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High-level Dialogue on Special and Differential
Treatment
GLOBAL PROGRAMME ONLINE NEWS,
GENEVA, 8 May 2003
Participants at a high-level
seminar on how provisions for Special and Differential Treatment (S&D)
in the Doha Round could benefit development, called for more flexibility
for developing countries.
Convened jointly with the International Centre for Trade and
Development the meeting brought together senior trade figures in
national Governments, trade negotiators in Geneva and representatives of
civil society to flesh out opportunities ahead of the Cancun Ministerial
summit. The dialogue also featured presentations and research from
prominent trade specialists Professor Ajit Singh and Dr. Christopher
Stevens.
During the event participants agreed that S&D was a
tool for development, compensating to some extent for the difficulties
faced by poorer countries in the multilateral trading system. The link was
also made between Special and Differential Treatment and preserving
domestic policy space; a crucial issue since it was agreed that furthering
trade liberalization needed to be complemented by appropriate policies if
development were to occur successfully.
A range of views were
heard on whether the asymmetries that would be promulgated by S&D
might harm the WTO. On the one hand, a multi-speed system was seen as a
threat to multilateral trade. On the other hand, most agreed that
flexibility was the only option for low-income countries to become
efficiently engaged with the WTO and for the Doha Development Round to
live up to its name.
It was agreed that a further dialogue be held
to examine Special and Differential Treatment in the context of
supply-side reforms being undertaken as part of their trade liberalization
by many developing countries.
For more information
please visit the the
dialogue page at ICTSD
Or email werner.corrales-leal@unctad.org
Click here to go to the main news
page.
© United Nations 2001
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