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Trade Justice
Movement
Policy Briefing
February 2005
Stop Forced Liberalisation
The Trade
Justice Movement's 2005 Challenge to the UK
Government
2005 represents a unique chance for the UK
government to put in place the trade policy changes needed to reduce
poverty, and thereby to help achieve the Millennium Development Goals
(MDGs). Yet the UK government's overriding emphasis on trade
liberalisation as the model for developing countries to follow is highly
detrimental to the needs of poor people and the environment, and
undermines the ability of developing countries to put in place the right
policies to achieve the MDGs.
The central difference between the
Trade Justice Movement and UK government on trade policy is the
government's insistence on 'free trade' as the blueprint for developing
and developed countries alike. In the face of mounting evidence of the
social, economic and environmental damage caused by 'free trade', and
under pressure from UK public opinion, the government has begun to soften
its rhetoric on trade liberalisation. Yet in practice the UK government
remains one of the foremost proponents of the 'free trade' model, and
continues to press for greater access to the markets of developing
countries for UK exporters.
The Trade Justice Movement's opposition
to the 'free trade' agenda promoted by the UK government is not an
opposition to trade itself. We recognise that regional and international
trade forms an important part of the economic policies of many developing
countries, and we believe that appropriate policies are needed to link
trade with development. Our call for Trade Justice stems from the evidence
that the 'free trade' model has been responsible for increasing poverty,
harming the environment and eroding labour standards across the
world.
The world's poorest countries have often been required to
open their markets to foreign exporters as a condition of receiving aid,
loans or debt relief from donors such as the UK government and from
international financial institutions such as the World Bank and
International Monetary Fund (IMF). Similarly, developing countries come
under pressure to liberalise their markets in bilateral or regional
negotiations with more powerful trading partners, such as the Economic
Partnership Agreements (EPAs) currently being negotiated between the EU
and African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) countries. Developing countries
also come under pressure to accede to rich country demands in negotiations
at the World Trade Organisation (WTO), where representatives of poor
countries face threats that they will lose aid, trading preferences or
even their own jobs if they do not drop their resistance to the
liberalisation demands being made of them.
The Trade Justice
Movement calls on the UK government to stop putting pressure on developing
countries to open up their markets still further, at the expense of poor
people and the environment. This pressure is exerted in a number of
institutional settings in which the UK, along with its EU partners, is a
major player:
1. the core WTO agenda of industrial, services and
agricultural liberalisation 2. the Economic Partnership Agreements
(EPAs) between the EU and ACP countries 3. the economic conditionality
policies of the World Bank and IMF
1. STOP FORCED
LIBERALISATION THROUGH THE WTO
The core WTO agenda leading
up to the Hong Kong Ministerial at the end of 2005 will see developing
countries exposed to huge pressure to open up their industrial, services
and agricultural markets. Meanwhile, talks on special and differential
treatment for developing countries languish, having received scant
attention in the 'July package' finally agreed by WTO members in August
2004.
The UK government must ensure that developing countries are
not forced to liberalise their industrial, services or agricultural
sectors through the trade negotiations at the WTO. The UK government
must:
on non-agricultural market
access (NAMA):
- agree that developing countries should have a
separate formula for tariff reduction under NAMA, to secure the
principle of 'less than full reciprocity' at the heart of the
negotiations on industrial and manufacturing trade
- agree that developing countries should not be required to take part
in the sectoral initiative which aims to eliminate or harmonise tariffs
in selected industrial and manufacturing sectors
on services (GATS):
- call publicly for water to be removed from the
General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS), and for the EU to
withdraw its requests of other countries to commit their water sectors
under the WTO's services negotiations
- call publicly for the EU to make a statement in support of the right
of all developing countries to abstain from making either initial or
further offers in the services negotiations
on agriculture:
- call publicly for developing countries to have
the right to self-select an unrestricted number of agricultural 'special
products' which will be exempt from liberalisation, allowing them to
protect domestic agricultural producers on the grounds of food security,
livelihood security and sustainable rural development
- call publicly for developing countries to have access to a special
safeguard mechanism for all agricultural products, in order to address
the harmful effects of market volatility
- agree that developing countries should have a separate formula for
tariff reduction in the agriculture negotiations
2. STOP FORCED LIBERALISATION THROUGH
EPAS
The future development of African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP)
countries risks being seriously undermined by the inequitable bilateral
Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) currently being negotiated between
the EU and ACP countries.
The EU's proposals for EPAs include trade
liberalisation demands that go far beyond anything currently under
discussion at the WTO and could lead to deep and dramatic market opening
by ACP countries. In addition, the EU is pushing for trade negotiations in
areas of 'offensive interest', including investment and public procurement
liberalisation, that ACP countries have long opposed at the WTO. This is
undercutting ACP countries' negotiating positions at the WTO and will
deepen poverty in ACP countries.
The EU is asking ACP countries,
including those belonging to the category of Least Developed Countries, to
liberalise substantially all their markets over a very short time period,
possibly 10-15 years. The EU proposals would lead to free trade areas in
which the poorest African countries, their farmers, producers and
companies would compete openly with the richest European countries, their
producers and companies - and their heavily subsidised farmers.
The UK government
must use every opportunity in 2005, and particularly its presidency of the
EU in the second half of 2005, to ensure that the EU:
- withdraws 'offensive' market access demands from the EPA
negotiations:
- drops its demand for reciprocal trade liberalisation
- drops its demand for negotiations on the
'Singapore
- issues' of investment, competition policy and public procurement
- urgently honours its commitment to provide ACP countries with viable
non-reciprocal alternatives to EPAs, in parallel to EPA negotiations in
2005. At a minimum these should preserve current values of market access
into the EU, as per the commitment made in the Cotonou Agreement.
3. STOP FORCED LIBERALISATION THROUGH THE WORLD BANK
AND IMF
Developing countries continue to face economic policy
conditions attached to the loans and debt relief administered by the World
Bank and IMF. The G8 leaders who are meeting in Gleneagles in July 2005
have overwhelming influence in this regard, given that the G8 countries
enjoy built-in control over the policies implemented by the Bretton Woods
institutions by virtue of their 'one dollar, one vote' governance
structure. As host of the G8 summit, the UK government has a particular
responsibility to ensure that it sends a clear message to the World Bank
and IMF that economic policy conditions such as trade liberalisation are
unacceptable.
The UK government launched its own review of aid
conditionality in October 2004, and has already acknowledged the damage
which controversial policy conditions such as trade liberalisation and
privatisation can cause. On the instigation of the UK government, the
World Bank has also embarked upon a review of its policy and practice on
conditionality, and is due to report on this to the Annual Meetings of the
World Bank and IMF in September 2005. Now is the time to ensure that
developing countries are allowed to dictate their own paths to
development, rather than having to follow the economic blueprints drawn up
for them by donors and financial institutions such as the World Bank and
IMF.
The UK government
must:
- abandon all forms of economic policy
conditionality as a result of its current review of UK aid
conditionality, including conditions linked to trade liberalisation
- call publicly for the World Bank and IMF to abandon all forms of
economic policy conditionality, including conditions linked to trade
liberalisation
All Trade Justice Movement member organisations support the policy
positions outlined in our founding statement 'For Whose Benefit? Making
trade work for people and the planet' (available online at www.tjm.org.uk
).
The call to Stop Forced Liberalisation represents
the Trade Justice Movement's lead call for 2005, as one of the three
overall demands in the 'Vote for Trade Justice' campaign action.
We
believe everyone has the right to feed their families, make a decent
living and protect their environment.
But the rich and powerful are
pursuing trade policies that put profits before the needs of people and
the planet.
To end poverty and protect the environment we need
Trade Justice not free trade.
The UK government
should:
- Fight for rules that ensure governments can choose the best
solution to end poverty and protect the environment.
- End export subsidies that damage the livelihoods of poor rural
communities around the world;
- Make laws that stop big business profiting at the expense of
people and the environment.
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