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World’s main trading nations remain divided on global agreement: Doha Round doomed?

Saturday, May 14th 2011 - 05:07 UTC
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EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht set out a compromise plan EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht set out a compromise plan

The world's main trading nations remain divided over a global trade deal despite a compromise plan put forward by the European Union to rescue the stalled Doha trade round, the EU trade chief said.

EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht said it was not clear how trading powers could resolve differences over the key sticking point - how to open up trade in industrial goods.

Senior negotiators from the United States, EU, Brazil, India, China, Australia and Japan who met at the World Trade Organization to discuss the EU plan moved no closer to agreement, he said.

“I'm not prepared to risk losing the gains for the economy, for development and for the rules-based system without a serious attempt to identify a viable compromise,” De Gucht told reporters after a meeting of EU trade ministers in Brussels.

“But I have to concede that at present the gaps between the main players remain large and it is not clear how the market access negotiations can proceed”.

The EU would nevertheless continue pressing for a solution, he said. Brussels floated its plan last month, widely seen as a last-ditch effort to rescue an accord intended to boost world trade and lift millions out of poverty.

The plan aims to tackle one of the biggest sticking points to the negotiations - industrial tariffs - to help bridge the divide between rich countries and major developing nations such as India and China.

Indian negotiator Rajeev Kher this week rejected the plan as unacceptable. Reactions from the United States and China were no more encouraging, EU sources said, yet no one is yet willing officially to admit defeat.

“We will have to see in the coming days and coming weeks where this is leading us to” De Gucht said.

The Doha round - named after the Qatari capital where talks were launched in 2001 -will be discussed by senior officials at a summit of Pacific Rim countries in Montana next week, as well as at G20 and G8 summits of big economies in France at the end of the month and at the WTO, he said.

The EU trade ministers meeting in Brussels said they supported the EU Commission's attempts to forge a compromise.
 

Categories: Economy, Politics, International.

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  • GeoffWard

    With the world in a turmoil of post-apocalyptic financial restructuring,

    with the impact of moving the larger fraction of world manufacture to one (albeit large) country,

    with the revolutionary movements in world-economy-driving oil-rich nations,

    with the frantic sequestering of the world's raw mineral materials,

    with the great bread-basket countries of the world balancing food production with 'ethanol growth',

    with the breakin of the power of the formal trading blocs and their replacement with (ad hoc) bilateral, multilateral Free Trade Agreements and Preferential Trade Agreements,

    with tariff barriers erected all over the world to protect industries and countries in their weakness,

    with global climatic and weather patterns changing the very face of the earth for human populations,

    . . . . . . . . . is it any wonder that the Dohar main agreement and even the EU revision (the art of the possible) are making such little headway.

    The river of world affairs is flowing so hard that it is sweeping matters before it.
    It is like the Mississippi in flood - levees break or are broken, and some get sacrificed and inundated whilst others keep their feet dry.

    Our politian negotiators have as much chance as Canute would have with the Mississippi.

    May 14th, 2011 - 01:04 pm 0
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