Statement by Hon. Arnaldo Brown
ACP
Ministerial Coordinator and Minister of State in
the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs & Foreign Trade
Jamaica
I am
pleased to join in welcoming new members who have acceded since MC9 and look
forward to welcoming the Republic of Yemen who will become the 160th
WTO member during the course of this Ministerial Conference.
I am
also privileged to deliver these remarks as Coordinator of the ACP Group.
In
our Ministerial Declaration and Communique on MC9 issued in October 2013,
Ministers of Trade of the ACP declared their commitment to the pursuit of a
successful outcome here in Bali. We consider a successful outcome in Bali to be
of vital importance to ACP Member States and the WTO as a whole. We see a
successful outcome in Bali as a catalyst towards a post-Bali work programme
that reinvigorates the multilateral trading system and takes fully into account
the development dimension.
The
road to Bali was paved by a collective decision to pursue outcomes in
Agriculture, Trade Facilitation, Development and LDC issues. We have come to
Bali with significant convergence on texts across all areas but with gaps that
have delayed the consensus necessary to finalize them. Progress in key aspects
of the texts before us has been achieved due in part to the work done by the
ACP Group working with other developing country and LDC partners, indeed with
all members, to bridge gaps and forge consensus, particularly in Section 2 of
the Trade Facilitation Agreement. We remain committed to constructive and
solution-seeking engagement in all areas of our work here in Bali as we seek to
close remaining gaps and make this Ministerial truly a success for all.
With
respect to the Post-Bali Agenda our position is clear – we must reaffirm our
commitment to completing the DDA and to work on the issues of Special and
Differential Treatment and Development that we did not seek to address in the
context of our Bali outcomes. We insist that these be given priority together
with built-in agendas in agriculture and LDC issues.
It is
true that we have consistently allowed success to elude us since the
establishment of the WTO but we need not repeat history here at MC9. While
there are differing views on the consequences of not securing a package here in
Bali, everyone recognizes that the consequences for the negotiating function of
the WTO will be significant. As developing countries committed to
multilateralism and a rules-based trading system we stand to be most seriously
affected by any setback to the system.
Bali
is a watershed for the WTO. We have within our grasp an agreement on a package
that could provide significant impetus for concluding the Round and
strengthening and enhancing the credibility of the WTO and the multilateral
trading system. In keeping with our declared commitment as Ministers of
the ACP States we will therefore spare no effort to achieve a balanced and
successful outcome here in Bali. I request that the ACP Declaration be entered
into the record of this Ministerial Conference.
I
will now deliver remarks in my National Capacity.
Jamaica
remains committed to the efforts to deliver a successful Bali package. We have
engaged constructively with the rest of the Membership and have managed to
reach agreement on Section 2 of the Draft Consolidated Negotiating Text on
Trade Facilitation, the Monitoring Mechanism and elements of the LDC Package. Other
outstanding areas remain for resolution in Section I and on Agriculture.
However, we are convinced that these issues are not insurmountable and
can be addressed if there is political will to do so.
Work
at the technical level in Geneva has been exhausted and clear political input
is now required to address the outstanding issues. I fully intend to work
closely with colleague Ministers here in Bali to find compromises and achieve
solutions that will be directly beneficial to the Membership, particularly the
developing countries and LDCs.
Let
me also emphasize that we must finish the task here in Bali. Jamaica will not
support any call for the negotiating process to revert to Geneva. We concur
with the DG that there are serious risks associated with such an approach.
Potential solutions are within our grasp and we must accept full responsibility
if we do not explore and embrace them here and now.
Jamaica
has always maintained that any outcome agreed at Bali must be meaningful and
balanced with special focus and priority on the development dimension.
This has been a key feature of the elements that have already been
agreed. We have secured an outcome in Section II that is substantially
stabilized around the principles established in Annex D and the Hong Kong
mandate. It contains the necessary flexibilities and elaborates a process that
seeks to address the issue of the acquisition of capacity and the ability to
implement Category C commitments. The provision of technical and financial
assistance and capacity building to developing countries and LDCs will be
crucial in assisting these countries in implementing their commitments under
the TF Agreement.
Like
other developing countries, Jamaica recognizes that there are benefits to
concluding an agreement on TF. This includes improvements, not only to border
management procedures but also provisions that will have a strong bearing on
increased productivity and competitiveness at both the national and
international levels through investment in physical infrastructure, technology
and innovation.
We
must acknowledge that the outcome under the Development pillar is a very modest
one both in terms of scope and substance. The agreement reached on the
Monitoring Mechanism represents a first step in the negotiations under this
pillar. We expect the Mechanism to function complementary to the
Committee on Trade and Development and the Mandate on Special and Differential
Treatment set forth in the Doha Declaration. It should bring into sharp focus
the concerns of developing countries and LDCs relating to the special and
differential treatment provisions under the relevant agreements. It will
act as a focal point in the WTO system in reviewing and assessing these
provisions.
There
has also been agreement on certain elements of the LDC Package. Jamaica
fully supports the results of the work in this area and looks forward to their
incorporation in the collective decisions we will adopt at this meeting.
We
are encouraged by the progress made in reaching agreements or understandings on
the proposals tabled by the G20 and the G33. It is our view that
temporary solutions that have been negotiated will lead to more permanent ones
as part of a post-Bali work programme.
It
will be important to preserve and build on any outcome achieved in Bali, as
well as on the progress achieved so far in the Doha Round, particularly the
negotiated flexibilities including for SVEs as contained in the revised draft
modalities on Agriculture and Non-agricultural Market Access.
The
importance of the work in the non-DDA issues is also important. In this regard,
Jamaica reaffirms the importance it places on the Work Programme on Small
Economies and the need to find solutions to the trade-related issues and
concerns raised by the Group in the WTO. Jamaica also wishes to emphasize the
importance of the work relating to the Aid for Trade Initiative which was
established to address, inter alia, the
enhancement of supply-side capacity in developing countries and LDCs thereby
contributing to their integration into the multilateral trading system.
Finally,
Jamaica wishes to express deep appreciation to the Government and People of
Indonesia for their warmth and hospitality. The arrangements for this
Ministerial Conference have been outstanding and we trust that we will be in a
position to honour the quality of the support that has been provided by
adopting the decisions that will ensure a successful outcome.
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