In Davos, DG Okonjo-Iweala Calls for Global
Solidarity in Responding to Crises
·
World
leaders created a set of institutions after the Second World War based on the idea
of solidifying international interdependence and solidarity
·
Developed
countries had promised that, to tackle climate change, there would be US$ 100 billion
per year to help poor countries meet their costs. That hasn't been done
At the World Economic Forum in Davos, Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala urged government
and business leaders to come together through multilateral institutions such as
the WTO to address the multiple crises facing the global economy and world trade.
In a gathering overshadowed by the Ukraine conflict and its
impact on global food supplies, the Director-General met with heads of state, prime
ministers, senior officials, corporate heads, academics, journalists and others
during her Davos stay, which wrapped up on 26 May.
The DG also met with trade ministers in attendance on 25 May
to brief them on preparations for the organization's 12th Ministerial Conference
(MC12) on 12-15 June and to review progress in the negotiations on several key issues
to be addressed at MC12.
In her interventions, the DG underlined the important role
that the WTO can play in helping to tackle pressing issues such as growing food
insecurity, the COVID-19 pandemic, climate change, supply chain disruptions and
dwindling fisheries resources.
At a Forum session focusing on financing resilient economies,
the DG said that a theme common to all the major crises facing the world today is
that of the global commons, and the fact that no single country can resolve these
challenges on its own.
“You cannot have resilience unless you have global solidarity,”
she told the Forum participants. “It's survival together, it's supporting each other, it's financing
together, it's recognizing that my resilience cannot happen unless your resilience
also happens.”
The DG reminded participants that world leaders created a
set of institutions after the Second World War based on the idea of solidifying
international interdependence and solidarity and using these institutions to help
solve problems of the global commons.
“We have the institutions, we just have not reformed them
to be able to deal with these issues, and my institution, the WTO, is one that I
think needs to be made fit for purpose,” she declared.
The Director-General also participated in a discussion on
challenges to trade with European Union Trade Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis and
Indian Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal.
During this discussion, the DG noted that at MC12, WTO members
will be addressing many crisis issues. These will include the WTO's response to
the pandemic, both in terms of addressing trade and health measures, and of a waiver
to WTO intellectual property rules for vaccine production; concluding more than
two decades of negotiations on an agreement to eliminate harmful fisheries subsidies;
setting the path for future work on agricultural reform; and launching the process
for discussions on WTO reform.
Members will also seek to address food security fears by looking
at what steps can be taken to facilitate trade's central role in ensuring that food
is available to those in need, while also addressing the concerns of producers regarding
the need to ensure sufficient domestic supply.
“It's very difficult to agree to things multilaterally, and
that has been plaguing the WTO,” she acknowledged. “We shouldn't make light of it.
That's why we need to find ways forward to agree on some things to show that the
organisation can function.”
The DG also underlined the urgent need to address global warming
and its impacts during a Forum discussion on climate change. She said that climate
change should not be sidelined as the world grapples with other immediate challenges.
“The consequences of inaction are in front of us every day,
on every continent, in so many countries,” she said. “It's true that we're in a
world of simultaneous crises, climate change, food, the pandemic, international
security, but I don't think we can prioritize one over the other because they're
all linked, they're all crises of the global commons.”
An effective response, however, requires significant financial
commitments, something many poorer countries lack as they grapple with food shortages
and the pandemic.
“Developed countries had promised that, to tackle climate
change, there would be US$ 100 billion per year to help poor countries meet their
costs. That hasn't been done,” she said in reference to the commitment made at the
2009 United Nations climate summit in Copenhagen. “There are no excuses on this.”
The DG reiterated her call for a global carbon pricing mechanism
involving developing countries to assuage fears of “green protectionism” and said
the WTO would be the proper forum for such discussions given its broad and diverse
membership. The WTO is already collaborating
with the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development to explore
such an initiative, she noted.