Business News of Tuesday, 25 April 2023

Source: www.ghanaweb.com

Trade Minister advocates for reform at WTO to benefit developing countries

WTO boss and Ministers of State play videoWTO boss and Ministers of State

Ghana’s Minister for Trade and Industry, Kobina Tahir Hammond, is calling for an enhanced capacity for developing countries to enable them to participate effectively in WTO negotiations and thereby benefit from the Multilateral Trading System.

The Minister also wants the restoration of a fully functional two-tier dispute settlement mechanism i.e. Panels and the Appellate Body to give the multilateral trading system (MTS) the needed predictability and certainty.

Additionally, he is pressing for improving the transparency of governments' trade measures, especially as it pertains to export prohibitions and restrictions as witnessed during the height of the COVID crisis.

As part of the measures to reform the Organisation, the Minister is again advocating positively reviewing the “special and differential” treatment for developing countries and ensuring that existing flexibilities in the Agreement on Agriculture, especially those pertaining to Article 6.2, are fully preserved to help confront the challenges of food insecurity and, reinvigorating the WTO's negotiating function.

The above raft of measures are the proposals the Minister is making as the Organisation prepares to hold its Thirteenth Ministerial Conference (MC13) in Abu Dhabi in February 2024.

K.T Hammond made the proposals when he met with the Director-General of the WTO, H.E. Dr. Ngozi Okonja-Iweala, on the occasion of her working visit to Ghana as part of her maiden African tour which includes countries like Cote d’ Ivoire, Senegal, Kenya, Tanzania and Rwanda.

Thanking the Director-General for choosing Ghana as her first point of call on her African tour, the Minister noted that the decision reinforces Ghana’s credentials as the centre of African Commercial Diplomacy, in view of Ghana’s hosting of the Secretariat of AfCFTA.

He congratulated her for being the first African, and the first woman, to assume the position and applauded Dr. Ngozi for the positive signal that her occupation of the role of Director-General of the WTO conveys to the many young women and girls of Africa.

Recalling the support that Ghana, then as Chair of the Authority of ECOWAS Heads of State and Government, offered for her to assume her current role, he encouraged her to continue being a role model for Africa and was hopeful that her tenure will be successful in view of her quest to reform the WTO.

On the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), he called for support from the WTO for its implementation through the WTO’s “Aid-for-Trade” initiative and the effective implementation of the WTO’s Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA).

He specifically called for additional flows of Aid for Trade from bilateral, regional, and multilateral donors to support requests for trade-related capacity building from beneficiary countries.

He also encouraged the mainstreaming of trade into national development strategies by partner countries; and support for improved ways of monitoring and evaluating the initiative with a view to seeking enhanced implementation.

On her part, the Director General, H.E. Dr. Ngozi Okonja-Iweala, elaborated on the duties of the World Trade Organization by explaining that it is about enhancing the lives of people and guarding the rules and regulations that govern trade in the world.

She called on Ghana to fast-track the ratification of an agreement to put away 22 million worth of harmful fishing substances that affect the fisheries industry in Ghana.

Dr. Ngozi also announced that the WTO has waived the patent on vaccines to African countries to produce their own COVID-19 vaccines for the next five years.

The World Trade Organisation (WTO) was established in January 1995 as an Intergovernmental Organisation to regulate international trade with its headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland. It has a membership of 164 countries.







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