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Statement by Luisa Romero
Bermudez, Minister of Production
and Commerce of Venezuela
Fourth WTO Ministerial Conference
Doha, Qatar, 9 to 13 November 2001
The
need to review the multilateral
trading system
1.
This Conference is taking place at
a time when the global economy is
in an unusual situation, when the
industrialized countries all
appear to be in the grip of a
recession and when many developing
countries are evaluating what they
have gained from the
liberalization of trade in support
of their development, the well-being
of their peoples, poverty
reduction, the diversification and
strengthening of their production
sector and growth in their trade.
This is the context in which
Venezuela emphasizes once again
the basics main elements of its
concern and its position on the
multilateral trading system, the
latter's future and its impact on
the well-being of our peoples,
which has already been expressed
in other forums such as the
Seattle Conference.
2.
This could be the time to ask
ourselves what we expect from the
multilateral trading system from
the development perspective so
that we can assess the challenges
it raises for Members of the WTO.
To summarize, in practical terms,
this is a valuable opportunity to
undertake an objective evaluation
of the results achieved under the
Uruguay Round Agreements.
3.
For Venezuela, participation in
this Fourth Ministerial Conference
is particularly significant
because we are involved in
building a new project for our
country with a view to more
beneficial integration in the
global economy based on
diversification of our production
sector in a world that we would
like to see multipolar, with a
more balanced and equitable system
of economic relations. Our message
today outlines this perspective
and gives our vision of
development, trade and the
liberalization process; it also
explains Venezuela's position on
the main topics to be covered at
this Meeting.
4.
Many countries welcomed the
liberalization of trade,
especially after the Uruguay Round,
with the legitimate expectation of
participating in its benefits.
Nevertheless, the benefits
obtained by the majority of
developing countries have been
slender in comparison with their
expectations, despite the great
sacrifices they have made to adapt
their economies and observe the
commitments and disciplines, and
despite the efforts they have made
to gain greater access to global
markets.
5.
The international community must
be aware of the great efforts made
by many countries to adapt to the
rules of the WTO, but there has
been little evidence that this
effort has yielded trade benefits
that are satisfactory in terms of
their economic development needs,
equity and real improvements for
their peoples.
6.
These considerations lead us to
suggest that it is time to review
the process of liberalizing the
global economy from a broad
perspective. The purpose is not to
turn aside from the process, as it
can be useful, but rather to put
right its defects, to perfect it
and to make it into a genuine
catalyst for development, in terms
of social impact and not only
growth in trade. This process
should allow our countries to
participate effectively in the
benefits of trade, changing the
multilateral system into a
practical tool for the fulfilment
of the economic, social and
political aspirations of all
societies in the world.
Practical expression of the
development dimension in the
agreements and negotiations
7.
The aim of our efforts towards the
international integration of our
economies should be the
development and well-being of our
peoples and, consequently, the
trade liberalization process
should be evaluated in terms of
its aptitude to contribute towards
the objectives fixed. We stress
that the future progress of the
multilateral trading system should
not only seek to liberalize trade.
It is not enough to increase the
trade of developing countries,
they also need to be helped to
diversify their production, give
their exports added value,
strengthen technology, maximize
trade's impact on well-being and
employment, and what is lacking in
particular is the willingness of
industrialized countries to
establish genuine mechanisms to
open up access to their markets.
These objectives cannot be
achieved through liberalization
alone and the multilateral trading
system cannot help to achieve them
if in the future its objective is
simply liberalization per se
without including effective and
concrete provisions, rules and
mechanisms to promote these
objectives and to consolidate the
economic and social development of
the countries.
8.
From this standpoint, we can only
justify extending the WTO
negotiations beyond the mandates
in the "built-in agenda" that was
the outcome of Marrakesh if they
really include the dimension
outlined in these objectives in
the form of rules and provisions.
9.
This is how we see the development
dimension so often mentioned,
which must serve as a framework
and a guide to the future progress
of the multilateral trading system,
its negotiations and the
implementation of its disciplines.
In other words, the development
dimension described must become an
effective part of the system. This
can only be achieved through
priority action and commitments in
three areas.
10.
On the one hand, one result of
this Conference should be to
provide a firm commitment to
finding effective solutions to the
implementation problems inherent
in certain Uruguay Round
Agreements, which have made it
difficult for developing countries
to enjoy the expected benefits of
trade, as has been the case for
agriculture, for example.
11.
Secondly, the concept of special
and differential treatment must be
re-evaluated so that it goes
beyond its current limited and
diffused scope, which only
consists of time-limits and
promises – not always fulfilled –
on international cooperation. The
concept of special and
differential treatment must be
included in the Agreements in an
operational and binding form. In
essence, what needs to be done is
to ensure that rules are not
simply used to regulate imbalances,
and the adoption of different
commitments according to the
Members' levels of development
should be recognized as legitimate.
12.
Thirdly, the agreements to be
negotiated should be sufficiently
flexible to allow developing
countries to implement policies to
develop production that are in
harmony with the market, in other
words, the concept of "spaces for
development policies" should be
legitimized and this should also
be done for other issues such as
access to technology, giving the
possibility of applying active
policies in respect of offer with
the aim of increasing the value
added, diversifying production,
encouraging technological progress
and promoting the economic growth
of depressed areas in developing
countries.
Access to technology and open
regionalism: two fundamental
issues for developing countries
13.
There are two issues concerning
multilateral rules which we would
like to highlight in particular
before commenting on the specific
topics of negotiation discussed at
this Conference. Two issues on
which the opportunities for
successful international
integration of developing
countries largely depend and which
should therefore receive positive
treatment in the WTO's agenda. The
first of these is guaranteed
access to technology and the
second is the support to be given
to strengthening regional
integration and free-trade
agreements among developing
countries.
14.
Following the Uruguay Round, the
multilateral rules laid down
limits on the use of certain
instruments to promote
technological development, for
example, subsidies and other
incentives. The multilateral
agenda also included issues
concerning trade-related
investment measures, on the one
hand, and intellectual property
rights on the other. These two
areas are closely linked: on the
one hand, the mastery of
technological innovation, which is
related to development policies
and, on the other, the WTO rules,
which originally only covered
trade policies. Their importance
for developing countries is quite
obvious because the
competitiveness of their
production and trade depends on
narrowing the existing gap in
technological development at the
international level. This is why
Venezuela once again emphasizes
that the multilateral rules should
be designed in such a way as to
guarantee a space for development
policies and should be implemented
in a manner that helps to increase
our access to technology on
reasonable trade terms, rather
than preventing such access or
making it difficult due to
adoption of the rules.
15.
We also consider that the
multilateral system should help to
strengthen and reinforce
integration agreements because,
rather than being an obstacle or
threat to the system, they
complement it and are an effective
means of allowing small economies
gradually to scale-up production
and gain force to participate
global trade.
The
preparatory process for this
Ministerial Conference and the
essential determinants of our
position
16.
The preparatory process for this
Conference has not been easy, on
the contrary, it has been complex
and difficult. Venezuela has taken
an active part, bearing in mind
the factors we have described,
trying to ensure that the
framework that may be established
for the negotiations contributes
to better integration of
developing countries and of
Venezuela in the global economy.
17.
In this connection, the progress
that may be achieved on
implementation, as well as the
concrete inclusion of the
development dimension in the
future programme, in areas of
particular interest to Venezuela
such as agriculture and services,
investment and industrial tariffs,
for example, should be highlighted.
What
should be the aim of the
negotiations on the built-in
agenda?
18.
Turning to the issues for the
future work programme, we should
highlight the subjects for
negotiations on the built-in
agenda, starting with agriculture.
Further reform of trade in
agricultural products is of vital
importance to our countries. It
should seek the abolition of the
subsidies that destabilize global
markets in agricultural products,
as well as the establishment of an
appropriate framework for
achieving the objectives of food
security, rural development and
poverty reduction. As far as the
developing countries are concerned
this means reviewing the special
and differential treatment and
including flexible policy
provisions that allow these
countries to succeed in developing
their agricultural and food
sectors.
19.
Venezuela is particularly
interested in the negotiations on
trade in services. Services are
the main value added economic
activity and their development can
prove an effective tool in
diversifying our exports and
building a knowledge-based economy
in our countries. The current
negotiations on trade in services
have agreed guidelines and
negotiating procedures that
include elements of extreme
importance to Venezuela: the right
to regulate the supply of services,
to set conditions for access to
our market, the maintenance of the
structure of the Agreement, and
negotiating methods that give
priority to the request/offer
system.
Electronic commerce and government
procurement
20.
An agreement on transparency in
government procurement would help
to increase competition among
suppliers and consequently the
efficiency of purchasing by our
public sectors. Venezuela welcomes
the commencement of negotiations
on this subject and considers that
they should be restricted to
transparency, giving due
consideration to national
practices and allowing developing
countries to use government
procurement as a policy instrument
to strengthen small and medium
enterprises and their domestic
production apparatus in general.
21.
Venezuela attaches particular
importance to information
technology and electronic commerce,
whose development is helping to
reinforce a new technological
model that is changing methods of
production and value-added and
revolutionizing the way in which
we communicate and trade. This is
why we support the view that the
WTO should study the implications
of electronic commerce and the
possible application of
multilateral rules in this respect.
Intellectual property,
technological development and
health
22.
The Government of Venezuela
considers that the application of
intellectual property rules should
be fair and equitable so that they
are beneficial to the economic and
social development interests of
our countries. The revision of the
TRIPS Agreement should therefore
take into account the adoption of
mechanisms to protect intellectual
property rights relating to
traditional knowledge and
incorporate in the Agreement the
principles and objectives of the
Convention on Biological Diversity.
It should also seek to give effect
to the objective of transfer of
technology for the purpose of
building national capacity in all
areas of research and the
application of innovation. As we
have already said, raising the
value-added of our exports,
diversifying our economies and
becoming really competitive means
that our countries need
technological development so the
rules on property must act as
incentives and not obstacles.
23.
The TRIPS Agreement and public
health policies are related and we
therefore support a special
declaration on this issue that
leaves no room for doubt regarding
its interpretation. Any
interpretation of the Agreement
that prevents the implementation
of health policies, restricts
access to medicines at low prices
or prevents States from using the
safeguards allowed by the
Agreement must be stopped. We call
on Ministers to confirm that the
flexibility contained in the TRIPS
Agreement should be given
practical expression through an
appropriate interpretation in
support of public health in
general and access to its benefits
for the peoples in developing
countries.
Effective market access: WTO
rules, tariffs and trade
facilitation
24.
Trade in manufactures from
developing countries is frequently
subject to pressures and
restrictions that do not allow the
benefits expected from this trade
to be obtained. On the one hand,
the relative prices of commodities
continue their downward trend, and
on the other, access to the
markets of industrialized
countries by products from our
countries with higher value-added
is limited by the abusive or
unjustified application of anti-dumping
measures, barriers based on
technical standards, and lack of
stability and tariff peaks.
Venezuela therefore welcomes the
inclusion of a negotiating mandate
in the future work programme that
will permit an evaluation and
revision of the current rules on
subsidies and antidumping so that
their implementation is regulated
and made more transparent and
special and differential treatment
is put into practice.
25.
For the same reasons, as regards
the proposal on initiating market
access negotiations for non-agricultural
products, in principle Venezuela
could support such negotiations to
the extent that they effectively
recognize that special and
differential treatment for
developing countries should be re-evaluated
so that the final agreement gives
these countries sufficient
flexibility as regards policies,
preferences during the transition
periods, and also tariff
reductions based on the bound
levels. In addition, Venezuela
proposes that the negotiations
should give priority to
eliminating tariff peaks and
escalation that affect products
with higher value-added from
developing countries.
26.
Another subject that is closely
related to any commitments that
might be made on access is the
rules on trade facilitation.
Venezuela shares the view of many
countries regarding the importance
of expeditive and efficient
procedures at the border which do
not nullify the expected effects
of the trade liberalization
commitments given. Nevertheless,
the development of the existing
provisions and their
transformation into more extensive
and specific rules, subject also
to the dispute settlement
mechanism, would not necessarily
support the efforts made by
developing countries to modernize
their customs services and make
them more efficient. On the
contrary, it could be counter-productive
if the reform process under way in
countries such as Venezuela is
made subject to outside pressures
and requirements that ignore the
progressive nature and the limits
of such reforms. Consequently, at
this Conference, Venezuela could
not support the initiation of
negotiations on trade facilitation
that will lead to rules subject to
the Dispute Settlement Body. We
can accept the definition of
multilateral voluntary schemes,
based on cooperation programmes
that effectively take into account
the needs of developing countries
in this respect.
The
WTO Dispute Settlement
Understanding
27.
Venezuela has directly benefited
from the balanced and fair
functioning of the WTO's dispute
settlement mechanism and considers
that the Dispute Settlement Body,
which guarantees confidence and
predictability, is a fundamental –
if not the main – element of a
multilateral trading system. This
is why we would like to see this
Conference adopt a series of
amendments to the Understanding
that, even though not
comprehensive, deal with an
essential element of the mechanism,
namely the sequencing. We regret
that the political will needed to
reach a consensus in this respect
has not been sufficient, but we
shall continue to take part in the
revision of the mechanism so that
this and other aspects can be
dealt with positively as soon as
possible.
The
rules of the multilateral trading
system and the issues of the
environment and labour standards
28.
For Venezuela, the protection of
the environment and sustainable
development, on the one hand, and
human rights, including labour
rights, on the other, should be
taken into account in national
development policies and in
international policies and rules
because they are part of a concept
of peoples' fulfilment which we
share, human development.
Nevertheless, we consider that the
WTO's contribution to such
fulfilment should be to include
development objectives in the
disciplines that are its
responsibility and not to try to
become a forum for the search for
solutions to environmental and
labour problems.
29.
This is why we emphasize that the
WTO should not link the
multilateral rules on
international trade to these other
issues and that there are other
appropriate disciplines,
mechanisms and forums for
responding to the concerns raised
by such issues. In this respect,
we recognize and support the ILO
Declaration on Fundamental
Principles and Rights at Work, and
the multilateral environmental
agreements, as well as the
agreements resulting from the
Earth Summit, inter alia,
which include broad and
comprehensive reviews of the
specific issues, including their
application to international trade.
30.
If the WTO wishes to be credible
in the eyes of the peoples of the
world it cannot remain aloof from
human development questions. Its
role is to include the social
development dimension properly in
the area of trade.
The
debt of developing countries
31.
I would not like to end without
expressing to this Ministerial
meeting our support for the
initiatives taken within the WTO
to study the contribution that the
multilateral trading system can
make to the problem of the debt of
developing countries and the
complex relationship between
international trade and financial
flows, in particular, how to
ensure that the financial crises
in developing countries do not
have a negative impact on trade
and thus accentuate the vicious
circle of poverty, thereby raising
the price of recovery.
Accession of the People's Republic
of China
32.
We welcome with satisfaction the
accession of the new Members of
this Organization. We are sure
that the accession of the People's
Republic of China will mark a
change in the system's structure
because of China's status as an
agricultural economy, its impact
on global trade and its large
population.
33.
In conclusion, Mr Chairman, we
should like to express, through
you, to the Government of the
Emirate of Qatar and the
authorities of the city of Doha
our gratitude for their
hospitality and for their
contribution to the holding of
this Fourth Ministerial Meeting.
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