Disappointed Brazil Wants WTO to Keep Trying to Reach Global Agreement

Brazil's foreign minister, Celso Amorim Pascal Lamy, the head of the World Trade Organization admitted  that the marathon talks in Geneva aimed at liberalizing global trade have collapsed. Officials have blamed China, India and the US for failing to agree on import rules.

EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson said the result was "heartbreaking" and Brazil's Foreign Affairs minister Celso Amorim described the situation as "disappointing" and called for "another try."

The talks were launched in 2001 in Doha and were seen as providing a cornerstone for future global trade.

The main stumbling block was farm import rules, which allow countries to protect poor farmers by imposing a tariff on certain goods in the event of a drop in prices or a surge in imports.

India, China and the US could not agree on the tariff threshold for such an event. Washington said that the "safeguard clause" protecting developing nations from unrestricted imports had been set too low.

The negotiations floundered as trade officials gathered for a ninth day.

"There's no use beating around the bush, this meeting has collapsed," Mr Lamy said. "Members have simply not been able to bridge their differences." He added that time was needed to determine "if and how" WTO members could end the stalemate.

The Doha development round of trade talks initially started in 2001 with the aim of remedying inequality so that the developing world could benefit more from freer trade.

However, the talks have repeatedly collapsed as developed countries failed to agree with developing nations on terms of access to each others' markets.

The US and the European Union want greater access to provide services to fast-growing emerging countries, including China and India. Meanwhile, developing countries want greater access for their agricultural products in Europe and the US.

Analysts have said that the collapse of the Doha talks could symbolize an end to multilateral trade agreements.

Instead, nations may pursue dual agreements with partner nations, preferring to focus on their own requirements rather than a more common negotiating goal.

The talks in Geneva were complicated by recent increases in the price of food and fuel.

Higher prices have prompted protests in both developed and developing nations, making it harder for negotiators to reach a compromise on opening up their markets to greater competition, analysts said.

Mr Mandelson, the EU trade commissioner, blamed the collapse on a "collective failure" but warned that the "consequences would not be equal," predicting that it would be countries that most needed help that would be hit hardest.

"They [the consequences] will fall disproportionately on those who are most vulnerable in the global economy, those who needed the chances, the opportunities most from a successful trade round." he said.

Trade officials had struck an optimistic tone on Friday, but this evaporated over the weekend amid acrimonious exchanges with the US accusing India and China of blocking progress.

The US said they were being overly protective towards their own farmers and are failing to do enough to open their markets, with US trade representative Susan Schwab calling the stance "blatant protectionism."

"In the face of the global food price crisis, it is ironic that the debate came down to how much and how fast could nations raise their barriers to imports of food" she said.

But India's trade minister, Kamal Nath, who had been criticized by a number of countries for his intransigence said the US demands were unreasonable.

"It's unfortunate in a development round we couldn't run the last mile because of an issue concerning livelihood security," Mr Nath said.

WTO "should make another try" said Brazilian Foreign Affairs Minister Celso Amorim.

"I am very disappointed that we were unable to finish the round; I would not have thought that everything would hinge on the special safeguard measures," added Amorim.

Lamy's decision to call the summit was a gamble aimed at pressing key governments in the 153-member WTO to bridge divisions in a short period. He told negotiators last month that without an accord on agriculture and industrial goods by the end of July, the chances for a successful conclusion to the trade round were less than 50%.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Real, the Brazilian currency

Brazil’s 2.9% Growth Is the Worst in South America

Brazil's economy expanded 2.9% last year compared to 2.35% in 2005 according to the ...

Lula Urges Confidence for Brazil to Get New Markets

Beginning in June, typical Brazilian items, such as coffee and thongs, will be sold ...

Brazil: Brasí­lia Declaration Defends Falklands Talks

One of the issues mentioned in the BrasÀ­lia Declaration, document with the conclusions of ...

Brazil Supreme Delays Decision on Giving Watchdog Agency Punitive Power

Brazil’s Supreme Court has delayed a decision on the most eagerly awaited case on ...

Emirates Get Brazilian Embraer’s First of Five Lineage 1000 Jets

Embraer, the Brazilian aircraft manufacturer, delivered the first Lineage 1000 executive jet to company ...

Brazil’s Lula: War Is Not the Answer to Terror

Continuing a tradition that began with the birth of the United Nations in 1946, ...

A Brazilian Frontier State Learns How to Make Ecologically Correct Furniture

The northern Brazilian state of Acre definitely isn’t a state symbol of furniture making ...

Defiant Brazil’s House Speaker Says He Won’t Step Down

Brazil’s House Speaker, Severino Cavalcanti (from the PP party of the northeastern Brazilian state ...

Boeing Tragedy: Aviation Leaders Beg Brazil to Not Indict Air Controllers

Several international aviation organizations including the  Flight Safety Foundation and the National Business Aviation ...

Suspect of Ordering US Missionary Murder Elected Deputy Mayor in Brazil

Three years and eight months after missionary Dorothy Stang was murdered, one of her ...