New WTO Working Group Established to Deepen Trade
and Gender Discussions
A group of WTO members agreed to establish an Informal Working
Group on Trade and Gender on 23 September, marking the next phase of an initiative
kick started in 2017 to increase the participation of women in trade. The online
meeting to launch the new WTO working group was held at the invitation of Iceland
and Botswana.
Iceland
Ambassador Harald Aspelund, co-chair of the International
Gender Champions (IGC) Trade Impact Group, introduced the proposal to establish the WTO Informal Working Group. This
proposal, he said, stemmed from consultations with WTO members who expressed support
for following-up on the commitments contained in the Buenos Aires Declaration
on Trade and Women's Economic Empowerment. The declaration established
an initiative to remove barriers to women's participation in trade and was supported
by 118 WTO members and observers at the 11th Ministerial Conference in 2017. It
now counts 127 signatories.
The Informal
Working Group's objectives will be to continue to share best practices among members
on increasing women's participation in trade, consider and clarify what a “gender
lens” is in the context of international trade and review how a gender lens could
usefully be applied to the work of the WTO, review and discuss gender-related analytical
work produced by the WTO Secretariat, and explore how best to support the delivery
of the WTO Aid for Trade work programme. It will convene
for its first meeting in the second half of 2020 and establish a schedule of activities
and themes to be discussed in the run up to the 12th Ministerial Conference.
“The
Buenos Aires Declaration on Trade and Women's Economic Empowerment has become a
vital part of the WTO's work to make trade more inclusive,” Deputy Director-General
Yonov Frederick Agah said at
the meeting. “Today marks an important new phase in moving this work forward on
a continued transparent, collaborative and open basis.” Read his full remarks here.
Botswana
Ambassador Athaliah Molokomme,
likewise a co-chair of the IGC Trade Impact Group, summed up members' interventions
at the meeting, saying that she found there to be strong support for the formation
of an Informal Working Group and that concrete activities and timelines are needed
next.
Dorothy
Tembo, executive director ad interim of the International
Trade Centre and co-chair of the IGC Trade Impact Group, further noted that work
must continue to expand the group beyond the 127 current supporters.