Eighth China Round Table Underlines
Contributions of Accessions to WTO Reform
The Eighth China Round Table on WTO Accessions, hosted in
Moscow by the Russian Government on 4-5 December, focused on how WTO accessions
can contribute to the ongoing discussion on WTO reform. Under the theme
“Accessions and WTO Reform: on the Road to MC12”, this year’s Round Table also
underlined the implications of regional integration for accession negotiations
and the multilateral trading system. The Round Table provided a platform for
experience-sharing in the run-up to the 12th Ministerial Conference to be held
in Nur-sultan, Kazakhstan, in June 2020.
The
event was opened on 4 December by WTO Deputy Director-General Alan Wolff,
Russia's Minister of Economic Development Maxim Oreshkin
and China's Permanent Representative to the WTO Ambassador Zhang Xiangchen. Over 100 representatives of accession candidates
and WTO members attended the meeting as well as chairs of WTO accession working
parties, representatives of international organizations, and various
stakeholders from the host country, including government officials, academia
and experts from partner institutions.
In
his welcoming remarks, Mr Oreshkin
underlined the need to maintain an effectively functioning multilateral trading
system and to further develop the WTO, both in terms of its geographical
coverage and substance. He expressed hope that acceding governments will join
the WTO family and help make it more resilient and effective. “For Russia, it
is of utmost importance to promote fruitful cooperation with all partners in
the Organization,” he said. “The fundamental aim is to jointly make the
multilateral trading system as embodied in the WTO more responsive to the
evolving needs and challenges of the 21st century global economy”. His full
speech is available here.
DDG
Wolff thanked the Russian Federation for hosting the Round Table. He also
expressed gratitude to China for the renewal of the China Programme
earlier in the year. Emphasizing the importance for the WTO to adapt and stay
relevant, DDG Wolff noted that WTO accessions could “provide a source of
inspiration and valuable lessons that would help to develop a systemic response”.He added that many acceding governments were
actively engaged in parallel negotiations to pursue deeper integration at the
regional level, which could raise “issues of coherence in rules negotiations
and of sequencing in market access negotiations”. His full speech is available here.
Ambassador
Zhang emphasized China's continued support for the accessions of least
developed countries (LDCs) to the WTO. The WTO “can help acceding countries,
especially LDCs, better integrate into the multilateral trading system, and
further grow their domestic economy”. He emphasized China’s support for
fostering necessary WTO reform, with a view to enhancing the organization's
effectiveness and authority and stressed the need for pragmatic approaches as
the WTO prepares for MC12, highlighting the importance of advancing discussions
on investment facilitation for development, “one of the few positive agenda
items with relatively promising prospects”. His full speech is available here.
The China Round Table, as
one of the five pillars of the China Programme, has
served as a platform for stakeholders' dialogue on WTO accessions since 2012.
The Round Table aims to sustain discussions on the integration of new members
into the multilateral trading system. To date, eight Round Tables have been
hosted in three continents.