There are many opportunities to advance trade liberalizationif the U.S.
seeks them.
The jury is still out on whether President Bush will be able to score major
trade victories. Many have predicted smooth sailing based on the recent
Republican unity on tax cuts in the House of Representatives, the tradition of
bipartisan support for trade in the Senate, and the momentum created by
President Clinton's victory on the vote to grant China permanent normalized
trade relations. In reality, the picture is much more complicated both at home
and abroad.
America needs a trade strategy that navigates the rocky shoals between the
priorities of key domestic groups and the interests of disparate foreign trade
partners. There is a way forward, but it involves substantial risks.
First, progress on trade abroad hinges on building broad political support
at home. There is an enticing opportunity for a Republican president to borrow a
page from his predecessor's gamebook and pursue a "triangulation" strategy on
trade, addressing the concerns of those whose jobs are threatened, and exploring
constructive ways to improve labor and environmental protections in developing
countries. Short of this, it would be better to postpone the fast track debate
indefinitely than pursue a partisan bill that could result in polarization at
home and signal paralysis abroad.
Second, any meaningful trade agenda must encompass the World Trade
Organization (WTO). The status quo option of remaining on the sidelines, which
many have advocated in the wake of Seattle, is not in America's national
interest. Related to this, any successful strategy must respond to the
legitimate interests of poorer nations.
Finally, America should strategically pursue a limited set of regional and
bilateral agreementsrather than opportunistically agreeing to a confused
patchwork of initiatives. The Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) meets this
bar, by helping to nurture the seeds of democracy and market reform throughout
Latin America, but the Pacific 5 (P5) and several bilateral candidates do not.
Increasingly, observers on both sides of the trade debate are asking whether
it is necessary or wise for America to take an activist posture on global trade
talks. Even free traders wonder whether the incremental economic gains are worth
the requisite political compromises.
Having been burned at Seattle, America understandably might view pursuit of
a new Round as a big risk. But taking important risks for compelling reasons is
what leadership is all about. And leadership on the global trade system is in
America's national interest. Geopolitically, as a global power, America has a
strong interest in shaping the WTO, the only global trade forum that represents
nations from all regions and levels of development. Economically, global always
trumps regional and bilateral; producers should be scanning the globe for the
best market opportunities, not the best special deals negotiated between
governments. Pragmatically, there is particular urgency because of the
expiration two years hence of the so-called "peace clause" preventing disputes
between the United States and European Union on agriculture.
Market access should be the central thrust of the next Round. This is in
America's interest. It is also the strongest point of common interest with
developing nations, who share deep misgivings at the prospect of a broad Round
mandating major changes in domestic regulation. One could reasonably expect
special progress in areas of America's competitive strengths: agriculture and
services, since these are the unfinished business of the last Round.
Launching a Round is achievable, if we pursue limited goals informed by
political reality rather than a technocrat's wish list. America's offensive
agenda includes ambitious goals for agricultural and services
liberalizationwhere we have many alliesand modest goals on social
issueswhere we have few allies. The key defensive points are on antidumping
and protection in a few vulnerable sectors. Getting to yes on a Round requires
accommodations on three fronts: with the EU, Japan, and key developing
countries.
With Europe, U.S. Trade Representative Robert Zoellick and EU Trade
Commissioner Pascal Lamy must leverage their much touted friendship to agree an
agenda that is acceptable to key constituencies on both sides of the Atlantic.
The EU's greatest sensitivities are on agriculture, the environment, and food
safety. Truth be told, the European Commission (EC) has a considerable interest
in getting dragged to the table on agriculture, enabling it to lay the blame
elsewhere for internal reforms that are anyway essential if big agricultural
producers like Poland are to join the EU without wrecking the budget.
In return, the EC must get enough diversionary issues such as investment and
competition policy on the table to persuade recalcitrant members to accept
agricultural terms resembling those negotiated in Seattle. The United States can
stand down as a central protagonist on these diversionary issues, recognizing
that the scope will be circumscribed through the efforts of key developing
countries. On labor and the environment, the EU and the United States have
different priorities and can agree to pursue them separately. The EU's
indifference to U.S. goals on the social agenda is striking given Europe's
strong social charter and the predominance of center left governments. But one
has to look no farther than the EU's overweening agenda on trade and the
environment driven by its powerful environmental constituencies to understand
Europe's ardent courting of developing countries in other areas. The Bush
administration would be well advised to start out in a moderating posture on the
trade-related environment issues, given its initial clumsiness on climate change
diplomacy vis-a-vis the EU and strong opposition from developing countries.
For Japan and a few others, such as Korea, antidumping is the heart of the
issue, driven by the steel industry. Going into Seattle, Japan opposed a Round,
and the stalemate over antidumping served as a convenient foil. Recent political
and economic developments may have heightened Japan's interest in a Round. To
move forward, Japan must accept the hard truth that there is little flexibility
in the United States on antidumping given strong bipartisan opposition,
especially against the backdrop of sharp job losses in steel and the
manufacturing slowdown. The strongest action Congress has taken on trade so far
this year is a letter signed by sixty-two senators signaling strong opposition
to any agreement weakening U.S. trade remedy laws. The United States will have
to accept the equally hard truth that antidumping cannot be taken off the table
completely. There is scope for accommodation with Japan on a work program
circumscribed to the administration of existing antidumping laws. Indeed, the
United States has a growing interest in the fair and transparent administration
of foreign laws, since several Latin American countries are increasingly
resorting to their own antidumping procedures.
Any successful strategy must deal squarely and fairly with the interests of
poorer nations. (Although the "developing countries" are effective as a blocking
coalition, in fact there is a vast diversity of interests among this group.)
Agricultural liberalization is the single biggest prize for many of the poor
countries. On a per capita basis, the EU provides more agricultural support than
the per capita annual income of the eleven poorest countries. Developing
countries also have a strong interest in expanding access into highly protected
industrial sectors. The United States can show flexibility at the outset by
agreeing to include these in the negotiations without committing to any
particular reductions. Moreover, restructuring is already underway in several
domestic industries in response to NAFTA and existing trade preference programs,
where expanded access will be felt mostly in a shift of import patterns rather
than domestic displacement.
More broadly, the United States should support expanded overall access for
the reform-oriented poorest nations consistent with our preference for
market-driven development. Already, America offers among the most generous
preferential access in the world, and there is scope to do more. However,
special access for the poorest is opposed by many middle-income countries who
see themselves as the losers.
There is also scope to address concerns about implementation. Michael Finger
of the World Bank estimates that a typical developing country must spend $ 150
million to implement just three of the WTO's many agreementsa hefty share of
the overall budget for many countries. For countries committed to reform, which
are hampered by weak institutions, limited resources, and a range of competing
poverty reduction and development goals, it is not difficult to conceive a
constructive approach. Rather than resorting in the first instance to litigation
and punitive trade sanctions, the developed countries should provide technical
assistance and permit flexibility on deadlines in return for a commitment to a
detailed work program and timeline for compliance. In addition, there may be
special circumstances, such as the HIV/AIDs crisis in Africa, which warrant a
deviation from standard practice.
Third, many poor nations have legitimate concerns about representation in
the WTO. Although in principle a consensus organization, in practice the WTO
lends itself to agenda setting by a small group of nations through a
nontransparent, ad hoc process. The United States should support calls for
institutional reform of the WTO to proceed in parallel with rather than as a
precondition for the launch of negotiations.
Finally, it is important to keep in mind that trade is a necessary but by no
means sufficient driver of growth in the developing world. The United States
must continue to work actively to build public support for a more robust
development agenda, just as the poor countries themselves must lay solid
domestic foundations for broad-based growth.
There is no hope for reinvigorating the WTO as long as two of the central
protagonists are on the brink of a $ 4 billion retaliation. The United States
and EU are bending the dispute settlement system to the point of breaking by
pursuing litigious brinkmanship with no clear exit strategy. The only path out
of continued escalation is a negotiated solution with concessions on each side.
Both have already made a downpayment on restoring goodwill by resolving the
long festering "bananas" dispute. Next, the EU should blink on its case against
the U.S. Foreign Sales Corporation (FSC) tax break for exports. The EU can
orchestrate a gracious exit by declaring victory over the U.S. FSC replacement
legislation passed with strong bipartisan support, which responds to the spirit
of the EU's complaint, and demanding modest concessions on the administration of
the new law. By all accounts, this is a case with no real EU constituency and
involving no real economic damage. On its side, the EU will require resolution
of the US$ 117 million dispute on beef. With the requisite political will, the
EU and the United States could move quickly to a compromise allowing the United
States to expand its exports of "hormone free" beef.
As a general rule, America should pursue regional and bilateral trade
agreements strategically rather than opportunistically. The regionalism debate
is polarized between the promiscuous advocacy of entering into relations with
any willing partner, and the puritanical condemnation of regional trade
arrangements as always and everywhere detrimental to free trade. Experience lies
somewhere in between. Regional agreements can move forward the global framework
by pioneering deeper and broader disciplines, reinforcing rather than distorting
natural trade patterns, and spurring a virtuous cycle of competitive market
opening. But it is foolish to underestimate the substantial political capital
required, the risk that domestic backlash could undermine broader
liberalization, and the potential for regional blocs to stymie rather than spur
multilateral progress. Thus, free trade agreements should be pursued only where
the economic and security gains warrant the political cost, they contribute to a
competitive dynamic that strengthens the multilateral trade framework, and there
is a commitment to plough new territory.
The FTAA meets these tests. Latin American attitudes towards trade and
market reform have undergone a sea change. With the notable exception of Brazil,
key countries have signaled eagerness to expand trade with the United States,
whether individually or in groups. It is manifestly in our interest to nurture
the seeds of democracy and market reform by anchoring Latin American economies
in a framework of rules and an expanded market, helping to attract productive
investment, reduce the scope for government meddling, and promote broadly shared
prosperity. Properly constructed, the FTAA could also address trade distortions
created by NAFTA and spur otherwise reluctant countries to the world negotiating
table. But the domestic political cost will be considerable, as it has been with
NAFTA. (On a sobering note, although the foreign policy rationale for the FTAA
is strong, the economic gains to the United States are likely to be modest. The
western hemisphere overall accounts for 38 percent of U.S. trade, but only 7
percent of U.S. trade is with countries other than Mexico and Canada, which are
already covered by NAFTA.)
The bilateral trade negotiation with Chile can be justified on related
grounds. America's negotiating position within the FTAA will be greatly
strengthened if we can demonstrate the capacity to consummate an agreement.
Moreover, Chile has demonstrated willingness to meet the high level of standards
pioneered in NAFTA, including by addressing labor and environmental issues. The
United States should also respond favorably to overtures from Argentina, which
could help generate a liberalizing competitive dynamic vis-a-vis Brazil and give
Argentine investors a needed psychological boost.
The potential for a trade agreement spanning the Pacific is much murkier.
One thing is clear: APEC is not a promising forum for such an agreement. Some
have proposed a "P5" negotiation encompassing Australia, New Zealand, Chile,
Singapore, and the United States as an alternative means to advance
liberalization without paying a steep political price in the United States. The
difficulty with this analysis is threefold. First, meaningful opening implies
significantly greater access for competitive agricultural products from
Australia and New Zealand (such as lamb and dairy), which will meet stiff U.S.
resistance. Second, the economic gains for the United States would be modest,
since the proposed members are already among the most open in the region. And
most important, embarking on negotiations with this group would provide a
convenient excuse for Malaysia and others to revive Asia-only schemes, as
evident in the recent flurry of activity among the ASEAN Plus Three.
The Bush administration appears to be pursuing separate U.S.-Australia and
U.S.-Singapore trade agreements, but has yet to articulate the overarching
strategic rationale. It is difficult to see how any such initiative could
advance U.S. strategic objectives, provide meaningful liberalization in the
Asia-Pacific region, and goad others to follow suit rather than go off on their
own if it does not include a sizeable Asian security ally, such as South Korea
or Thailand. However, skeptics might legitimately question whether the political
hurdle for a more meaningful initiative along these lines could be met.
No trade strategy can prevail abroad without broad support at home. It would
be a serious mistake for the Bush administration to pursue a partisan "trade
promotion" or fast track bill that shuts off debate on the legitimate concerns
of many Americans. To the contrary, President Bush has a unique opportunity to
gain Congressional support on trade by pursuing a triangulation strategy.
Achieving House passage of pro-trade legislation has been difficult in recent
years because of a growing bloc of trade opponents within the Republican caucus
and the reluctance of the House leadership to make the compromises necessary to
attract a compensatory number of Democrats (the China PNTR vote succeeded in
part because key concessions were made). But a Republican president could change
that dynamic: President Bush likely would retain support from much of his own
caucus in the House and gain the support of many Democrats by demonstrating a
genuine commitment to address concerns on labor and the environment. A narrowly
partisan approach would surely fail: Even if House Republicans could muster a
degree of unity comparable to that on the tax billwhich is dubiousthe newly
Democratic Senate will be seeking to stake out separate ground, especially in
the wake of the divisive tax cut vote.
Even the most orthodox economists acknowledge that although trade expands
the overall pie, there is no guarantee the gains will be equitably shared. Not
only do the less skilled fare poorly on a relative basis, but many who lose
their jobs may take years to find employment at comparable pay. Thus, any
serious effort to gain support for trade liberalization must at a minimum
include expansion and reform of adjustment assistance for dislocated workers
(although this will by no means be considered sufficient for trade opponents,
who deride it as "burial insurance").
Second, any serious effort must grapple with the ongoing crisis in the steel
industry. The Bush administration has self-initiated safeguards actionthe
first such action in fifteen yearsand vowed to hold negotiations aimed at
reducing international steel capacity. The safeguards action provides some
degrees of freedom on the domestic politics of trade; however, the net effect
for the overall trade agenda is hard to predict, depending on the intensity of
the backlash from key trading partners.
Third, labor and environmental standards must be addressed. Americans want
trade to be a force for rising living standards and human dignity both here and
abroad. Unfortunately, the current debate suffers from a serious lack of trust
among the main protagonists.
In the United States, a fabric of social protections was woven together over
the course of several decades as the national economy grew increasingly
integrated. These in turn made an integral contribution to the development of a
mass middle class and sustained prosperity. But these protections emerged from
an evolutionary domestic process; they were not imposed externally. The question
today is whether globalization makes it more difficult for individual developing
countries to evolve such a safety net because of a harmful race-to-the-bottom
dynamic, especially in "footloose" industries such as textiles and footwear,
where a global floor could be helpful.
We are in the early stages of understanding the linkages between labor
standards and trade. At the multilateral level, the first step is to establish a
dialogue to promote common understanding, but even this is contentious. Many
developing countries oppose housing such a dialogue at the WTO because they fear
it will be the first step on a slippery slope to trade sanctions since the WTO
is notable among international institutions for its binding dispute settlement
mechanism. On the other side, proponents of labor standards worry that
relegating this issue to the International Labor Organization (ILO) would gut
it, since the ILO lacks effective enforcement mechanisms. The obvious middle
ground is a dialogue shepherded jointly by both institutions.
More broadly, the rush to judgement on trade sanctions makes it too easy for
opponents to deny the legitimacy of the labor standards debate. There are a
variety of constructive proposals to advance the "core" labor standardsthose
that are considered human rights and independent of the level of development,
such as freedom of association and freedom from forced labor. Rather than
resorting to punitive measures in the first instance, richer nations could
provide resources to help committed governments in the poorest nations improve
observance of core labor standards, including through programs such as the
International Program to Eliminate Child Labor, which address the root causes of
abuses. They could provide additional preferential trade access as an incentive
for poor countries to strengthen enforcement. There is also significant scope
for annual report cards and corporate codes of conduct to help businesses invest
responsibly and to facilitate coordinated consumer action, as have been
introduced in industries such as textiles, rugs and soccer balls. When pursuing
deeper integration with middle-income countries whose laws enshrine the core
labor standards, a broader set of mechanisms could be contemplated to monitor
and encourage implementation and, if necessary, punish systematic trade-related
evasion. U.S. negotiators could also work systematically to identify
shortcomings at the outset of trade negotiations and integrate remedial steps
into the overall negotiating framework. The recent requirement for environmental
reviews of major trade agreements is a useful step.
The Bush administration has indicated an intention to pursue fast track or
"trade promotion" authority this year. Considering that fast track authority is
a tool and not an end in itself, this is a risky gambit before there are
concrete benefits to galvanize supporters. It makes the case for a triangulation
strategy all the more compelling. The worst scenario is that the administration
pursues a partisan fast track bill that is polarizing on the issues of labor and
the environment, lacks sufficiently concrete near-term benefits to motivate
supporters, and holds hostage completed trade agreements. Further evidence of
polarization here at home would risk serious paralysis and loss of leadership
abroad.
The three-step strategy above holds out hope for an ambitious trade agenda
in the face of challenging political and international constraints. To succeed,
a tremendous amount of groundwork must be laid, making a compelling case for
trade at home, articulating concrete trade negotiating priorities as part of an
overall strategy, engaging with bipartisan Congressional members and
representatives of business, farm, consumer, labor and environmental groups, and
building coalitions with key trade partners around the world. At the moment,
there is little evidence that the requisite groundwork is being laid abroad or
at home by the Bush administration, with the lonely exception of the U.S. Trade
Representative. If this continues, the United States simply will not be ready to
forge agreement on a Round agenda in time for the November WTO ministerial in
Qatar. Come next year, it would be a great shame if the United States finds
itself drifting into a handful of piecemeal agreements, selected not because of
their strategic value but because their political and diplomatic cost is low.