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Shouting into the Wind: Examining the Structural Weakness of Developing Countries in the Global Trading Order Michael Smith Department of Political Science, Columbia University mgs2131@columbia.edu IPES Conference, November 15, 2008
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LDCs and the WTO: Newfound Voice Seattle Ministerial, 1999: Dozens of unmet LDC demands leads to mass exodus Doha: Well organized and coherent expression of LDC interest in negotiations
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Research Question Is this new voice indicative of a greater power in the GATT/WTO regime?
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LDCs and the WTO: Newfound Power? Democratization leads to a new interest in free trade (Milner and Kubota)
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LDCs and the WTO: Newfound Power? Democratization leads to a new interest in free trade (Milner and Kubota) Efficiency rationale: International regimes allow states to overcome domestic barriers to free trade (neoliberal institutionalists)
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LDCs and the WTO: Newfound Power? RoundDates Number of Member Countries Geneva194723 Annecy194933 Torquay195034 Geneva195622 Dillon196145 Kennedy1962-748 Tokyo1973-999 Uruguay1981-94117 Doha2001-pres.147
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LDCs and the WTO: Newfound Power? Democratization leads to a new interest in free trade (Milner and Kubota) Efficiency rationale: International regimes allow states to overcome domestic barriers to free trade (neoliberal institutionalists) New coalitional bargaining strategies allow LDCs to effectively press their demands in WTO negotiations (Narlikar and Tussie)
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But… New coalitional bargaining strategies made possible by institutional changes in GATT/WTO that allow for trade-related coalitions
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But… New coalitional bargaining strategies made possible by institutional changes in GATT/WTO that allow for trade-related coalitions If structural change in the GATT/WTO empowered the global south, why did this structural change occur in the first place?
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But… New coalitional bargaining strategies made possible by institutional changes in GATT/WTO that allow for trade-related coalitions If structural change in the GATT/WTO empowered the global south, why did this structural change occur in the first place? Analysis of evolving GATT/WTO regime requires a role for power
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But… New coalitional bargaining strategies made possible by institutional changes in GATT/WTO that allow for trade-related coalitions If structural change in the GATT/WTO empowered the global south, why did this structural change occur in the first place? Analysis of evolving GATT/WTO regime requires a role for power Expression of voice by developing countries doesn’t correspond theoretically or empirically to increased power
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Bringing Power Back In Gruber’s ‘go-it-alone’ power: dominant powers seeking efficiency gains from international cooperation can change status quo in system through creation of self-serving agreements and compel other states to join
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Bringing Power Back In Gruber’s ‘go-it-alone’ power: dominant powers seeking efficiency gains from international cooperation can change status quo in system through creation of self-serving agreements and compel other states to join Extended to GATT/WTO example: core coalition of dominant cooperating states can exercise structural power. A kind of ‘go-it- together’ power
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Bringing Power Back In Gruber’s ‘go-it-alone’ power: dominant powers seeking efficiency gains from international cooperation can change status quo in system through creation of self-serving agreements and compel other states to join Extended to GATT/WTO example: core coalition of dominant cooperating states can exercise structural power. A kind of ‘go-it- together’ power When agreement is reached between dominant powers, developing countries feel compelled to join
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Expressions of Power Structural: Draws in Outliers
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Expressions of Power Structural: Draws in Outliers Rule Setting: Defining Institutions
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Expressions of Power Structural: Draws in Outliers Rule Setting: Defining Institutions Agenda Setting: Content of Votes and Declarations
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Expressions of Power Structural: Draws in Outliers Rule Setting: Defining Institutions Agenda Setting: Content of Votes and Declarations Exit: But Fruitless
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Hypotheses: When Agreement? Core Coalition? Structural Power Rule Setting Power Agenda-Setting PowerAgreement Yes No Yes (though ineffectual) No
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Expectations Small-n agreements driven by efficiency concerns
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Expectations Small-n agreements driven by efficiency concerns For an agreement to grow it must be between states with large structural power
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Expectations Small-n agreements driven by efficiency concerns For an agreement to grow it must be between states with large structural power Where a core coalition exists, GATT/WTO rules will be changed as needed
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Expectations Small-n agreements driven by efficiency concerns For an agreement to grow it must be between states with large structural power Where a core coalition exists, GATT/WTO rules will be changed as needed Agenda setting may coexist with any form of coalition but only leads to agreement when forwarded by core coalition
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Evidence GATT/WTO negotiations considered as four cases: 1. Havana to the Kennedy Round 2. Tokyo Round 3. Uruguay Round 4. Doha Development Round
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Havana to Kennedy GATT founded as UK-US-France coalition More development-friendly ITO rejected Substantive agreements represent northern interest: agriculture kept off the table
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Tokyo Round US/EC division over agricultural liberalization stalls progress until US concedes agricultural products as special goods Developing world makes fails to gain desired removal of safeguards proposal despite agreement with US: EC achieves maintenance of selective safeguards Global South largely avoids signing agreements; agitate in alternative but ineffective UNCTAD
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Uruguay Round Developing countries compelled to return to negotiations despite prior exit US/EC dispute over agriculture stall negotiations; resolved when US threat of retaliatory tariffs compels EC to accede New institutional framework of WTO meets blueprint of Dunkel Draft – a US and EC drafted document Passage of round as single undertaking: for South, take it or leave it
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Doha Development Round Seattle 1999: Enduring US-EU-Japan disagreements over accelerating agricultural liberalization in addition to North/South arguments over discussing Uruguay’s implementation. Walkout. Cancun : G-22 forms, fight for lowered agricultural subsidies and Northern market access. Maintain coherence until re-introduction of Singapore issues forces an impasse; again, walkout. Geneva July 2008: Inclusion of China, India and Brazil in writing draft text. Breakdown over efforts by China and India to protect farmers
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Conclusions and Questions Voice does not mean power: in trade rounds, the existence of a core coalition is required for progress. How do changes in the international economy affect this? Does inclusion of China, India and Brazil in Green Room talks indicate a change in the core coalition?
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