WTO Claims 163 Countries Agree to Make Changes in Rules Governing
Trade Dispute Resolution
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New Rules for Appellate Body Appointment Drafted by
WTO General Council
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Decision to be taken in 9 Dec Meeting to Get
Appellate Body working again as last but One Member Retires on 11 Dec
The decision is seen as a move to placate the US to
keep the Appellate Body afloat
In an unusual development on Friday, 163 countries
agreed to make comprehensive changes to the rules governing the resolution of
trade disputes merely to placate one member — the US — for keeping the
Appellate Body afloat, trade envoys said.
The Appellate Body, which is the highest
adjudicating court for global trade disputes will become dysfunctional on
December 11 when it will be reduced to one member from the mandatory minimum of
three members. The US has blocked the selection process for filling six
vacancies at the AB for the past two years.
To appease the US, a draft General Council decision
with comprehensive changes in the rules governing dispute settlement
understanding was finalised on Friday. The draft
decision makes several amendments to the rules in the DSU as per the US’
demands.
At the informal meeting of trade envoys on Friday,
the chair for the dispute settlement body Ambassador David Walker presented the
draft GC decision that states unambiguously, as per the US’ demand, that “the
Appellate Body has, in some respects, not been functioning as intended under
the Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes (the
DSU)”.
The three-page restricted draft decision, if
approved at the upcoming GC meeting on December 9, can be used by the US to
claim that the WTO members have finally agreed to its long-stated complaint
that the AB has failed to adhere to the DSU provisions in some trade disputes,
said a trade envoy, who asked not to be quoted.
Central
importance
The draft decision emphasises
that “the central importance of a properly functioning dispute settlement
system in the rules-based multilateral trading system, which serves to preserve
the rights and obligations of members under the WTO Agreement and ensures that
rules are enforceable.”
More important, it contains several amendments as
per the US demands on what ought to be “transitional rules for outgoing Appellate
Body members”, “the 90-day rule for completing the AB reports” (including
positive consensus that any member to the dispute can decide whether to go
ahead or not), “scope of appeal”, “advisor opinions”, “precedent”, “overreach”
and “regular dialogue between the DSB and the Appellate Body.”
The US managed to secure sweeping changes in the
functioning of the Appellate Body as per its demands for free and without
paying any price to other 163 countries, said a trade envoy.
Yet, there is no guarantee that the US would
approve the draft GC decision when it comes up at the GC meeting as Washington
insists that there has to be a discussion as to how the Appellate Body
committed these mistakes from the beginning, said a trade envoy from an industrialised country.
Filling up
vacancies
The US is not ready to lift its blockage for
launching the selection process for filling the six vacancies at the AB despite
securing the substantial changes in the AB’s functioning, the envoy suggested.
The AB will become dysfunctional on December 11
when it would be reduced to one AB member, who will retire in November 2020.
117 countries had appealed to the US last week to lift the blockage for
launching the selection process for filling the six vacancies.
Last week, the WTO Director-General worked out an
arrangement that would limit the expenses for the three AB members at CHF
100,000 for adjudicating a trade dispute concerning plain package tobacco
dispute between The Dominican Republic and Honduras on the one side, and
Australia on the other.
However, members disapproved the Director-General’s
arrangement on grounds that it would amount to “differential” and
“discriminatory” treatment.