“Decisions made at the WTO will matter” for Economic
Recovery from COVID-19 Crisis, says DG Azevêdo
Addressing heads of WTO member delegations for
the last time as Chair of the Trade Negotiations Committee, Director-General
Roberto Azevêdo emphasized that “keeping markets
broadly open to trade” would help build “a post-COVID economic recovery that is
strong, sustainable and inclusive”. He told the 20 July meeting that members’
policy choices, including at the WTO, would play an important role in laying
the groundwork for a return to growth and job creation.
In his remarks, the Director-General said that the pandemic’s
growing economic and social impact would shape the context for the WTO’s work
for the foreseeable future. “International cooperation on trade will be
critical to help all countries build back better,” he said.
DG Azevêdo emphasized that the year
ahead would be a defining one for the WTO. The Twelfth Ministerial Conference
(MC12), now postponed to 2021, would be a key milestone for members’ efforts.
“As originally scheduled for this past June, MC12 would already
have marked a critical juncture for the organization. Multilateral agreements
on fisheries subsidies and agriculture, together with advances in the joint
statement initiatives, would have sent a powerful signal that the WTO could
continue to provide certainty and predictability for global trade for the next
25 years. Failure to agree, meanwhile, would have called all of this into
question.
"Now, MC12 will have to do this and more. It will mark a key
decision point for the direction of the post-COVID global economy. Will we
react to the ongoing shocks with renewed cooperation, leading to shared growth
and resilience? Or will we move further on the path towards costly fragmentation?
Your work in the months ahead, including in this body, will help provide the
answer.”
To maximize their prospects for success at the next Ministerial
Conference, the outgoing Director-General urged members to swiftly agree on his
successor, and then “work with her or him to chart a course for MC12 and
beyond”.
The existing WTO rulebook continues to provide “a vital anchor of
predictability and certainty in the global economy,” DG Azevêdo
said. Nevertheless, like all international organizations, the WTO must adapt to
changing economic and geopolitical circumstances. “Reform is a permanent task
for the WTO – but it is a process that will be built by specific negotiated
decisions,” he said.
“The past seven years have taught us that multilateral agreements
are possible when the political will is there, and when you are pragmatic about
the issues to tackle, open to creative approaches and compromise, and inclusive
towards the voices of all members,” the Director-General concluded. “These
lessons will be useful as you move forward.”