
VOIR
AUSSI:
Communiqués
de presse
Nouvelles
Allocutions:
Mike Moore
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Three weeks ago in Geneva we marked the 50th anniversary
of the multilateral trading system - an event which
brought together world leaders and ministers from every
region, every background and every stage of development
to commemorate one of the great successes of the postwar
world. This was more than a ceremonial occasion. It
demonstrated how far we have come towards constructing a
truly global economic system. Even during this period of
significant change and uncertainty, not a single speaker
questioned the validity of multilateral trade or of the
WTO. From President Clinton to President Castro, Prime
Minister Blair to President Mandela, President Cardoso to
Prime Minister Prodi - all saw this system as
indispensable to growth and stability in our
interdependent world; even if each one had a different
perspective on success and failure, reflecting different
backgrounds and historical experiences. Everyone
underlined the reality of the globalization process and
the need to improve its governance.Why
does this consensus exist? Because the history of the
latter half of this century has taught us that there is
really no rational alternative. The postwar architects
were guided by a central idea - that a durable
international peace must be built on the foundations of
progressive liberalization and economic interdependence.
In their vision, removing barriers to trade would lead to
shared prosperity and a shared commitment to
international stability. The principle of
non-discrimination in trade relations would restrain
destructive economic nationalism, and help prevent the
resurgence of the protectionist policies which had done
so much to increase interwar tensions. Theirs was a
vision centred on the rule of law, not the rule of power,
built on consensus among nations, binding commitments
freely entered into and the settlement of disputes
through procedures available to all and applicable to
all. These have also been the basic values on which we
have built the European Union today - from a customs
union through to an European single currency.
This
idea now finds a consensus of support from practically
every part of the world. The Berlin Wall fell because
millions of people rebelled not only against the loss of
their political freedom, but against the loss of their
material and economic freedom as well. With the end of
the Cold War came the end of any pretence of a viable
competition between state-planned and free market
economies. Equally significant is the economic revolution
which has been unfolding in much of the developing world,
and the changing dynamic of North-South relations.
Countries in Latin America, Asia, and now Africa have
moved or are moving from a world of import substitution
and protectionism towards a world of freer markets and
more open, rules-based trade. This change in outlook has
in turn had a profound effect on the multilateral trading
system. Whereas only 23 economies participated in the
first GATT negotiation in 1947, today the WTO has 132
members, and 31 are waiting to join - ranging from giants
like China and Russia, to small island states. Like the
presence in Geneva of so many representative leaders and
ministers for the 50th anniversary commemoration, this
impressive number of Members and candidates to the WTO is
an unmistakable sign of the validity of this system.
II
The
point is not that the global economy is somehow perfect -
or that the widening range of public concerns are without
substance or validity. The point, rather, is that the
challenges we face can only realistically be addressed
inside this global system - not outside of it. If people,
especially young people, say that unemployment is too
high, they are right. If environmentalists say that
growth must be sustainable - and not destroy the planet's
essential equilibrium - they are right. If people say
that labour standards have to be raised, not rolled back,
they too are right. But none of these international - and
national - problems will be resolved any easier by
restricting trade, closing borders, or undermining the
international rule of law - as embodied in the WTO. Just
the opposite. As President Castro reminded demonstrators
in Geneva, "it is unemployment we are fighting, not
the WTO".
There
is another important point which follows from this
consensus. It is that we must stop viewing the world
through a narrow lens, and begin to look at the various
challenges we face as pieces of a larger puzzle demanding
broader, more integrated solutions. It is true that some
of the current opposition to liberalization and
globalization is irrational or worse - as we saw from
some of the demonstrations which accompanied the 50th
anniversary commemoration in Geneva. But it is equally
true that many perfectly reasonable people are
legitimately concerned about signs of worsening
environmental degradation, unacceptable levels of
poverty, human rights abuses in certain countries, or a
lowering of labour standards. All of which is made more
immediate and central in the public's mind by the reality
of ever-closer global integration, and the power of an
ever-more influential global media.
More
than ever before trade - and the rules of the trading
system - intersect with a broad array of issues and
concerns which have a powerful impact on people's
day-to-day lives. More and more the WTO is under pressure
to expand its agenda because more and more it is seen as
the focal point for the many challenges and concerns of
globalization.
III
How
to respond? Certainly we must continue to advance trade
liberalization within the multilateral system, which has
been such a powerful engine of growth. Certainly we must
continue to expand the universality of the system, in
order to make its benefits more inclusive. Certainly this
system cannot give answers to all the issues on the
global agenda, just as it cannot ignore the pressures for
change. However, as President Mandela pointed out,
"trade does not of itself or in itself bring a
better world". No invisible hand is at work to
ensure globally balanced and harmonious outcomes. Freer
markets alone will not restore the stratospheric ozone.
Lower tariffs will promote trade, but not, of themselves,
alleviate poverty or raise labour standards.
President
Clinton captured the challenge facing us when he said
that: "we must do more to make sure that this new
economy lifts living standards around the world, and that
spirited economic competition among nations never becomes
a race to the bottom in environmental protection,
consumer protection and labour standards. We should level
up, not level down. Without such a strategy, we cannot
build the necessary public support for the global
economy. Working people will only assume the risks of a
free international market if they have the confidence
that this system will work for them".
What
we need is a broader global vision to address at the
national as well as the international level our growing
global needs. We must build up a consensus for more
cooperation and concerted action across a wider front of
issues. By reaching enforceable multilateral agreements
and standards, not just in trade. And by identifying and
strengthening the kind of international institutions
needed to promote - in a balanced way - a very complex
global agenda. The WTO can - and must - be an
important cornerstone of this architecture, and powerful
support for the needed progress in other multilateral
fora. Already WTO Members have outlined the need for
progress in three broad areas of global policy.
First,
we need to inject a new sense of dynamism into the WTO
Committee on Trade and the Environment in order to better
clarify a positive relationship between the rules of the
trading system and the needs of the environment.
President Clinton and Sir Leon Brittan have suggested a
high level meeting on trade and the environment, as I
myself have affirmed on various occasions. I do not want
to enter into a discussion today of how to revitalize
this relationship between trade and the environment. The
point is that it must be revitalized - beginning with a
thorough preparatory process - if the trade and
environmental agendas are to advance in a mutually
supportive way.
A
second important step forward was the consensus reached
at the WTO's first Ministerial Conference in Singapore on
the issue of labour standards. Positions on either side
of the issue were very strongly held. But after months of
careful preparation in Geneva, and five days of intense
debate in Singapore, we emerged from the Conference with
a clear and strong consensus - a consensus first, that
members were committed to the observance of core labour
standards; second, that the ILO was the relevant body to
address these issues; third, that standards are best
promoted by growth and development, fostered by trade
liberalization; and fourth, that labour standards should
in no way be used for protectionist purposes or to put
into question the comparative advantage of countries. It
is this consensus which has opened the door for the
International Labour Organization to make real progress
in its Declaration of principles concerning fundamental
rights and its appropriate follow-up mechanism. Perhaps
not everyone is fully satisfied with this progress. But
the reality is that we would have made no progress at all
if we were still fighting over the issue of the ILO's or
the WTO's competence.
The
third step was the WTO initiative last year to provide
assistance, in collaboration with UNCTAD, UNDP, the World
Bank and others, to address the needs of least-developed
countries. One objective is to give least-developed
countries better access for their exports in advanced
markets, and here I have strongly advocated that we
provide bound duty free access - a call which has now
also been taken up by many world leaders. In Geneva,
Prime Minister Blair and others urged that "we must
all commit to zero tariffs". In addition, we must
continue to work towards a more integrated approach to
capacity building in these countries. And we must build
upon our efforts to link the Least-Developed Countries
via the Internet to all the resources and expertise of
the WTO - a powerful symbol of the new kind of dialogue
that is needed in our global electronic village.
I
give these examples to illustrate three points: First,
that multilateral approaches in the environmental, labour
and development fields can work. In these areas we are
moving beyond identifying problems, and are starting to
identify solutions. Second, that WTO Members have a
direct interest in seeing real and substantive progress
also in non-trade areas - not least because without
progress, public support will weaken, and trade
liberalization will suffer. And third, not only that
consensus on the most difficult issues is possible, but
that consensus is absolutely critical to real and lasting
progress. The success of the WTO was the result - not the
cause - of a broadening international consensus about the
value of trade liberalization, painstakingly built up
over the past fifty years. In the same way, we will only
reach durable global solutions to the environment or
labour issues - as to the many other global issues now on
the agenda - by constructing the same kind of
international consensus from the bottom up.
In
all this we must also be clear that every global issue
should have its own solution. Environmental and social
problems need environmental and social answers - and
seeking solutions through trade rules is not a
substitute. And those solutions should be multilaterally
agreed in the proper forum - in coordination with trade
rules - so that different policies can reflect common
values and be mutually supportive. The reality is that
many of the existing problems the WTO system faces with
environmental and other objectives do not lie in
differences of values or of priorities, but in the lack
of multilateral rules in these areas - which in turn
calls for an impossible blessing of unilateral and
extraterritorial rules.
This
underlines the need for much greater technical and policy
coordination - both at the national and the international
level. No one should imagine that policy issues which
cannot be balanced within a national government can
miraculously achieve equilibrium in an international
context. The first task must be to ensure that national
delegations are bringing a coherent and consistent
message to the negotiating table. The second task is to
clarify all the cases in which there are no differences
in values or objectives between the trading system and
these other policy areas. The false perception exists
that, in many cases, environmental objectives cannot be
achieved because of the primacy of the trading rules.
This perception must be dispelled. As the famous
tuna-dolphin case between the US and Mexico has shown,
the solution to the problem was not in maintaining
unilateral trade measures but in a multilateral agreement
on the kind of nets which capture tuna but protect
dolphins. The answer was, as it should be, an
environmental answer, not a trade answer.
We
would be making a profound mistake to pretend that
unilateral pressure offers a short cut to international
environmental or social policy - or that there is a magic
bullet called trade sanctions. Unilateralism will not
convince any country of the validity of the values which
another asserts. Nor will trade sanctions serve as a wake
up call for public opinion around the world. This
approach could in fact be seen as a sign of weakness not
strength. And it reflects a basic lack of confidence that
one's rights or values can be freely shared by others.
IV
How,
then, do we in the WTO move ahead? In one sense, our
negotiating path is already set out. First, there is the
task of implementing the 27,000 pages of Uruguay Round
agreements. We have an important responsibility for
providing technical assistance to many developing
countries and, in particular, to all the least-developed
countries if we want to achieve the full implementation
of the commitments already agreed. And this, in turn,
means we have a responsibility for providing the
necessary financial resources. Second, there is the
launch of the new negotiations at the turn of the century
which are already mandated - in services, in agriculture,
and in certain aspects of intellectual property. Third,
there are decisions which must soon be taken about the
work launched at the first Ministerial Conference in
Singapore - in investment, competition policy,
transparency in government procurement, and trade
facilitation. And fourth, there is a lengthening list of
new issues that Members wish to see the WTO take up -
both new areas of negotiations, such as electronic
commerce where we have already begun, and the broader
public concerns I mentioned earlier. This road has been
approved by consensus by the representatives of 132
Members in Geneva three weeks ago.
The
real key to the future of the multilateral trading system
does not lie only with trade negotiators, however. It
lies also with our citizens, our public. It lies with our
ability to explain what kind of future we want. What our
goals are for the 21st century. And why millions of
ordinary people should value and support these goals.
This is why the very challenging ideas presented by
President Clinton and the other leaders at the 50th
anniversary celebration deserves the maximum attention.
This
brings me back to the point with which I began today -
the immeasurable importance of building consensus and
global vision. By definition, the global challenges we
all face call for shared and cooperative solutions. And
this can only be achieved through consensus - as we have
done in the multilateral trading system for the past
fifty years. Furthermore, separate sectoral or national
approaches are no longer sufficient. Nor can there be
one, single policy response to the complex issues we
face.
We
need a global vision that embraces all of the issues, all
of the actors, now on the international agenda - this is
what our publics are asking for more and more. We need to
integrate our responses to the economic challenges we
face in a way which reflects real human values and real
human interests. Trade liberalization must be supportive
of environmental objectives; but environmental policies
must also be supportive of growth and development through
trade liberalization - the process which provides the new
resources so critical to a sustainable environment. The
same positive relationship must exist with regard to
labour standards, to financial stability, and, most of
all, to the promotion of national policies designed to
alleviate the social impact of our rapid transition
towards an ever-more interdependent world. We do not need
to destroy the welfare state. We need to adapt it to the
new realities of a globalizing economy.
Consensus
does not just mean agreement among governments. Consensus
also means dialogue with our citizens. And dialogue means
working to understand one another, and working
constructively to erase the false perceptions - and even
false information - that sometimes stand between an open
exchange of views. This is the way forward - building on
the consensus we achieved in Geneva, through even more
cooperation between governments and international
institutions, but also broadening this consensus to
include civil society and all the social partners. This
is why I intend to devote a great deal of my time to
improving this dialogue - a dialogue including the widest
possible representation and transparency in all the
activities of the WTO.
The
end of the Cold War swept away many of the barriers of
ideology, politics, and economics which had divided our
world for almost fifty years. We have a unique
opportunity, in this new global era, to tackle shared
challenges with a new sense of shared outlook, shared
values, and shared purpose. It would be a sad irony if,
at a time when there has never been a broader awareness
among governments and elites about the benefits of trade,
openness and integration, we found a widening gap between
these governments and the publics they serve. We cannot
allow this gap to open.
So
this 50th anniversary year is not simply an occasion to
look to past successes. More importantly, it is an
occasion to look to the future - and to grasp the huge
opportunities that this future offers. To extend the
benefits of technology and innovation to billions of
people around the world. To reduce the inequalities of
our present world. To work to eradicate poverty,
malnutrition and the scourge of ignorance. To strengthen
the foundations of international peace as well as
prosperity - for developing and developed countries
alike. This is a new beginning. We face today a shared
challenge but also a shared responsibility - to be
as creative in developing a new global community as our
forefathers were a half a century ago in developing the
postwar international system.
In
this endeavour, the Federal Republic of Germany's
contribution and pro-active rôle is of the utmost
importance. You are the second largest single world
exporter of goods and the fourth largest services
exporter. You are certainly one of the countries that
benefit the most from a trade system like ours, based on
binding commitments, global rules and an enforceable
dispute settlement mechanism.
The
construction of Europe and the launch of the single
currency is certainly an historic achievement. But it is
also important as a new departure towards an even more
globalizing world. This is why you are an indispensable
partner in the front row of this new global vision for a
better world.
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