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Opinions expressed in the case studies and any errors or omissions
therein are the responsibility of their authors and not of the
editors of this volume or of the institutions with which they are
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> Case
Studies main page
> Introduction
ON THIS PAGE:
> I. Introduction
> II. The national and regional players and their roles
> Actors in the WTO trade policy process
> Actors at the national levels: Mauritius and Zambia
> The regional level: COMESA and SADC
> III. Regional support and co-ordination
> Trade capacity building support from the regions
> Initial steps towards regional co-ordination of positions
> IV. Main lessons
> Annex I ABC of WTO global coalition
groupings
> Reference
|

I. Introduction back to top
Since the conclusion of the Uruguay Round and
the establishment of the WTO, the active participation of developing
countries in the multilateral trading system has increasingly been
recognized as a crucial element for their development as well as an
imperative to ensure the legitimacy and sustainability of the world
trade regime. Yet many poor countries do not have the capacity to
influence significantly the WTO negotiations or to implement the
commitments agreed multilaterally. They still face major challenges to
determining and defending their positions in technical negotiations,
even on issues which are of key strategic interest to them. Indeed, the
unprecedented depth and breadth of issues discussed in the current Doha
Development Round have put the capacity of the developing countries (DCs),
both at home and in their Geneva missions (for those that can afford to
have one), under extraordinary pressure in effectively managing the
process of their participation in these WTO negotiations.
Recognizing the key potential role of
international trade for their sustainable development, many DCs entered
into various bilateral and regional trade agreements and followed a dual
path of multilateralism and regionalism.
The specific question addressed in this case
study is the extent to which the participation of DCs in regional
economic communities (RECs) has facilitated, or on the contrary
hampered, their participation in the WTO. Regional co-operation and
co-ordination among DCs can be construed as a way of pooling scarce
resources and create synergies. Regional institutions may provide the
necessary support and appropriate forum for countries to exchange views,
share information, generate technical analysis and policy input, define
and when relevant co-ordinate positions and identify best practices.
Working at the regional level may also offer the opportunity to connect
WTO positions to regional strategies and stimulate positive spillovers
between these two levels of negotiations. On the other hand, regional
organizations and agendas can also divert national resources away from
the WTO process towards the regional integration process or bi-regional
trade negotiations. In this respect, regional co-operation can proceed
at the expense of participation in the WTO.
To address these issues, the study focuses on
two countries, Mauritius and Zambia, and the two regional communities to
which they both belong, the Common Market for Eastern and Southern
Africa (COMESA) and the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC).
Mauritius has a track record of being one of the most effective trade
negotiators in Africa, being a key player at regional level, as well as
in the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) Group and in the current
negotiations of an Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA). Zambia, as a
least developed country (LDC), has encountered greater difficulties in
its participation in international trade negotiations. Yet, in spite of
serious capacity constraints, Zambia has so far managed to remain a
committed player. COMESA is intending to move towards a customs union
soon. SADC, whose political dimension is predominant for the time being,
gives priority to the implementation of its Trade Protocol.
This two-country two-region case study offers
a comparative illustration of how regional integration processes and
regional negotiations affect the preparation for and participation of
members in the WTO. On the basis of interviews with a range of key
actors involved in the trade policy-making process at the national,
regional and Geneva level, the study attempts to address some of the
following questions: Does the regional dimension help countries to
co-ordinate their positions at the WTO, or are national interests and
non-regional alliances predominant? Do regional secretariats provide
solid technical support and analysis to help member countries take
positions on certain (overlapping) issues in the WTO? And is the
preparation on WTO-related issues at the regional level a complement to
or a substitute for national preparation? Has the increased attention
and external (trade capacity building) support for regional integration
and bi-regional negotiations also contributed to facilitate the analysis
and formulation of positions at the WTO? Or, on the contrary, are the
two levels of negotiation (WTO, regional) competing for limited domestic
capacities and resources?
II. The national and regional players and their roles back to top
Actors in the WTO trade policy process
Negotiations at the WTO take place in the
Trade Negotiations Committee (TNC) and its various sub-committees or
regular WTO councils present in Geneva. The actual generation of
proposals and positions in the WTO is a bottom-up process whereby input
is generated at national and regional levels with numerous stages of
consultation and co-ordination before it is finally delivered to Geneva.
Overall, this policy process involves a broad range of state and
non-state actors that should have the opportunity to provide input. A
simplified scheme of this policy process from the national to the Geneva
level is depicted in Figure 1.

Figure 1. Input into the
WTO from the capital to Geneva
Many DCs, however, face considerable obstacles
in this policy process. The human and financial resource constraints
with respect to the dense agenda of negotiations in Geneva, their
representation and the generation of substantial input at the national
level constitute major hurdles. Some do not maintain a permanent mission
in Geneva, and even for those that do it is still impossible to
participate in the multitude of meetings and to follow the complete
agenda.(1)
Co-operation, co-ordination and the pooling of
resources with countries that have similar interests is therefore of
vital importance for the effective participation of many DCs in the WTO.
Whereas the formation of coalitions by DCs is not a new feature in
multilateral trade negotiations, the most recent Ministerial Conferences
in Seattle, Doha and Cancún have shown these coalitions to be better
organized and more pro-active than before. They manage to share
information better, preserve internal cohesion and engage in
co-ordination with other groupings.(2) A brief overview of the WTO
coalitions is provided in Annex I, while Table
1 shows the extent to which Mauritius and Zambia are involved
in WTO coalition groupings, as well as the degree to which their
affiliation matches those of their fellow COMESA and SADC members.
Table 1
Participation in WTO coalitions
| |
|
|
COMESA (20)
|
SADC (13)**
|
|
WTO coalition groupings*
|
Mauritius |
Zambia |
(number of members in coalition) |
(number of members in coalition) |
| |
(x = member) |
|
|
|
G90 |
x |
x |
19 |
13 |
|
ACP Group |
x |
x |
18 |
13 |
|
Africa Group |
x |
x |
19 |
13 |
|
LDCs |
|
x |
6 |
6 |
|
Friends of Multifunctionality |
x |
|
1 |
1 |
|
G10 |
x |
|
1 |
1 |
|
G33 |
x |
x |
5 |
6 |
|
Like Minded Group (LMG) |
(observer) |
|
4 |
1 |
|
NFIDC/LDC |
x |
x |
|
|
|
SIDS |
x |
|
1 |
1 |
|
SVE |
x |
|
3 |
1 |
|
WTO member |
x |
x |
15 |
13 |
| |
|
+3 observers |
|
|
* All coalition groupings are issue-specific
groupings, with the notable exception of the G90, ACP Group, Africa
Group and LDCs which cover horizontal (cross-cutting) issues. Annex I
provides a short description and membership of all the main WTO
coalition groupings.
** After completing its accession, Madagascar
will become the fourteenth member of SADC (while remaining a COMESA
member).
Clearly, whereas both Mauritius and Zambia
affiliate to various coalition groupings, these groupings do not always
match well with the strategic interests of other REC members. The fault
lines of some strategic interests as represented by the coalitions cut
right through the RECs.
Actors at the national levels: Mauritius
and Zambia back to top
Mauritius
Mauritius has considerable human and financial
resources as well as significant experience as a result of its active
involvement in international trade fora over the last decades. The
process of its trade and overall economic policy-making has been well
documented.(3) The country has considerable experience in participatory
(trade) policy-making processes. Both private-sector and trade union
representatives take part in a number of trade-related committees (e.g.
the Committee of Agriculture and International Trade) and are regularly
included in delegations to WTO Ministerial Conferences and regional
meetings. The views of these committees flow into a core group which is
chaired by the permanent secretary to the Trade Minister. At the highest
level, it is the WTO’s Standing Co-ordination Committee — chaired by
the Trade Minister — that involves actors from various ministries and a
number of private-sector actors. Ultimately, it is the minister who
either decides on a particular position or refers the issue to the
cabinet for approval or adaptation.
A position on a WTO issue can either be
submitted directly to relevant WTO committees, or it can be co-ordinated
and possibly adapted in a coalition grouping, after which it is
submitted on behalf of the coalition. On general issues, Mauritius works
mostly within the Africa Group whereas on specific issues the G10, the
G33 and the Multifunctionality Group are referred to.
Zambia
As an LDC Zambia has faced more constraints on
its participation, but supported by donors and international agencies it
has moved to reform its policy-making process and institutions.
The Zambian Ministry of Commerce, Trade and
Industry is responsible for conducting trade policy. It faces serious
(human) resource constraints, in particular at the technical level.
Consultation with public- and private-sector
stakeholders used to be organized in an ad hoc fashion, but since June
2004 a National Working Group on Trade (NWGT) has been established. In
the NWGT, six government and six private-sector institutions have a
seat. As for WTO coalitions, Zambia works predominantly with the G33 and
the G90. Within the latter group it is a member of all three
sub-groupings (the ACP group, the Africa group and the LDC group).
The regional level: COMESA and SADC
back to top
Mauritius and Zambia are members of both the
Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) and the Southern
African Development Community (SADC).(4) As can be seen in
Figure 2,
membership of multiple regional organizations is common among nearly all
countries in eastern and southern Africa.

Figure 2. Regional groupings in east and
southern Africa
COMESA
Established in 1994, COMESA currently
comprises twenty member states: Angola, Burundi, Comoros, Democratic
Republic of Congo (DRC), Djibouti, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya,
Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Namibia, Rwanda, Seychelles, Sudan,
Swaziland, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe. Many member states also belong
to other regional organizations such as the SADC, the Eastern African
Community (EAC), the Indian Ocean Commission (IOC) and the
Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD).
Heads of state form the principal authority
for COMESA’s policy direction. The Council of Ministers, which
receives recommendations from the Intergovernmental Committee, decides
on operational issues and is responsible for the COMESA Secretariat. The
task of the Secretariat is to provide advisory services and technical
support to member states in the implementation of the COMESA Treaty.
COMESA’s main focus is on strengthening
regional integration through promotion of cross-border trade and
investment. It has programmes on trade and transport facilitation, trade
in services, free movement of persons and investment. Other features
include gender policy, conflict prevention and a COMESA Court of
Justice. In October 2000, nine COMESA member states moved towards a free
trade area.(5) The objective is to move towards a customs union from 2004
onwards. Two other countries (Rwanda and Burundi) joined the COMESA FTA
in January 2004, taking membership to eleven. All other COMESA members
(except Swaziland, as a member of SACU) offer preferential access to
their markets to all COMESA member states.
For WTO questions, COMESA has established a
Working Group on WTO issues, which operates as a sub-committee of the
COMESA Trade and Customs Committee. The core functions of this Working
Group are to provide technical back-up and analysis of WTO issues and to
suggest appropriate recommendations.
COMESA also facilitates EPA negotiations with
the EU for sixteen ESA countries (i.e. all COMESA members except Egypt,
Angola and Swaziland).
SADC
Established in 1992, the SADC currently counts
thirteen member states: Angola, Botswana, DRC, Lesotho, Malawi,
Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania,
Zambia and Zimbabwe, after the Seychelles left in 2004.
SADC is a development community with a broad
range of objectives varying from self-sustained development, economic
growth and poverty alleviation to common political values, systems and
institutions. As in COMESA, SADC heads of state and the Council of
Ministers are overall responsible for the general policy direction of
the organization as well as for policy implementation. The SADC
Secretariat is the principal executive institution, responsible for
strategic planning, co-ordination and management of SADC programmes. In
2001, SADC underwent serious restructuring, giving the Secretariat a
more expanded mandate and increasing the number of staff. The previous
Sector Co-ordinating Units (dispersed over the member states) are now
centralized in the SADC Secretariat in Gaborone, Botswana, and merged
into only four directorates.
The trade, industry, finance and investment (TIFI)
cluster works on trade and economic integration and focuses on
stimulating the implementation by the member states of the 1996 SADC
Trade Protocol. The implementation of the Protocol should lead to the
liberalization of 85% of all regional goods trade by 2008, the
liberalization of regional services trade in six priority sectors, the
elimination of non-tariff trade barriers, and the harmonization of
standards, customs rules and procedures. The objective is to have moved
by 2012 towards a customs union with a common external tariff and trade
policy. The Secretariat also seeks to facilitate member states’
compliance with WTO policies and agreements as well as help prepare the
negotiations for a SADC-EU economic partnership agreement (EPA).
III. Regional support and co-ordination
back to top
For the participation of a country in the WTO
negotiations to have any significant value, a two-stage policy process
must be in place. First, countries need to be able to identify their
strategic interests and be informed about the consequences of the
various policy options open to them. This first stage requires proper
capacity to analyze and formulate trade policy and negotiation
positions. The second stage of the trade policy process consists of the
identification of a negotiation strategy. This includes the formation of
alliances and coalitions with partners that share common views and trade
interests. Strategies must be flexible and reaction time limited, so as
to adapt to the rapidly evolving negotiation environment. These two
stages should not be seen as independent but rather as complementary.
In this process, the regional dimension can
usefully come into play. First, regional organizations can support the
preparatory work of their member states. The co-ordination of trade
capacity building programmes, the organization of regional workshops,
the elaboration of technical papers and the dissemination of information
on WTO issues are examples of such supportive activities. Regional
platforms may also contribute to facilitating the exchange of
information and sharing of experiences among neighbouring countries.
Second, regional groupings may have a role to
play in helping their member countries to co-ordinate their position at
WTO level, in a way consistent with their regional integration and trade
policy objectives. Regional organizations might co-ordinate the burden
sharing among countries in following and actively engaging in a heavy
WTO agenda which few, if any, DCs can adequately tackle on their own.
In the case of Mauritius and Zambia, let us
consider in turn the roles that the two main regional economic
communities, COMESA and SADC, have played in their participation to the
WTO.
Trade capacity building support from the
regions back to top
Direct support on WTO issues
While both regional organizations have
contributed to the strengthening of capacity and the preparation of
national actors for WTO negotiations, there is a general recognition, in
COMESA and SADC secretariats, and among key actors in Mauritius and
Zambia, that more could be done.
In COMESA, Ministerial conferences, and
high-level meetings that bring together trade experts, senior officials
and Geneva ambassadors have been organized on trade and WTO issues. The
purposes of such meetings have been to provide a broad overview of the
state of the WTO negotiations, to discuss more technical or systemic
issues of relevance to the members and, when appropriate, to formulate
recommendations for the national ministers on their strategy and
position for the negotiations. As such, there is no COMESA common
position at the WTO (see below). These meetings are therefore primarily
designed to support member countries in their preparation for the WTO
negotiations. They also provide a useful platform for officials to
exchange views and information.
The COMESA Secretariat has developed
handbooks, conference proceedings and reports on WTO issues and
distributed these to its members in preparation for WTO Ministerial
Conferences. The Secretariat has conducted specific studies for trade
ministries of COMESA members and has provided direct input on specific
WTO issues (e.g. on WTO rules and on Ethiopia’s accession to the WTO)
to some of their Geneva-based missions, as well as to the Africa Group
and the African Union (AU). However, this technical support has been
given on an ad hoc basis as a result of specific requests.
Given that members have not often called on
the COMESA Secretariat, its role has been limited in the preparation for
WTO negotiations. Moreover, donors’ activities on trade capacity
building for WTO issues have mainly been channelled through national
programmes (e.g. JITAP), somewhat neglecting the regional dimension.
Nonetheless, COMESA has developed programmes and projects on trade
capacity building for its members on WTO-related issues such as trade
negotiations, customs valuation and facilitation, notifications and so
on. Finally, it is worth noting that although the COMESA Secretariat is
quite knowledgeable on WTO issues, some COMESA countries are actually
better equipped and have more expertise and experience at the national
level to deal with WTO matters.
In SADC, trade issues have
traditionally received less attention than in COMESA, as SADC has a
broader mandate, encompassing development and political dimensions. In
addition, SADC restructuring process which is centralizing the
programmes that were previously managed by the member states has not yet
been fully completed. The Secretariat remains understaffed and with
insufficient financial and technical means and absorption capacity to
cope with an increasing regional agenda. In these conditions, it is
difficult for the SADC Secretariat to contribute significantly to
strengthening the trade capacity of its member states on WTO issues.
Despite the absence of an SADC programme
dedicated to addressing WTO issues systematically for the region, the
SADC Secretariat has organized a number of activities that have directly
concerned the WTO. In response to requests from member states, and with
technical assistance from UNCTAD, specific support has been provided on
the issue of trade in services. The work concerned the identification of
key service sectors and the drafting of a legal framework to facilitate
the intra-regional liberalization of services. A study on domestic
agricultural support measures was also carried out, with the aim of
facilitating a regional position on this issue and was later used as
background material for the WTO negotiations.
As with COMESA, the activities on WTO matters
directly attributed to the Secretariat have mainly consisted of formal
meetings in preparation for WTO Ministerial Conferences. In addition,
the SADC Secretariat has also been collaborating with the Southern
Africa Trade Research Network (SATRN). This network organizes an annual
symposium on WTO issues and brings together researchers as well as
policy-makers and negotiators from the SADC region to share views on WTO
issues and developments.
In both Mauritius and Zambia
support from COMESA and SADC has been useful, though limited. One of the
main benefits of COMESA and SADC WTO-related activities has been the
engagement process they have generated. Regional and national officials
alike recognize that bringing national officers, diplomats and ministers
together to provide general input on WTO matters has contributed to
raise the political profile of WTO, and more generally trade matters. It
has increased awareness on some general technical matters. At the level
of Geneva missions to the WTO, the direct input from COMESA has gained
visibility. Other technical support targeted trade officials in
capitals, but might not always have trickled down to Geneva. Some
national officials acknowledged that COMESA tended to be more responsive
and proactive than SADC, the COMESA Secretariat being perhaps better
equipped to tackle technical issues. In both regions, however, the
support was generally provided on an ad hoc basis. It seems to have been
better suited to increasing the understanding of the WTO process rather
than to providing in-depth analysis which could directly input into the
national technical preparation. Interestingly, the regional
secretariats, COMESA in particular, noted the lack of explicit demands
from member states for dedicated input on WTO issues. The secretariats
therefore are left with little guidance for determining their technical
work plan. This tends to suggest that the potential value added of
regions in the WTO preparation of member states is not yet fully
identified. It was also suggested that the regional support on WTO
matters might have a greater impact on countries with weaker capacities.
More generally, awareness-raising activities
and regional training of officials on trade-related matters seem to have
been useful trade capacity building measures, with little distinction
between WTO and non-WTO issues, generating valuable synergies in the
preparation of national officials. To have a real impact on WTO
negotiations, however, the support by regional organizations would have
to be more specific and technical in nature, and delivered in a timely
manner.
Spillovers and trade-offs between regional and
WTO trade agendas
Besides the direct support on WTO issues, both
COMESA and SADC have engaged in numerous trade and regional integration
activities that have indirectly benefited WTO preparation and
compliance.
Hence some of the COMESA activities have aimed
at ensuring coherence between the regional integration process and the
WTO obligations of its member states (e.g. TBT and SPS). To foster
policy research COMESA has been implementing a Regional Integration
Research Network Project (RIRN) which has commissioned various studies
on topics such as Article XXIV, dispute settlement, on tariff schedules
(GATT/WTO bindings) or the implementation of the Decision on TRIPS
Agreement and Public Health.
SADC has experienced similar synergies between
its preparation for regional integration and WTO issues. An example is
the report and round table meeting on amendments to the Dispute
Settlement Mechanism of the SADC Trade Protocol, followed up by a
workshop on the WTO Dispute Settlement Mechanism.
SADC has also undertaken work to assess the
compliance of its member states with WTO rules, such as the notification
requirements under the WTO SPS and TBT agreements. Out of this work,
draft annexes on SPS and TBT to the Trade Protocol have been developed,
aimed at harmonizing regional SPS and TBT measures and regulations.
In addition, the intensive preparation for EPA
negotiations, by COMESA in the context of the ESA configuration and by
SADC, has also contributed to generating positive synergies with the WTO
agenda.
Clearly, numerous synergies exist in the trade
liberalization agenda and institutional development at the regional, EPA
and WTO levels. Yet the heavy agenda in each negotiation forum, combined
with the limited capacity at both the regional and national levels, have
negatively affected the preparation for these negotiations. The overall
issues are the same in the various trade negotiations fora, for example
effective market access, trade preferences, and linkages between trade
and development. However, in terms of negotiation positions, each
requires specific preparation. These have increased the burden on the
limited number of officials in trade and other relevant ministries.
Similarly, Geneva missions to the WTO (and to some extent the Brussels
missions to the EU) are often under-staffed and ill-equipped to follow
the wide array of trade negotiation sessions. The degree of political
commitment and the level of development of the countries do matter a
great deal, as suggested by the Mauritius and Zambia experiences, the
latter suffering more acutely from the lack of capacity. The same
constraints are reflected at the regional level.(6)
Not surprisingly, countries with less
capacity, as in the case of Zambia, have fewer opportunities to benefit
from the synergies created by the multiple trade agenda, as their
attention is often drawn to the most urgent matter of the time. The
competing trade agenda is therefore often determined by major
negotiating events. In addition, donor support can also divert
attention, as different steering groups are created to lead trade
support programmes whose foci vary (e.g. JITAP and IF in Zambia).
For Mauritius, this is less the case, as their
negotiating structure and capacities, although still insufficient and
seriously strained, are more appropriate to cope with the trade agenda.
The well-established tradition of significantly involving the private
sector in the trade and economic policy formulation has been an
important factor in Mauritius’ achievement.
Initial steps towards regional
co-ordination of positions back to top
The predominance of national interests
Although both COMESA and the SADC aim to
become customs unions, they have not yet established a common external
tariff or developed a common external trade policy. The member countries
have not had to delegate (part of) their trade authority to regional
secretariats and are under no pressure to harmonize their positions at
the regional level (unlike the European Union for instance).
In addition, both COMESA and that SADC have a
diversified (and overlapping) membership. As indicated above, COMESA is
composed of three different sub-regional groupings with some small
islands, coastal countries and landlocked countries, LDCs and more
advanced countries with a more diversified economy. Similarly, the SADC
is also a highly heterogeneous region. Besides the overlapping
membership with COMESA (seven countries being simultaneously members of
the two regional organizations), it includes a more deeply integrated
sub-region, the Southern Africa Customs Union (SACU), with its
dominating member, South Africa, together with some of the poorest and
smallest countries, such as Lesotho.
With such diverse economic, social, political
and geographical characteristics, and in the absence of a strong impetus
towards co-ordination, it is not surprising that national interests
largely dominate the position of COMESA as well as SADC countries in the
WTO arena.
The (informal) co-ordination role of the regions
In the absence of a formal mandate to
harmonize the positions of WTO members, regional groupings are left with
the limited option of facilitating and promoting the co-ordination of
the positions of their members.(7) In these conditions, the scope for co-ordinated
action at the regional level on WTO issues depends on the goodwill of
the member countries, and the capacity for initiative of the regional
secretariat. The main role adopted by both COMESA and the SADC has so
far been to facilitate informal co-operation and stimulate co-ordination
among members. Regional meetings of country trade officials and Geneva
ambassadors, as well as Ministerial Conferences, have generally
constituted the most appropriate (if not the only) platform for member
states to exchange views and possibly co-ordinate positions at the
regional level.
As discussed above, these meetings have helped
COMESA members in their technical preparation, but have helped more in
facilitating formal and informal consultations among member states, as
well as between Geneva (and Brussels) ambassadors and senior officials
in capitals. While common declarations have tended to be more general in
nature,(8) stressing the development dimension of the WTO negotiations,
they have contributed somewhat to the elaboration of an African
position, which has then also influenced larger WTO groupings, such as
the ACP Group, the Group of LDCs and the G90.
It is interesting to note that some meetings
are jointly organized by COMESA and SADC, or that representatives of the
other region are invited to attend. In addition, AU Commission and ACP
Secretariat representatives are also often invited to participate in
COMESA and SADC regional meetings. This strategy may have helped to
establish better linkages between the African Group and ACP positions
and the positions of COMESA and SADC members. Besides, COMESA and SADC
common declarations on WTO issues have normally been presented to the AU
and informed the African, ACP and LDCs Groups’ positions.
From a national perspective, the common view
is that regional support is more appropriate on technical issues and
capacity-building initiatives than for the co-ordination of positions,
which are better dealt with directly in WTO coalition groupings. Several
diplomats and senior trade officials did stress that co-ordination at
the regional level is better suited for delivering political messages on
WTO matters. However, technical issues, where interests among member
countries are more likely to differ, are better addressed directly at
WTO coalition level (e.g. G10 and G33 for agriculture and special
products).
IV. Main lessons
back to top
This study has sought to identify the
influence of the RECs in the preparation and participation of their
member (developing) countries in the WTO. In particular, looking at the
experience of an LDC, Zambia, and a small island economy, Mauritius,
this study attempted to identify the role of the two RECs, COMESA and
SADC, in supporting and facilitating their participation in the WTO.
The main lesson is that the regional dimension
in east and southern Africa (COMESA/SADC) has had little direct
impact so far on the preparation and conduct of the WTO negotiations.
Both regions have been conducting numerous useful activities to support
and co-ordinate the participation of their member states: studies,
reports, meetings, training and so forth. However, at least in the case
of Mauritius and Zambia, the type of support provided often remains too
general, with not enough specific technical relevance for member
countries’ specific interests significantly to inform their domestic
positions on WTO matters. Besides, both COMESA and the SADC have too
diverse a membership to allow for a meaningful co-ordination of their
member states’ positions on specific WTO issues. Common strategic
interests take form within WTO coalition groupings rather than
heterogeneous regional groupings. Moreover, these RECs have too small a
membership (in number and economic size) to form a strong alliance
within the WTO coalitions’ framework, where groupings are already
numerous. Since for the WTO size does matter, Mauritius and
Zambia give priority to larger coalitions for common WTO matters (e.g.
the Africa Group, ACP and LDCs Groups, and the G90). For
specific-interest WTO matters, they focus on issue-dedicated groupings
(e.g. the Friends of Multifunctionality, G10, G33, SIDS/SVE in the case
of Mauritius). In addition, countries often rely on the Geneva channels
for co-ordination and for transferring their input to WTO positions.
Since neither COMESA nor the SADC have representatives in Geneva, these
regional groupings are somewhat further marginalized. Nonetheless, the
situation might evolve over time, as both COMESA and SADC further their
integration to become effective customs unions. As COMESA and SADC
remain free trade areas in the making, member states are not yet under
pressure to co-ordinate their position.
Another important lesson is that regional
groupings can play a much needed role in the WTO preparations through
indirect means. The SADC and in particular COMESA have been instrumental
in putting trade high on the regional agenda and promoting the
visibility of trade matters. While the regional integration process has
been the driving force, the opening of EPA negotiations with the EU and
the WTO Doha Round have provided a major push. By raising awareness, by
training, by providing a platform for the exchange of views and
information, and by stimulating trade capacity building initiatives,
COMESA and the SADC have contributed to a better preparation of their
member countries on trade issues, which have had positive spillovers on
their participation to the WTO. The size of these regional groupings
provides good opportunities for developing useful common training and
other capacity building activities to the benefit of the members.
Finally, this case study has shown that
institutions with sufficient capacity have been able to benefit more
from the synergy opportunities created by the multi-level trade policy
interactions. Hence, COMESA, with its narrower focus on trade and
economic issues, appears better equipped to support the preparation for
various trade negotiations than SADC. Similarly, Mauritius officials
seem more positive about the complementarity of preparations for the
regional, EPA and WTO negotiations than their Zambian colleagues, who
have more stretched capacities and less time to cope with this multiple
agenda. Institutional capacities are therefore a key determinant in the
level of synergies and trade-offs that are created by a multi-level
negotiation process, in particular between the regional and multilateral
level.
Annex I ABC of WTO
global coalition groupings(9)
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In practice, the membership of coalition
groupings evolves over time and groups can have more or fewer members
than their name suggests. The current number of members is given in
parentheses.
Cairns group (17): Argentina,
Australia, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica,
Guatemala, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, Paraguay, Philippines,
South Africa, Thailand and Uruguay.
Founded in Cairns, Australia, in 1986, the
Cairns Group consists of the world’s largest agricultural exporters.
At the 2003 Cancún Ministerial many of its key players preferred to
partner along other lines, and the G20 took its place as the most
influential grouping of countries in the agriculture talks.
Friends of Multifunctionality (6): EU,
Switzerland, Norway, Japan, Korea and Mauritius.
This group seeks to pursue agricultural
policies that encourage environmental protection, rural development and
food security.
G10 (10): Bulgaria, South Korea,
Iceland, Israel, Japan, Liechtenstein, Mauritius, Switzerland, Taiwan
and Japan.
These are agricultural importers that maintain
heavy protectionist rules for their own products and are keen to protect
their domestic agricultural sector.
G20 (19): Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil,
Chile, China, Cuba, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan,
Paraguay, Philippines, South Africa, Thailand, Tanzania, Venezuela and
Zimbabwe.
A group striving for agricultural reform
created at the initiative of Brazil shortly before the 2003 Cancún
Ministerial and consisting solely of DCs. The varying references to the
group as G20, G20+ or even G22 has been due to the fact that a few
countries have joined and others — such as Peru and Colombia — have left
since September 2003.
G33 (30): Barbados, Botswana, Congo,
Côte d’Ivoire, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Honduras, Indonesia,
Jamaica, Kenya, South Korea, Mauritius, Mongolia, Mozambique, Nicaragua,
Nigeria, Pakistan, Panama, Peru, Philippines, Senegal, Sri Lanka,
Tanzania, Trinidad and Tobago, Turkey, Uganda, Venezuela, Zambia and
Zimbabwe. This group is also referred to as the Alliance for Special
Products and a Special Safeguard Mechanism.
The G33 consists of developing-country
importers of agricultural products, many of them also single-crop
producers and exporters. The group advocates that DCs be granted
flexibility to self-designate a number of ‘special products’ (SPs)
on which they would not have to make any tariff reduction or tariff rate
quota (TRQ) commitments. They also seek a new safeguard mechanism for
DCs to enable them to counter market volatility and sudden import
surges.
G90: The G90 is an umbrella group for
three partly overlapping groupings:
- The ACP Group, consisting of DCs from Africa, the Caribbean
and the Pacific Ocean that have signed the Cotonou Partnership Agreement
with the EU;
- The Africa Group, consisting of the members of the African
Union, which contains all African countries except Morocco; and
- The Group of Least-Developed Countries (LDCs), which
contains all the LDCs that are WTO members.
Like the G20, this group was also born in Cancún, among others, to
oppose attempts by the US and EU to include the so-called Singapore
issues — investment, competition policy, transparency in government
procurement and trade facilitation — in the negotiations.
Group on Cotton (4): Benin, Burkina Faso, Chad and Mali.
Seeking a complete phase-out of developed countries’ cotton
subsidies.
Group of Small Island Developing States (SIDS) (9):
Barbados, Cuba, Dominica, Jamaica, Mauritius, St Kitts and Nevis, St
Lucia, St Vincent and the Grenadines, and Trinidad and Tobago.
Group of Small and Vulnerable Economies (SVE) (25): SIDS group
plus Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Belize, Comoros, Fiji, Grenada,
Guyana, Haiti, Maldives, Mauritius, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Seychelles,
Solomon Islands, Surinam and Vanuatu.
Both these groups aim to put particular concerns and constraints
faced by small island and vulnerable economies on the agenda.
Like-Minded Group (LMG) (13): Cuba, Dominican Republic, Egypt,
Honduras, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Malaysia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka,
Tanzania, Uganda and Zimbabwe (Jamaica and Mauritius are observers).
The LMG pushes for the so-called implementation issues to be on the
agenda, as well as special and differential treatment, and opposes the
Singapore issues.
P5, or Five Interested Parties: United States, European Union,
Brazil and India (on behalf of the G20) and Australia (on behalf of the
Cairns Group).
These are the main parties involved in WTO agricultural negotiations.
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Reference
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3D → Trade — Human Rights — Equitable Economy (2004), ‘Jargon
Explained: Glossary of Terms Commonly Used in the WTO’, July 2004,
available at
http://www.3dthree.org/pdf_word/m311-3D Glossary July 2004 rev.pdf.
BIDPA (2004), ‘Identification of Support for the Integration of
SADC Countries into the World Trade System’, fact-finding mission
report, Gaborone: Botswana Institute for Development Policy Analysis (BIDPA)
Blackhurst, Richard, Bill Lyakurwa and Ademola Oyejide (1999), ‘Improving
African Participation in the WTO’, paper commissioned by the World
Bank for a Conference at the WTO on 20-21 Sept. 1999, revised November,
available at
http://www1.worldbank.org/wbiep/trade/papers_2000/dev_contries_wto.pdf
Bonaglia, Federico and Kiichiro Fukasaku (2002), ‘Trading
Competitively: A Study of Trade Capacity Building in Sub-Saharan Africa’,
OECD Development Centre, June 2002, available at
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/30/55/1939825.pdf
Narlikar, Amrita and Diana Tussie (2004), ‘The G20 at the Cancún
Ministerial: Developing Countries and their Evolving Coalitions in the
WTO’, World Economy, 27 (7), pp. 947-66
NOTES:
1.- See also Blackhurst et al. (1999). back to text
2.- See Narlikar and Tussie (2004). back to text
3.- See, e.g., Bonaglia and Fukasaku (2002). back to text
4.- In addition, Mauritius is a member of the
Indian Ocean Commission (IOC). back to text
5.- These are Djibouti, Egypt, Kenya,
Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Sudan, Zambia and Zimbabwe. back to text
6.- For a review of the SADC experience, see
for instance BIDPA (2004). back to text
7.- See Art. 17.8(i) of the COMESA Treaty and
Art. 29 of the SADC Protocol on Trade. back to text
8.- See, e.g., the Nairobi Declaration on
Preparations for EPA negotiations and the Fifth WTO Ministerial
Conference, 28 May 2003, COMESA. back to text
9.- Source: 3D (2004), and Narlikar and
Tussie (2004). back to text
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* European Centre for Development Policy Management (ECDPM),
Maastricht, The Netherlands. The authors are grateful to Kathleen Van Hove
for her most helpful editorial support.
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