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By Mario Osava
IPS-Inter Press Service
But "this is not chaos, life goes on, and everyone should take some time for reflection," said Pedro de Camargo Neto, the head of the Brazilian association of pork producers and exporters (ABIPECS).
"There have been similar failures in the past," and Brazil’s strong headway in the global agricultural market did not depend on the previous agreement, reached in the Uruguay Round, which ended in 1994 with the creation of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), Camargo pointed out to IPS.
Improving the agricultural health and food safety system and infrastructure, and overcoming legal and bureaucratic hurdles are the way to continue to conquer new markets, said Camargo who, as a high-level Agriculture Ministry official in 2002, spearheaded the successful legal actions that led to WTO resolutions against U.S. and EU subsidies.
The failure of the Doha Round, which got underway in
November 2001 in the capital of
It also drove a wedge into the Southern Common Market (Mercosur) trade bloc (made up of
"Alliances shift," said Camargo,
who noted that discrepancies had already been emerging in the G20, because of
the divergent interests of
The G20 was relevant when it emerged at the fifth WTO
ministerial conference in
When
Mercosur gained nothing, since "subsidies and protectionism remain in place," complained Castro, who said it would take a major effort to heal the divide in the South American trade bloc.
André Nassar, director of the Institute for International Trade Negotiations (ICONE), which advises the government and the agribusiness sector, said a distancing occurred between "defensive and offensive" members of the G20 over the special safeguard mechanism, which would enable developing countries to raise their tariffs in the event of a surge in imports beyond certain levels.
Many had expected these differences to erupt at the defining
moment.
It is important now to "salvage the many points on which agreement was reached," like the rules for cutting subsidies and tariffs, and the expansion of import quotas, said Nassar. But he told IPS that this will be very difficult to do, now that the talks have collapsed.
To reach a WTO agreement requires a consensus on all points. Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim said Tuesday that "it is unbelievable that we have failed over one issue," the safeguards, after nearly seven years of efforts.
Amorim’s role in the negotiations,
as
Treating
But now there will be new priorities, like the trade negotiations between Mercosur and the EU, he announced.
The collapse of the Doha Round leaves many questions up in the air, but it points to a new world order in the wake of "the polarisation between the United States on one hand, and China and India on the other," Nassar predicted.
The regrets are not shared by the international farmers movement Vía Campesina. "Luckily, it seems that Doha has failed," Pedro Stédile, a leader of Brazil’s Landless Workers Movement (MST), which forms part of the global network, commented to IPS.
"The WTO and its members have no mandate, neither from the United Nations nor from their own people, to negotiate anything related to food, which is a global right, and not a commodity," he argued.
The position taken by
Mercosur "has no future," said Stédile, who advocates a South American economic and political union "that would go beyond the question of tariffs."
ipsnews.net
Wednesday, July 30, 2008, 2:56 PM
by Peter Shinn
Brownfield
Trade ministers from World Trade Organization (WTO)
member-nations are leaving
Agriculture has always been a primary issue in the
negotiations. And during a press conference in
"Ultimately, the negotiations deadlocked on the scope
of a so-called safeguard mechanism to remedy surges in imported agricultural
products," Schwab said.
The position of
Of course, the Doha Round talks covered everything from farm
products to manufactured goods to services among all of the WTO's 153
member-nations, making it among the most complicated international negotiations
ever undertaken. And according to Schwab, that's likely the underlying reason
the Doha Round didn't succeed.
"The complexity of the cathedral that was built for the
Doha Round was its own worst enemy, you know, was its own source of
demise," Schwab said.
So is the Doha Round really dead? Schwab said "that's
not for me to say." In fact, she suggested parts of the negotiations may
still be agreed upon and implemented. And U.S. Ag Secretary Ed Schafer told
Brownfield on Tuesday he would be surprised if talks don't continue on some
level.
"I'm not sure the discussions are over," Schafer
said. "I think we've come at an impasse, kind of where, you know, we just
couldn't agree."
But the way forward on further global trade talks is
unclear. Schwab said it's now time for WTO members "to reflect" on
the breakdown of the Doha Round before deciding what, if anything, to do next.
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