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Global trade lopsided, says Sinha
By C. Rammanohar Reddy
PRAGUE, SEPT. 22. With rising oil prices and the falling euro
dominating the run-up to the 2000 Annual Meetings of the
International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, it was left this
morning to the speakers at a seminar, who included the Union
Finance Minister, Mr. Yashwant Sinha, to stress that equitable
globalisation - a constant refrain of speeches here - would not
be possible with the way the international trade regime was
presently structured.
In his first public engagement after his arrival here yesterday,
Mr. Sinha, while going along with the view that trade had a
beneficial impact on poverty reduction, reeled off a series of
statistics in support of his argument that there was no equity in
what now passed for the ``rules-based system'' of global trade.
That the average import tariff, imposed by the developed
countries on the developing countries' exports, was four times
the tariff on goods traded among themselves, the custom duty
revenues collected annually by the developed countries from poor
country exports exceeded what they provided by way of official
development assistance and farm subsidies in the rich countries
were twice as high as agricultural exports of the poor countries
were a few of the points made by Mr. Sinha.
The Finance Minister, without referring to the European Union by
name, said, ``India accounts for 14 per cent of the anti-dumping
actions imposed by one trading bloc though we account for only
one per cent of their trade.''
The seminar, one of the many being organised on the sidelines of
the IMF-World Bank meetings, was on ``Harnessing International
Trade for Development.''
Instead, it saw a consensus of views among the speakers on the
imbalances in the global trading regime. Mr. Kevin Watkins of the
U. K. charity, Oxfam, was particularly acerbic accusing the World
Bank and the IMF of silently colluding in the perpetuation of the
unfair global trade regime.
``IMF programmes require poor countries to lower their trade
barriers but the organisation cannot do a thing about the massive
barriers that the U.S. and the E.U. have in place to keep out
from developing countries.'' While the IMF and World Bank were
making much of the loan write-offs under the Heavily Indebted
Poor Country (HIPC) Initiative, ``for every dollar that rich
countries give by way of aid and debt-relief, they deprive the
poor countries of $14 through unfair trade practices.''
The Oxfam official said that from there being an equality in
global trade practices, ``in agriculture and other areas of world
trade, the `level playing field' runs all the way downhill from
Europe and the U.S.''
Everyone agreed that the global trading regime was tilted against
the developing countries but Mr. Watkins' attempt to draw
attention to the need to redress the imbalances in the benefits
from trade did not go very far.
When he referred to the contrast between the success of Bangalore
in information technology and the poverty of Bihar and Uttar
Pradesh, Mr. Sinha responded by saying how all the State
Governments in India, including Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, were
competing to attract investments in IT.
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