|


In a book for the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives titled
"GATS: How the New WTO's Services Negotiations Threaten
Democracy", it is argued that the GATS provisions on domestic
regulation pose one of the Agreement's most "dangerous threats to
democratic decision-making". The book claims that
"governments would be compelled to demonstrate, first, that
non-discriminatory regulations were necessary to achieve a WTO-sanctioned
legitimate objective and secondly, that no less
commercially-restrictive alternative measure was possible". As we
have said above, the only circumstances in which any Member would be
required to justify a domestic regulation would be in dispute
settlement—when a specific measure had been challenged by another
Government.
All
of the concerns expressed about "deregulation" of services
resulting from the GATS or about threats to health and safety
standards boil down to the possibility that a measure thought to be
discriminatory or unnecessarily restrictive can be challenged in
dispute settlement. In the first six years of the existence of the
GATS (as of February 2001) there have been no dispute settlement cases
based primarily on services, though three cases dealing essentially
with trade in goods under the GATT have had significant GATS elements.
There has been no challenge to any measure of domestic regulation
under the GATS. Nevertheless, cases may arise in the future. But can
this really be represented as an assault on democracy?
All
Governments are sovereign. Within their own jurisdictions they can
reserve the right to act in any way they wish—even to the extent of
banning foreign trade altogether, though in such a case, of course, it
would make no sense to participate in the WTO. Like all WTO
Agreements, the GATS is an agreement to abide by a set of
multilaterally agreed rules and therefore entails some surrender of
sovereignty. So do all other international agreements. The surrender
is voluntary, conditional and temporary: no country is obliged to
become or remain a Member of the WTO. But nearly all Governments in
the world—over 140 WTO Members and 30 countries negotiating
accession—agree that it is worthwhile to accept some negotiated
limitations on the otherwise sovereign right to intervene in trade,
including the possibility that one of their own measures may be
subject to challenge by a trading partner. Should a Government not be
able to challenge a measure which it believes to be illegal and
damaging to its country's interests? In dispute settlement each of the
Governments concerned is representing the interests of its people as
it sees them. It is not evident that either case has more democratic
legitimacy than the other. If the complaining country loses, is that
too a defeat for democracy? To represent the possibility of losing a
hypothetical dispute settlement case as an attack on democracy is to
deny the legitimacy of international trade agreements and the
principle of international cooperation—because participation in any
legal system entails accepting that others' rights may sometimes
prevail.
Anarchy
in international trade relations would imply a far greater loss of
sovereignty, above all for the small and weak. Recognizing this,
Governments have accepted the obligation to justify and if necessary
change disputed trade measures as a price well worth paying, if the
alternative is the law of the most powerful. In this they are surely
right. <
Previous |