What
You Need to Know about the
Global Trading System by Chris Wold, Instructor, Northwestern
School of Law of Lewis & Clark College.
I n November 30, 1999, more than 3,000
governmental delegates and thousands of activists will descend on Seattle,
Washington for a Ministerial Meeting of the World Trade Organization (WTO).
For many people, this will be their first experience with the WTO. Yet,
the WTO is a very influential institution that has the power to decide
that nationally enacted environmental and labor laws are inconsistent with
international trade rules. For example, a recent WTO dispute resolution
panel found that U.S. efforts to protect endangered sea turtles violated
WTO rules. Another panel ruled that the European Union's import ban on
meat products containing bovine growth hormones violated WTO rules. The
meeting in Seattle will set the WTO's agenda for the next decade. Of crucial
importance, the 134 Members of the WTO will discuss the possibility of
eliminating all tariffs and perhaps even non-tariff measures relating to
timber and timber products. This article describes the basic rules of the
WTO and explains why citizens must educate themselves about the WTO.
The
Rules of the GATT
The General Agreement on Tariffs and
Trade (GATT) preceded the WTO and remains in force as part of the WTO.
The GATT emerged from the ruins of World War II to reduce tariffs on goods
and to create rules for trading in goods. By all accounts, the GATT has
been successful at reducing tariffs. Tariffs (taxes imposed on a good as
the price of entry into a country) have fallen from about 40% of the cost
of the good to about 4% since the end of World War II.
The so-called nontariff rules of the
global trading system, however, have generated most of the controversy.
The GATT imposes three important rules to end discrimination against products.
First, it requires countries that have signed the agreement to treat the
products of foreign countries the same for tax and regulatory purposes.
This principle is known as the Most-Favored-Nation (MFN) principle and
prohibits countries from playing favorites. Thus, the United States must
tax and regulate shrimp from Brazil the same as shrimp from Thailand or
Bangladesh.
Second, a country must treat products
from foreign countries the same as domestic products. Known as National
Treatment, this principle is designed to ensure that countries do not protect
their products from foreign competition. Thus, the United States must tax
and regulate tuna from Mexico the same as tuna from the United States.
Third, countries cannot impose other types of restrictions on products,
such as quotas and licensing schemes, even if unenforced, because they
may change the conditions of competition.
These non-discrimination rules have
been interpreted in a way that prohibits a country from applying different
taxes or regulations to products based on the way that the product was
produced. Distinctions in tax and regulatory treatment must apply only
to products with different physical characteristics. Thus, a panel ruled
that the United States could not prohibit the importation of tuna from
Mexico even though Mexico was catching tuna by encircling and killing dolphins
in violation of the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA). The United States
argued that it was treating Mexican and U.S. fishermen the same, because
all fishermen had to comply with the MMPA. The panel ruled that the United
States was imposing a restriction on trade, because it was treating Mexican
tuna differently from United States tuna. According to the panel, tuna
is tuna and the capture method is irrelevant.
Similarly, a WTO panel ruled that the
United States could not prohibit the importation of shrimp from several
Asian countries because those countries did not use turtle excluder devices
(TEDs) — equipment which permits endangered sea turtles to escape from
a shrimp net. The panel ruled that the prohibitions constituted quantitative
restrictions on shrimp in violation of the GATT. The United States was
also violating its MFN obligation, because it permitted the importation
of shrimp from some countries and prohibited it from others, but the panel
did not expressly rule on this issue.
A panel would rule similarly if the
United States tried to prohibit imports of Adidas or Nike tennis shoes
because of labor conditions in Indonesia or Vietnam, where the shoes are
produced. These trade rules are a modern day version of "a rose is a rose
is a rose." Under trade rules, tennis shoes are tennis shoes, regardless
of whether the minimum wage is $1.00 a day or $10.00 an hour or whether
a 12 year old child works 60 hours a week to produce the shoes. Members
of the WTO can tax and regulate products differently only if the products
have different physical characteristics or if their end uses are different.
Thus, tuna and salmon can be taxed differently, and tuna in water can be
taxed differently from tuna in oil. But, tuna caught using different capture
methods cannot.
The GATT does not include any exceptions
from these rules for labor conditions, unless the product is produced with
prison labor. It does include environmental exceptions for measures necessary
to protect human, animal, or plant life or health and for measures relating
to the conservation of exhaustible natural resources. However, panels have
interpreted these exceptions extremely narrowly — so narrowly that no provision
has ever been saved by the environmental exceptions. For example, the United
States argued that its prohibitions against tuna imports were "necessary
to protect dolphins." But, the panel ruled that the prohibitions were not
necessary, because the United States could have used other, less trade-restrictive
options. The panel also said that the United States had not exhausted all
options reasonably available to it, such as negotiating an international
treaty. These interpretations obviously allow panels great discretion to
determine when a Member has less trade restrictive options and when the
Member has exhausted all reasonable options.
The
Emergence of the WTO
Relatively early in the life of GATT,
the Members realized that lower tariffs and non-discrimination rules were
insufficient to open markets adequately. As a result, they initiated negotiations
called "rounds", to develop rules for subsidies and other "non-tariff barriers"
to trade. These early rules proved largely ineffective and Members finally
agreed to a comprehensive set of negotiations to develop several new agreements
and to create a more effective dispute resolution body. These negotiations,
called the Uruguay Round, culminated in the creation of the World Trade
Organization.
Because the WTO includes the GATT, the
basic non-discrimination rules still apply. Whereas the GATT applied those
rules to goods, the WTO also applies them to intellectual property rights,
agriculture, food safety laws, and services, among other things.
Moreover, the WTO includes two agreements
that require Members to use standards developed by international organizations
rather than their own national standards. One of those agreements, called
the Agreement on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Standards, relates to additives,
contaminants, bacteria, invasive species and other things that affect human,
animal, and plant life and health. This agreement is particularly important
because it affects food safety laws and could expose Americans to significantly
more pesticides in their food. This agreement requires Members to use standards
established by an international organization called Codex Alimentarius,
but its standards are often less restrictive than those imposed by the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. According to this agreement, the
U.S. can establish its own standards if the standards are scientifically
justified and if they are based on "scientific principles" and a risk assessment.
The agreement does not define these key terms, however, which gives trade
panels much discretion to determine when a standard is scientifically justified
or based on scientific principles.
The first test of this agreement suggests
that U.S. measures to protect our food supply from dangerous pesticides
are in jeopardy. A WTO panel ruled that the European Union's prohibition
against the importation of meat products containing bovine growth hormones
was invalid, because the prohibition was not rationally related to scientific
reports concerning the health effects of growth hormones in meat products.
Members of the panel rejected the findings of Europe's experts and the
concerns of Europeans relating to the health consequences of growth hormones
in meat products.
The
WTO Dispute Resolution Process
If a Member believes that another Member
is violating any rules of the WTO Agreements, it may initiate the dispute
resolution process. The disputing parties must first attempt to resolve
their dispute through confidential consultations. If those consultations
fail, then the complaining party may request the establishment of a dispute
resolution panel. Panels are composed of three panelists, unless the parties
mutually agree to a panel of five. Panel members are chosen from a list
of candidates. The candidates may be individuals from any Member country
and from any governmental or non-governmental organization so long as they
possess some relevant expertise, although trade expertise is of most importance.
The dispute resolution rules expressly
state that Panel deliberations "shall be confidential." Unlike the court
systems of most countries, citizens cannot watch the hearings and they
generally do not have the right to obtain information about the proceedings.
Due to a lawsuit brought by the group Public Citizen, citizens can obtain
documents submitted by the United States. Moreover, citizens cannot participate
in developing the position of their government through notice and comment
rulemaking, which federal agencies must do when they prepare new regulations.
Citizens may submit their own briefs to a panel, but a panel is not required
to read them.
Once the panel issues its decision,
the panel's report is automatically adopted by the Dispute Resolution Body,
which includes all Members of the WTO, unless one of the disputants appeals
to the Appellate Body. The Dispute Resolution Body must decide by consensus
not to adopt a panel decision. If the panel rules that a Member has a law
that is inconsistent with WTO rules, then it has three options. Under trade
rules, the most preferable option is for the Member to repeal or amend
its offending law to conform to the panel's opinion. If the Member refuses
to comply with the panel's decision, then the disputants can negotiate
trade sanctions. If the disputing Members cannot agree on appropriate trade
sanctions, then the complaining Member may impose economic sanctions —
tariffs — on the non-complying Member in an amount equivalent to the value
of the products embargoed. For example, a WTO panel found the European
Union's prohibitions against the importation of meat products containing
bovine growth hormones to be inconsistent with WTO rules. But, the EU refuses
to repeal the ban. As a result, the United States imposed 100% tariffs
on certain beef products, flowers, mineral water, and other products from
the European Union.
Conclusion
The WTO is fast becoming the institution
where national environmental and labor laws can be defeated because they
limit free trade. In Seattle, Members of the WTO will seek to eliminate
tariffs on timber products. They will also seek to negotiate a treaty that
extends trade rules to investment opportunities. Similar investment provisions
in the NAFTA have already proven dangerous for environmental legislation.
When Canada banned the import and interprovincial transport of the gasoline
additive MMT, because its main ingredient, manganese, is a known human
neurotoxin, Ethyl Corporation claimed under NAFTA that the law was an "expropriation"
of its assets. Canada ultimately paid Ethyl $13 million in damages and
legal fees to settle the claim. These decisions show that citizens must
become more educated about the WTO, because important decisions about our
environmental and labor laws are being made without our knowledge and without
our participation.
Resources
Several organizations have excellent
websites, including