the deals could potentially violate the WTO's so-called "most-favoured nation" (MFN) principle, which aims to extend any trade advantage granted to one trading partner to all others, in a bid to avoid discrimination.

The United States itself indicated to the WTO last December that it considers the principle "unsuitable for this era", particularly given "some countries' unwillingness to pursue and uphold fair, market-oriented competition" and "insistence on maintaining economic systems that are fundamentally incompatible with WTO principles".

- 'Game-changer' -

Olberg believes the US position on MFN is "a game-changer".

"I think the US is fed up, and quite a few others are also quite fed up," he said.

"We cannot go on like this."

Olberg stressed that the goal in Yaounde was not to finalise reforms, but to establish a work programme, with objectives and deadlines.

"Right now, I think the prospects that we actually will get this plan are quite good," he said.

He highlighted that most agreements within the WTO system function well and bring huge benefits to members, including the United States.

Things like customs valuation procedures and intellectual property agreements may not be "super sexy", he said, but they are "very important to doing business".

A full 72 percent of global trade still operates under WTO rules. But Olberg acknowledged that the organisation's effectiveness was increasingly being questioned.

One major issue is the WTO's requirement for any agreement to have full consensus among members.

"We're not able to adopt new rules, and we're not able to change the old rules," Olberg said.

The consensus rule has, for instance, allowed the United States to block the appointment of new judges, paralysing the WTO dispute mechanism's appellate body since 2019.

And it has permitted India especially to repeatedly block the adoption of plurilateral trade agreements into the WTO framework.

"There's a huge frustration building," Olberg said.

"Now more than ever, people are understanding that we have to change, we have to reform, otherwise we become irrelevant," he said.

"The alternative is not status quo."

(U.Gruber--BBZ)