Hamid Mamdouh — WTO reform imperative: a possible way forward

Posted by Peter Ungphakorn
POSTED NOVEMBER 9, 2021 | UPDATED NOVEMBER 9, 2021

This is a short proposal on World Trade Organization (WTO) reform by Hamid Mamdouh, former director of the WTO Secretariat’s Trade in Services Division and a recent candidate to be WTO director-general.

Mamdouh proposes members start from overall principles and cover all three of the WTO’s main functions:

This should be done, he suggests, in a new working party to start work in the new year.

He is not alone. The EU Commission and Council have also floated the idea of a working group on WTO reform in a trade policy statement presented to the European Parliament on February 18, 2021 (page 18 of this). The EU is understood to be discussing the proposal privately with other delegations in Geneva.

Continue reading “Hamid Mamdouh — WTO reform imperative: a possible way forward”

The WTO is regularly in crisis, but this time could be different

The WTO Ministerial Conference is almost upon us. The chorus of calls for “WTO reform” puts too much emphasis on Geneva when the real solutions require fundamental changes in and between the capitals of its 164 members.

New dates
On February 23, 2022, WTO members meeting as the General Council
agreed to reschedule the Ministerial Conference for the week of June 13

The Ministerial Conference had been “postponed indefinitely” on November 26, four days before it was due to start, as Switzerland tightened travel restrictions because of the new omicron COVID-19 variant

By Peter Ungphakorn and Robert Wolfe
POSTED OCTOBER 30 AND NOVEMBER 26, 2021
ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED BY COSMOPOLITAN GLOBALIST SEPTEMBER 28, 2021
UPDATED FEBRUARY 24, 2022

On December 8, 2019, The New York Times predicted the possible “end of the […] World Trade Organization itself.” Earlier, a Bloomberg headline spoke of a “fatal blow” to the WTO.

Two years later, the WTO is still up and running. Even the crisis in dispute settlement, where first-stage rulings can no longer be appealed — and the cause of those doom-mongering news reports — has failed to stop it.

Yet the WTO does face serious problems. Dealing with them has become more urgent.

This piece was originally published in September. We are now only days away from when WTO ministers are due to meet in Geneva, where “WTO reform” is a major item on the agenda.

We have heard various upbeat statements from events like the G20 trade ministers’ October 12 meeting in Sorrento, the G7 ministers in London 10 days later, the optimistic sounds coming from Geneva, and apparently a new signal from Washington.

A cacophony of cans being kicked down the road

As the November 30–December 3 Ministerial Conference approached, activity increased, including from some ministers.

The US strengthened its call to talk.

Canadian Trade Minister Mary Ng visited Geneva to rally delegations to produce “concrete outcomes on key initiatives” at the Ministerial Conference. She met the Ottawa Group of members working on WTO reform, the WTO director-general, the chair of the fisheries subsidies negotiations, ambassadors from India, South Africa, EU and Mauritius, and the US chargé d’affaires.

Nevertheless, the only likely deal to be struck is on services regulation among a small group of members. We are also told a last-minute WTO-wide breakthrough on fisheries subsidies might be possible — after 20 years of negotiation and at least one missed deadline. In reality a lot of difficult issues still remain at the last minute.

Aside from those two subjects, we remain sceptical that anything substantial will be delivered.

Continue reading or jump down the page to:
Round the clock activity | No stranger to crisis | The misunderstood role of the WTO | Dispute settlement | The real problem: low priority | ‘Reform’ and the ministerial conference | Two strands of WTO reform | Find out more

See also: Hamid Mamdouh — WTO reform imperative: a possible way forward

Continue reading “The WTO is regularly in crisis, but this time could be different”

UPDATES: the WTO fisheries subsidies talks. 2020–2024

Timeline with links to some key documents and news


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By Peter Ungphakorn
POSTED APRIL 21, 2021 | UPDATED AS INDICATED

The drive for a WTO agreement on fisheries subsidies accelerated in 2021 and eventually led to a slightly stripped down deal.

The agreement reached at the Geneva ministerial conference on June 17, 2022 had a vital piece missing, subsidies contributing to overfishing and overcapacity. See also: ‘Fisheries subsidies’ has been agreed by WTO ministers. What’s next? Talks continue in the search for that missing piece. Failure means the agreement self-destructs.

Updates on the latest developments will be added here, with links to new documents and news items, including ratifications (chart and in a nutshell).

Key events

  • Latest ratifications chart, ratifications summary, events
  • April 12, 2024 — chair Gunnarsson circulates a copy of the “advance draft” from the final day of the Abu Dhabi Ministerial Conference. His accompanying explanation includes an account of the negotiations in Abu Dhabi
  • March 2, 2024 (updated) — The Abu Dhabi Ministerial Conference ends. Members are totally deadlocked on fisheries subsidies (and agriculture). The final declaration does not even mention it. Eye witnesses report a confrontation between ministers from India, Fiji and Vanuatu
  • February 26–27, 2024 — big celebration of 69 ratifications, with one more a day later, but the target for entry into force is missed and quietly dropped
  • February 16–19, 2024 — draft for the Abu Dhabi Ministerial Conference circulated
  • January 16–February 12, 2024 — the final busy “fish month” before the Ministerial Conference leaves the chair with a lot of redrafting. He plans to circulate a new version before the conference.
  • December 21, 2023 (updated January 2, 2024) — the chair’s new draft and explanation are released publicly
  • December 12, 2023 — next round of talks: a “fish month” from mid-January 2024. Will members have enough time to settle all their differences?
  • December 4–8, 2023 — at the end of the final “fish week” of 2023, chair Einar Gunnarsson concedes that agreement cannot be reached by year-end. Negotiators are left with lots still to do and no end in sight. No new ratifications since October either
  • October 23–24, 2023 — year-end set as target to complete negotiations on the text. Also, seven new ratifications. Does that count as a surge?
  • October 9–13, 2023 — sixth “fish week”, members set out their differences but do not negotiate. Details of India’s controversial paper emerge
  • September 18–22, 2023 — fifth “fish week”, call for ratifications when senior officials meet, October 23–24
  • September 9–10, 2023 — G20 leaders’ strange commitment
  • September 4, 2023 — first draft on disciplines for subsidies contributing to overcapacity and overfishing, the “missing piece”
  • July 10–14, 2023 — fourth of a series of “fish weeks”
  • May 25, 2023 — EU to ratify. But will that bring total ratifications to 34 or 35? A long-standing WTO conundrum
  • February 28, 2023 — WTO head shifts target for ratifications back to 2024
  • January 27, 2023 — new chair picked after months of deadlock
  • January 24, 2023 — first ratification (Switzerland)
  • October 10, 2022 — Evian retreat
  • September 26, 2022 — chair Santiago Wills departs
  • June 17, 2022 — slimmed-down agreement reached at ministerial conference
  • June 10, 2022 — new draft
  • November 24, 2021 — new draft
  • November 8, 2021 — new draft
  • June 30, 2021 — new draft circulated publicly
  • May 27, 2021 — US proposal on forced labour
  • December 2020 — draft leaked
Continue reading “UPDATES: the WTO fisheries subsidies talks. 2020–2024”