WTO MC14: Crisis, Key Issues & India’s Strategic Role

Context: The WTO’s 14th Ministerial Conference (MC14), to be held in Yaoundé, Cameroon, is the organisation’s highest decision-making body tasked with shaping the future of global trade governance.

Crisis in Trade Multilateralism

  • MC14 is taking place amid rising U.S.-China rivalry, global conflicts, and increasing securitisation of trade.
  • Trade multilateralism is weakening, with a rise in unilateralism and coercive trade practices.
  • The U.S. has imposed arbitrary tariffs violating MFN principle and bound tariff commitments.
  • It has also pursued one-sided trade agreements through tariff coercion.
  • The WTO dispute settlement system is paralysed due to blockage of appointments to the Appellate Body.
  • WTO’s inability to evolve new rules, with only two agreements in decades, reflects institutional stagnation.
  • As a result, countries are shifting towards FTAs for trade rule-making.

Key Issues Before MC14

  • Debate on incorporating plurilateral agreements such as Investment Facilitation and E-commerce into WTO framework.
  • Plurilateral route is seen as a solution to consensus paralysis but risks fragmentation of system.
  • The e-commerce moratorium (since 1998) prevents tariffs on digital trade but may cause revenue losses for developing countries.
  • Developed countries favour its continuation, while countries like India face a policy dilemma.
  • Debate on special and differential treatment (SDT), with the U.S. seeking to limit benefits for emerging economies.
  • Restoration of the dispute settlement system requires revival of the Appellate Body.
  • Attempts to weaken foundational principles like MFN rule threaten WTO’s core framework.

India’s Role and Strategic Choices

  • India must reaffirm its commitment to trade multilateralism and defend rule-based order.
  • It should act as a normative leader for the Global South, building coalitions with developing countries.
  • India may need to revisit rigid opposition to plurilateral agreements for greater strategic flexibility.
  • Supporting innovative solutions, such as alternative methods for appointing Appellate Body members, can strengthen institutional credibility.
  • Failure of MC14 may strengthen unilateralism and lead to a coercive trade order, harming developing countries.

Conclusion

  • MC14 represents a critical juncture where the WTO must balance competing interests to preserve multilateral trade governance. For countries like India, the challenge lies in protecting developmental interests while adapting to a rapidly evolving global trade order. 

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