AN INCREASING DEMAND FOR TRANSPARENCY?
Information and negotiation technologies for preferential trade agreements |
by Félix Peña
September 2010
English translation: Isabel Romero Carranza
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There is a growing demand for greater transparency
in the negotiations of preferential trade agreements. This demand is driven
by the fact that the development of information technologies will enable
access in real time to the information related to the negotiations of
such agreements. The tendency towards secrecy and the strong reserve that
characterized these negotiations for a long time is increasingly being
perceived by those who may be affected by their results as something obsolete
and of medieval times. The timely access to relevant information is considered
today as a right of the citizenship and of its representative organizations.
Timely information is important in the negotiation
of preferential trade agreements because it can have an impact on investment
decisions, ways of life and modes of production, sources of labor and
the quality of consumption and of the environment, as well as in the scope
of action to devise and implement public policies referred to the economic
development of a country or a group of countries. A preferential trade
agreement generates costs and benefits throughout time and translates
into ground rules that determine who will be the winners and the losers
among and within the involved countries.
Additionally, the issue of transparency in the negotiation
of preferential trade agreements has gained currency as a result of a
recent report on the prospective free trade agreement between India and
the European Union (EU). This is an issue that will be necessary to keep
in mind in the case of the negotiations between Mercosur and the EU. Other
precedent that points to the current relevance of this issue is the fact
that the texts of the agreements finalized last May between the EU and
Colombia, Peru and the Central American countries have yet to be published.
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The development of information technologies is generating a growing demand
for greater transparency in international trade negotiations and, most
particularly, in those negotiations that result in different modalities
of preferential trade agreements, especially those foreseen by article
XXIV of the GATT.
The tendency towards secrecy or the strong reserve that characterized
for a long time such negotiations is increasingly perceived by all those
who may be affected by their results as something obsolete belonging to
medieval times.
The reason for this is simple. Today it is technologically possible to
have access in real time to the documentation and texts that feed and
results of a negotiating process. Web pages have become a powerful instrument
for the timely dissemination of relevant information. Those who negotiate
preferential trade agreements have no more excuses left to keep the public
uninformed about the corresponding information, whether a negotiation
advances or is concluded. The reasons for not providing this information
would need to be very strong indeed and, in any case, exceptional. At
least this seems to be the expectation in many of the organizations of
the civil society.
Additionally, the quality of a Web page has become one of the most widespread
criteria currently used to evaluate the efficiency of all kinds of institutions
- be it public or private - and which has the most impact on the image
of businesses that offer their goods and services to the world. This is
valid as well in the case of the Web pages of government offices responsible
for the negotiation of preferential trade agreements and of the respective
international institutional ambits.
For this reason, the access to information is increasingly being recognized
as a right of the citizenship and of its organizations. This becomes relevant
in the negotiation of preferential trade agreements because what is negotiated
can have an impact on investment decisions, ways of life, modes of production,
sources of labor, and on the quality of consumption and of the environment,
as well as in the scope of action to devise and implement public policies
for the economic development of a country or group of countries.
This is also so due to the fact that a preferential trade agreement,
resulting from a concrete negotiation, generates costs and benefits throughout
time and translates into ground rules that determine who become the winners
and the losers among and within the involved countries. It may even have
an impact on the shift of competitive advantages - for example because
of its effects on the relative conditions for the access of goods and
services of the involved markets - for businesses from other countries
that are not participating in a preferential trade negotiation but that
are members of the World Trade Organization (WTO).
The issue of transparency in the negotiation of a preferential trade
agreement has gained currency as a result of a recent report - mentioned
bellow - about an eventual free trade agreement between India and the
European Union.
As is well known, since 2001 India and the European Union (EU) have been
negotiating a Free Trade Agreement (for more information go to http://ec.europa.eu/).
The objective would be to sign it promptly, possibly in 2011. Some substantial
progress in the negotiations, even its conclusion, will expectedly be
announced next December at a bilateral Summit. This will not be an easy
task since there have been significant differences in relation to important
issues, such as those related with intellectual property, sustainable
development and the access to the EU for Indian workers, among others.
(On the negotiations between India and the EU see the book by Khorama,
Perdikis, Yeung and Kerr, mentioned as Recommended Reading in the May
2010 edition of this newsletter).
This constitutes a relevant trade negotiation due to the size of the
two added markets (1,500 million inhabitants which represents one fifth
of the world's population) and because of the prominence that both countries
have in the global economy. This relevance is accentuated by the fact
that India is increasingly being perceived as one of the great emerging
economies, that together with Brazil, China and Russia form part of the
much publicized BRIC group.
However, it has also become relevant due to the fact that they are being
carried out at the same time as the negotiations between Mercosur and
the EU (on these negotiations refer to the April, May, June and July editions
of this newsletter). Even though they are being developed along separate
trails, there are probably certain communicating vessels between both
negotiating tables. Each will observe attentively - or at least it would
be advisable that they did so - the contents that are intended to be included
in both agreements and, in particular, how the most sensitive issues in
terms of access to markets and the respective regulating frameworks are
being dealt with. They will be particularly alert to any flexibilities
that are achieved or that will need to be accepted. The instruments, through
which these will materialize, especially those of variable geometry and
multi speed, are becoming increasingly relevant for the legal engineering
of the respective preferential agreement. The room for maneuver provided
by WTO rules is broad and some precedents can be found in similar agreements,
for example, in those that were also negotiated by the European Union.
Another issue exposed in a report by Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO,
published at the beginning of this month, also deserves our attention
(see the reference to this report in the Recommended Reading section at
the end of this newsletter). It presents some interesting implications
of the key issue reflected by the title "How big business is driving
the EU-India free trade negotiations". Among these, the main concern
is that referred to the transparency of the negotiating process. Or, more
precisely, of what the report considers a lack of transparency. On this
regard it mentions the preoccupation expressed by different organizations
of the civil society -especially in Europe - regarding the fact that a
negotiation that could have negative effects on Indian industry, employment
and lifestyle, on the access to services and health care, and that could
swipe valuable instruments for the country's development and cohesion
policies, is being undertaken with such low visibility. The report presents
evidence of the lack of access that the public and its organizations,
and even politicians and legislators, have to the texts of the terms that
are being negotiated. They corroborate that the precise information on
what is being negotiated has not been published on any Web site and point
at the paradox that this situation entails, given that this is a negotiation
between two great democracies.
The issue of transparency and of the access to the texts of the terms
that are being discussed is something that should also be kept in mind
in the case of the negotiations between Mercosur and the EU, especially
as from the next meeting of the Bi-regional Negotiations Committee that
will take place in Brussels on the week of October 11th. It is expected
that this meeting produces relevant information on the position of both
parties.
The other precedent that helps understand the relevance of the issue
at hand is that, until now, the texts of the association agreements that
the EU concluded last May with Colombia, Peru and the Central American
countries have yet to be published. (For an analysis of a draft agreement
and a tentative text see http://www.bilaterals.org/,
http://www.tuc.org.uk/,
or click
here and http://www.tuc.org.uk/
or click
here). The reason that has been given for this is that the texts need
to be translated, in the case of the EU from English to other twenty-three
official languages, and that this task takes time. However, as was mentioned
before, the fact that these texts are not available on any official Web
page - at least as they were initiated - is not a minor issue, especially
if we consider that these types of negotiations result in winners and
losers. The lack of timely access to relevant information needed to defend
its interests could mean that businesses, producers, consumers, workers
and different social sectors, especially the most vulnerable ones, are
left on the side of the losers.
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Recommended Reading:
- ALOP, "El Mercosur ciudadano. Retos para una nueva institucionalidad",
Asociación Latinoamericana de Organizaciones de Promoción
al Desarrollo (ALOP), CLAEH - CCU, Montevideo, Mayo 2009, en http://www.iadb.org/
or click
here or see http://www.alop.or.cr/
or click
here.
- ALOP, "La negociación del Acuerdo de Asociación
entre Centroamérica y la Unión Europea: Balance y Alternativas",
Asociación Latinoamericana de Promoción al Desarrollo
(ALOP) - Iniciativa Mesoamericana CID, México, Abril de 2010,
en http://www.alop.or.cr/.
- Archivos del Presente, "Revista Latinoamericana de Temas Internacionales",
Año 14, Nº 52, Buenos Aires 2010.
- Bizzozero Revelez, Lincoln, "Las relaciones Unión Europea
- Mercosur. ¿Porqué debería cambiarse el formato
de negociaciones para concertar un Acuerdo de Cooperación Estratégico?,
Consejo Uruguayo para las Relaciones Internacionales, Estudios del CURI,
Estudio nº 4/10, Montevideo, 14 de julio de 2010, en http://www.curi.org.uy/
or click
here.
- Claessens, Stijn; Evenett, Simon; Hoekman, Bernard (editors), "Rebalancing
the Global Economy: A Primer for Policymaking", Centre for Economic
Policy Research (CEPR), A VoxEu.org Publication, London 2010, en http://www.voxeu.org/
or click
here.
- Eberhardt, Pia; Kumar, Dharmendra, "Trade Invaders: How big business
is driving the EU-India free trade negotiations", Corporate Europe
Observatory (CEO) - India FDI Watch, Brussels-New Delhi, September 2010,
en http://www.corporateeurope.org/.
- Gamberoni, Elisa; Newfarmer, Richard, "From Market Access to
Accessing the Market: Aid for Trade and Program of the World Bank",
ICTSD, Trade Negotiations Insights, Issue 09/Volum 8, Geneva, November
2009, en http://www.ictsd.net/news/tni.
- Gants, David, "Regional Trade Agreements. Law, Policy and Practice",
Carolina Academic Press, Durham, North Carolina 2009.
- Hoekman, Bernard; Wilson, John S., "Aid for Trade: An Action
Agenda Looking Forward", The World Bank, Economic Premise, Number
25, Washington, August 2010, en http://siteresources.worldbank.org/
or click
here.
- Horn, Henrik; Mavroidis, Petros C.; Sapir, André, "Beyond
the WTO? An anatomy of EU and US preferential trade agreements",
Bruegel Blueprint Series, Volume VII, Brussels 2009, en http://aei.pitt.edu/
or click
here.
- Kruger, Paul; Denner, Willemien; Cronje, JB, "Comparing safeguard
measures in regional and bilateral agreements", International Centre
for Trade and Sustainable Development (ICTSD), Issue Paper nº 22,
Geneva 2009, en http://ictsd.org/
or click
here.
- Lugones, Gustavo; Flores, Jorge (compiladores), "Intérpretes
e interpretaciones de la Argentina en el Bicentenario", Editorial
Universidad Nacional de Quilmes, Bernal 2010.
- Macmillan, Kathleen E.; Grady, Patrick, "A New Prescription:
Can the BC-Alberta TILMA Resuscitate Internal Trade in Canada?, C.D.Howe
Institute Backgrounder, Nº 106, Ottawa, October 2007, en http://www.cdhowe.org/
or click
here.
- Maurer, Andreas; Degain, Christophe, "Globalization and trade
flows: what you see is not what you get!", World Trade Organization,
Economic Research and Statistics Division, Staff Working Paper ERSD
- 2010-12, Geneva, June 2010, en http://www.wto.org/
or click
here.
- Motta Vega, Pedro da, "Trading Food. Food Security Policies in
Latin America, Southeas Asia and Southern Africa and Their Implications
for Trade and Regional Integration", Trade Knowledge Network (TKN)
- International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD), Winnipeg,
Manitoba, August 2010, en http://www.tradeknowledgenetwork.net/
or click
here.
- Resico, Marcelo F., "La Estructura de una Economía Humana.
Reflexiones en cuanto a la actualidad del pensamiento de W.Röpke",
Educa, Buenos Aires 2008.
- Vasconcelos, Alvaro de (director), "Quelle Défense Européenne
en 2020?, Union Européenne Institut d'Études de Sécurité,
Paris, Mars 2010, en http://www.iss.europa.eu/
or click
here.
- Vasconcelos, Alvaro de (editor), "A strategy for EU foreign policy",
European Union Institute for Security Studies, Report N° 7, Paris,
June 2010, en http://www.iss.europa.eu/
or click
here.
- Woolcock, Stephen, "European Union policy towards Free Trade
Agreements", European Centre for International Political Economy
(ECIPE), ECIPE Working Paper - Nº 03/2007, Brussels 2007, en http://www.ecipe.org/
or click
here.
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Félix Peña Director
of the Institute of International Trade at the ICBC Foundation. Director
of the Masters Degree in International Trade Relations at Tres de Febrero
National University (UNTREF). Member of the Executive Committee of the
Argentine Council for International Relations (CARI). Member of the Evian
Group Brains Trust. More
information.
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