Agenda for India on International Trade Policy
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CUTS>ADVOCACY>CUTS Submission at the 9th Meeting of Advisory Committee on International Trade, Ministry of Commerce & Industry, Govt. of India |
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Agenda for India on International Trade Policy CUTS submission at the 9th Meeting of the Advisory Committee on International Trade of the Ministry of Commerce & Industry, Govt. of India, New Delhi, 8th January 2002 |
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Agenda
for India on International Trade Policy 2.
Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights 5.
Trade and Competition Policy 6.
Trade and Investment Policy |
Agenda for India on International Trade Policy
As the world moved from autarky to globalisation, international trade policy is now designed at Geneva under the auspices of the World Trade Organisation, with some influence from the other two Bretton Woods institutions: The World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. These are pursuing economic reforms in developing countries, of which trade liberalisation is an important part. Partly as a result of these persuasions and otherwise, the WTO resulted from a hectic 7-years’ negotiation under the General Agreement on Tariffs & Trade, also known as the Uruguay Round. This concluded in 1995 as a decision of the 124 members of the GATT community.
The GATT was founded in 1948 as an arrangement to govern trade relations between member countries. Of the 23 founding members, India is one. She is also a founding member of the WTO.
The new GATT, 1994 is a much larger agreement covering many new areas, other than tariffs alone, for which agreements have been also entered into. Two new areas to the GATT discipline are agriculture, and textiles and clothing, both affecting consumers directly. Three issues entirely new to the GATT discipline are Trade Related aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs), Trade Related Investment Measures (TRIMs) and the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). All these also have a direct bearing on consumers and their welfare. TRIPs in particular has been a subject of much controversy, because of the provision of patents which has the potential of creating monopolies on consumer goods like pharmaceuticals, and on agricultural goods like seeds and fertilizers. Exploitation by such monopolistic or oligopolistic market structures can increase the cost of production, and thus affect consumer welfare directly.
The WTO agreements have had both good and bad effects on people of India. In some cases opportunities have increased leading to growth and thus creating more jobs, while in some cases it has had adverse effects. However the economy as a whole has gained.
In the WTO agreement there is a provision to review the progress at the Ministerial level every two years. The first review meeting was held in Singapore in December 1996, which threw up several ‘new’ issues for being examined by the members, and deliberated whether there is a need to incorporate them into the WTO acquis: investment policy, competition policy, transparency in government procurement and trade facilitation. However a plurilateral agreement on Information Technology Products was launched, to which India is also a party.
The second ministerial meeting was held at Geneva in May 1998 to coincide with the golden jubilee of the multilateral trading system, which did not throw up any new issue, except an understanding on studying e-commerce while agreeing to not levy any new taxes on it. The third ministerial meeting was held in Seattle though nothing was concluded in it.
In the recently held fourth Ministerial meeting in Doha, India secured major gains in several areas of the hard fought agenda. A dispassionate analysis of the Ministerial Declaration from the perspective of India's basic trade interests reveals that India bargained hard on agriculture, implementation, TRIPs and trade & transfer of technology among other areas and got a fair amount of success. However we have to keep in mind that environment is now in the agenda and the issue of labour standards is also not dead as understood by some. On the other hand we will have to gear up to tackle the Singapore issue as well, in future.
Having said that CUTS feel that India will have to do some major restructuring in current trade policy formulation process, as it is an integral component of the overall economic policy of any government. The government will have to make the system more professional, by bringing in trade experts rather than depending on transferable civil servants.
CUTS has prepared the following agenda for India to be pursued both at international as well as domestic level. The international agenda talks about what India should do at the international forums, in the best interest of its people in the context of the WTO. There is a domestic agenda too, which requires our Government to take note of, in implementing our commitments under the WTO as also to make the best out of it. We have to attend this huge domestic agenda before we can reap any perceived gains that future negotiations can throw up.
CUTS also wants to attract attention of the members of the advisory committee towards para. 10 of the Doha Declaration, wherein we have agreed to ensure more effective and prompt dissemination of information related to WTO, and to improve dialogue with the public. We also agreed to promote a better public understanding about the WTO and to communicate the benefits of a liberal, rule bases multilateral trading system. |
1. Strategic IssuesInternational AgendaDomestic Agenda |
2. Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights
• The inclusion of intellectual property rights (IPRs) in the GATT is about restricting trade and guaranteeing profits for big business from developed countries at the cost of consumers. • TRIPs goes against the principle of trade liberalisation as it facilitates the use of ‘limited monopolies’. Hence an agreement that conflicts with the objectives of the WTO needs to be revised. • The introduction of product patents may imply significant social costs due to the higher prices charged for patented products, especially pharmaceutical and agro-based goods. • The Declaration on TRIPS and Public Health at Doha Ministerial was a significant positive result for India. The Declaration reaffirms the primacy of public health and recognises the concern about the effect of intellectual property protection on the price of medicines.
International Agenda
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3. Trade in Services
• The inclusion of services in the multilateral trade negotiations has provided an opportunity for equitable growth, and would help consumers to gain access to basic services like telecommunications, insurance etc at lower prices. • General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS), which provides a window for developing countries to export their skilled and unskilled labour is a question that needs to be answered. This will increase the overall income levels and will also have its positive spillover for other sectors. It would make the global services trade equitable and efficient; from sustainability as well as consumer satisfaction points of view. • New negotiations on progressive liberalisation of services trade (to increase the general level of specific commitments) will start from January 1, 2000. • Indian consumers will benefit from progressive liberalisation of services sectors, i.e. through enhancement of domestic competition.
International Agenda
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4. Trade and Environment
International Agenda
Domestic Agenda
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5. Trade and Competition PolicyInternational AgendaDomestic Agenda |
6. Trade and Investment PolicyInternational AgendaDomestic Agenda |
7. Trade in Textiles and Clothing
• ‘Backloading’ of commitments made by the importing countries (under the Agreement on Textiles and Clothing) has a negative impact on the employment and income levels of labour in the textiles and clothing sector as well as on reforms of the Indian textiles and clothing sector. • The phase-out of import quotas in rich countries under the Agreement on Textiles and Clothing will be completed in 2004 This protectionism adversely affects the interest of consumers in the North. • Lack of structural reforms in this sector also affects price reforms, which hurts Indian consumers as well as Northern consumers.
International AgendaDomestic Agenda
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8. Trade in AgricultureInternational AgendaDomestic Agenda
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