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CA Topic

The US Push to Redefine the WTO

Brief Context

Context The US recently articulated its vision for reforming the World Trade Organization (WTO). Major Highlights of the US Suggested Reforms Decision-Making (Plurilateralism): The US argues consensus among 166 members is unrealistic for new trade rules. It supports plurilateral agreements among willing members as the future of WTO rule-making.

Source Content

Syllabus: GS2/IR/GS3/Economy

Context

  • The US recently articulated its vision for reforming the World Trade Organization (WTO)

Major Highlights of the US Suggested Reforms

  • Decision-Making (Plurilateralism): The US argues consensus among 166 members is unrealistic for new trade rules.
    • It supports plurilateral agreements among willing members as the future of WTO rule-making.
    • Plurilateral describes agreements, or initiatives involving a limited group of countries that share specific interests, often focusing on particular sectors or issues, offering a flexible way to advance cooperation.
  • Special & Differential Treatment (S&DT): The US wants S&DT largely restricted to least developed countries.
    • It advocates uniform rules for all other members regardless of development gaps.
    • It demands strict justification for any deviation from common obligations.
  • Level Playing Field: US highlights trade distortions from non-market policies and practices.
    • Links erosion of trust in WTO to overcapacity and state intervention.
    • It proposes transparency and stricter notification compliance as key remedies.
  • Most-Favoured-Nation (MFN) Principle: US questions MFN’s relevance in an era of divergent economic systems. It argues MFN enforces one-size-fits-all liberalisation.
    • It supports wider departures to allow differentiated trade relationships.
    • MFN principle requires member countries to treat all trade partners equally by extending the same trade benefits (e.g., reduced tariffs or market access) to all signatories.
  • Role of WTO Secretariat: The US strongly criticises the role of the WTO Secretariat, which it views as fundamentally administrative rather than substantive.
    • It accuses the Secretariat of overstepping its mandate by expanding its monitoring and commentary on members’ trade measures, and undertaking research projects not authorised by members. 

Concerns with Reforms

  • MFN Principle: India should strongly oppose dilution of MFN principle.
    • MFN ensures predictability and protects weaker trading nations.
    • Its erosion would entrench power-based trade relations.
  • Trade Imbalances: The concern of Trade imbalances requires attention but it should not dominate trade policy. Structural and macroeconomic factors must be acknowledged.
    • WTO should not be reduced to a balance-of-trade enforcement forum.
  • Economic Security: Economic security concerns should be addressed multilaterally within the WTO.
    • Safeguards Agreement could be expanded to include strategic vulnerabilities.
  • S&DT Reform: Limiting S&DT only to LDCs is excessively rigid. A differentiation approach based on income levels offers a balanced approach.

Source: BL