
VOIR
AUSSI:
Communiqués
de presse
Nouvelles
Allocutions:
Mike Moore
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I want to begin by thanking the Danish Shipowners'
Association for this opportunity to address such a
distinguished and influential audience.
Denmark has been one of the strongest supporters of the
multilateral trading system - and as we mark the system's
fiftieth anniversary this year, it is fitting to pay
tribute to the contribution one outstanding Dane made to
its development. Finn Olav Gundelach was
successively Deputy-Director General of the GATT, where
he had a major hand in the success of the Kennedy Round,
and a European Commissioner. His belief in open
trade and his vision of its wider significance are
qualities we need to recall and reaffirm as we steer the
multilateral trading system into the new century. I
know how important the maritime transport sector is to
your country and how much influence Denmark has on
maritime policy in the European Union - and therefore how
much your opinions count. I also know that the
inclusion of maritime transport in the General Agreement
on Trade in Services - or GATS - has met with a certain
resistance among you.
But
what I want to suggest tonight is that the issue of
maritime services negotiations is about to come back to
life, as a new round of liberalizing negotiations
approaches. That these negotiations offer the best
chance of promoting liberalization and competition in
your industry. And that the best way to take full
advantage of these negotiations in two-years' time is to
be fully prepared now.
The
GATS covers all tradeable services - the only important
exception being in the air transport sector. It
therefore covers maritime services, which means that the
132 Members of the WTO may make commitments, enforceable
through a powerful dispute settlement mechanism, to allow
the shipping industries of other Members to invest and
trade in their markets on the same terms as the domestic
industry. There is no possibility that the maritime
sector could now be withdrawn from the scope of the
Agreement.
But,
unfortunately, the impact of the Agreement on shipping
has so far been modest. It is well known that
last-minute negotiations in the Uruguay Round between the
European Union and the United States failed - leading to
a withdrawal of the offers they had made, and the
decision to resume negotiations after the Round with a
deadline of June 1996. Even then, of the
three services sectors that have been the subject of
subsequent negotiation - maritime transport, financial
services and basic telecommunications - maritime is the
only case in which the negotiations clearly failed.
Only 36 countries have made market access commitments,
and the most-favoured-national principle has been
suspended for countries which have not made
commitments. Only two countries, Iceland and
Norway, added to the market access commitments which they
had made in the Uruguay Round. The US and the EU
made no commitments at all - leading to another
suspension of the negotiations.
The
contrast with our major successes in telecommunications
and financial services over the past twelve months is
striking. Both were at least as difficult in
technical and political terms as the maritime
sector. And yet both were concluded in 1997 with
impressive results and with the essential backing of
industries. The agreement in telecommunications
involved 69 countries representing 93 per cent of the
global market. The financial services agreement
represented 95 per cent of the global financial services
market, and brought trade in banking, insurance,
securities, and financial information in the realm of
multilateral rules for the first time. Customers
will benefit hugely from the increased competition,
increased choice and lower prices that global
liberalization will bring. But industry will also
benefit greatly from the new national markets which have
been opened, and from the predictability and stability
that will flow from enforceable global rules in these
sectors.
The
simple reality is that the principles of the GATS are as
important to your industry as to others - indeed, the
most-favoured nation clause owes its existence to the
trade and navigation treaties of the past, and national
treatment has been the objective of all bilateral
maritime agreements for the last 150 years. More
than most other service suppliers, shipowners stand to
benefit from the binding of market access commitments and
effective dispute settlement because they are so
vulnerable to arbitrary customs treatment. As you
well know, every day a ship is blocked in a port costs
thousands of dollars. In the absence of
multilateral dispute settlement provisions, the shipowner
also faces the danger of unilateral sanctions, such as
Section 19 of the US Shipping Act, or EEC Council
Regulations. Even for the country applying them,
these are slow and cumbersome, and they carry heavier
diplomatic costs than a multilaterally-accepted
procedure.
There
are two main reasons why the application of the GATS to
maritime transport has inspired some misgiving, if not
distrust, in the industry. The first is the fear
that GATS does not go far enough - and that by scheduling
specific commitments in GATS certain restrictive
practices might be locked in. I fully understand
your desire for ambitious liberalization and full
National Treatment. But this is not a rationale for
avoiding future multilateral negotiations in this
sector. Just the opposite. Restrictive
policies are already widely practised without an
agreement - and may proliferate. Outside the GATS
process, there is no obligation to remove these
restrictions, no mechanism for negotiating them away, and
no recourse to dispute settlement.
To
say "it is better to steer clear of the GATS than to
legitimize practices we disapprove of" is to deprive
yourselves of the possibility of attacking these
restrictions in future negotiations. By scheduling
these restrictions we are at least explicitly recognizing
them as limitations on access or national
treatment. We are also erecting a policy wall
against further restrictions. And if these
restrictions are exceeded, then they can be challenged in
dispute settlement.
More importantly, the dynamic of negotiations in the GATS
is that once the system of offers is set in motion it can
only move forward: thus, commitments in the field
of financial services, already far-reaching in 1993, were
extended once in 1995 and again in 1997 to a degree which
seemed inconceivable a few years earlier. The speed
of negotiated change was even more striking in
telecommunications. Liberalization under the GATS
has acquired a strong and irreversible momentum.
The second common objection to the involvement of
maritime in multilateral negotiations is that the
industry's interests may be traded off against some
objective sought in another sector. Of course, that
argument could be used by every industry. But the
single-sector negotiation on maritime in 1996 failed even
to get off the ground: in the Uruguay Round with a
huge agenda and the interests of other exporting
industries in mind, the United States at least reached
the stage of tabling an offer on maritime, though it was
a modest one. Despite the successes in financial
services and telecommunications, experience suggests that
difficult objectives such as liberalization in maritime
transport are more easily reached in the context of a
great negotiation - where trade-offs are possible - than
in self-contained negotiations.
Your
goal in the next negotiations should be to push hard for
liberalization. Only in the WTO context can you
engage the US and other major players in such a
debate. And only in the WTO context can the
benefits of liberalization be anchored in mutually
binding and enforceable rules. If there are to be
trade-offs, then these trade-offs will only be to your
benefit.
Making progress in the Maritime Services negotiations
will be an important part of moving forward on a much
wider trade agenda in the coming years. Average
tariff levels among industrialized nations have come down
to less than 4 per cent today from 40 per cent in
1950. World trade has expanded fourteen fold over
the same period. And we have established the
trading order on a firm institutional foundation with the
creation of the WTO in 1995 - providing a permanent forum
for future negotiations, and a binding mechanism for
settling disputes. When China, Russia, and the 29 other
candidates including the three Baltic countries join the
WTO - and I have every expectation they will - we will
have created a truly universal trading system. An
achievement that will be a major contribution, not just
to global prosperity, but to global stability and
security as well.
I
began by noting that Denmark has always had a strong
interest in the multilateral system. And of course
no sector exemplifies your worldwide interests more than
the maritime sector - a sector which, as a result of
advances in shipping capacity and containerization, has
been one of the single most powerful engines of
globalization.
Deepening dependence on global trade and the need to
maintain global competitiveness is central to the broader
European agenda as well. The completion of the
single market, the creation of a single currency, the
challenge of shaping a common European foreign policy to
match a common commercial policy - all of these issues
are both familiar and new. They rose out of the
demands for European security. They will advance
because of the need to ensure Europe's competitiveness in
a fast-changing world.
As
the multilateral trading system enters its next fifty
years, the voice of the business community, and the
shipping sector in particular, will be critical.
Already Danish business has successfully pushed for
global telecommunications liberalization and for free
trade in information technologies. Denmark has been
one of the most generous financial contributors to the
system - especially towards ending the marginalization of
the least-developed countries. I trust we can
continue to count on your support and your guidance, as
the WTO begins to chart the trade routes of the future.
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