WTO Reform Must Uphold Consensus, India's Goyal Tells Ministerial Conference

Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal led India's delegation at the WTO Ministerial Conference in Cameroon, asserting that consensus-based decision-making is fundamental to the organization's legitimacy. India emphasized the need to address long-pending issues like food security and the structural asymmetries from past trade rounds. The delegation highlighted the critical dysfunction of the WTO's dispute settlement system, which disadvantages smaller economies. India also cautioned against using transparency as a weapon for trade retaliation and called for a time-bound, inclusive reform process.

Key Points: India at WTO: Piyush Goyal Stresses Consensus, Reform Priorities

  • Uphold sovereign rights in rule-making
  • Fix dysfunctional dispute settlement system
  • Prioritize food security & cotton issues
  • Avoid fragmentation from plurilateral deals
3 min read

Consensus-based decision-making is bedrock of WTO's legitimacy: Piyush Goyal

Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal led India's push at WTO MC14, emphasizing consensus-based decisions, fixing dispute settlement, and prioritizing food security.

"consensus-based decision-making is the bedrock of the WTO's legitimacy - Piyush Goyal"

New Delhi, March 28

Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal on Tuesday led the Indian delegation at the World Trade Organisation's 14th Ministerial Conference in Yaounde, Cameroon, where trade ministers deliberated on WTO reform issues on the second day.

According to an official statement released by the Ministry of Commerce & Industry, Goyal emphasised that consensus-based decision-making is the bedrock of the WTO's legitimacy, and it is important for the WTO not to ignore the sovereign right of each member to not bind itself to rules which they do not agree to, India stressed on the importance of the WTO to undertake a careful stock-take of the current impasse and its underlying causes, while ensuring discussions remain transparent, inclusive and Member-driven.

India also highlighted that an integrated multilateral trading system cannot thrive alongside fragmentation within its own institutional framework.

On the 'Level playing field issues', Goyal emphasised that discussions must take into account the asymmetries from the Uruguay Round. India focused on the need for long-pending issues like food security, PSH, and SSM on Cotton to be prioritised while taking up new issues to address the structural asymmetries.

Highlighting the continued dysfunction of the dispute settlement system, India emphasised that without effective adjudication, rules lose their enforceability, thereby disproportionately disadvantaging smaller economies.

India also cautioned against weaponising transparency to justify trade retaliation or challenge legitimate domestic policies. Instead, it should be accompanied by meaningful and sustained capacity-building support, ensuring that all Members can meet obligations fairly and effectively, the ministry said.

India also stressed the importance of all Members to have a fair opportunity to build productive capacity, create employment, and participate meaningfully in global trade.

The day concluded with a Ministerial Plenary Session on WTO Reform Transparency.

Speaking during this session, Commerce Secretary Rajesh Agrawal, extended India's support for a time-bound restart of reform efforts with milestones, based on a more robust evidentiary analysis and through engagement with submissions and Ministerial Decisions.

India unequivocally called for eschewing cherry-picking issues and proliferating preconceived and prejudged positions.

India also highlighted the need to give greater importance to the role of WTO Committees, which, through their lived and learned experiences, can contribute to an exhaustive stocktake through a bottom-up approach.

While cautioning against plurilaterals fragmenting the multilateral trading system, Agrawal called for the consensus process to be premised on the principles of openness, transparency, inclusivity, participative and member-driven.

On the sidelines of the second day of the MC14 meetings, Goyal held bilateral meetings with his counterparts from the US, China, Korea, Switzerland, New Zealand, Canada, Morocco and Oman. Discussions were focused on the MC 14 agenda as well as on matters related to deepening bilateral trade ties.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Finally someone is saying it clearly! The WTO dispute system has been broken for years, and it's the smaller economies that suffer. Without a way to enforce rules, what's the point? India is right to push for this reform.
D
David E
Interesting perspective from India. The call against "cherry-picking" issues is valid for any multilateral body. However, consensus can also lead to complete paralysis. Hope they find a middle path that allows for progress.
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Aditya G
The point about "weaponising transparency" is so important. Developed countries often use technical standards and compliance as non-tariff barriers. Our domestic policies for farmers and MSMEs must be protected. Jai Kisan!
S
Sarah B
As someone who follows trade policy, India's emphasis on the asymmetries from the Uruguay Round is long overdue. The playing field was never level to begin with. New issues shouldn't be discussed until these historical imbalances are addressed.
K
Karthik V
Good to see our delegation being proactive. But I hope this isn't just talk. We need to see concrete outcomes, especially on the permanent solution for public stockholding. Our farmers have waited long enough.
N
Nisha Z
The bilateral meetings with the US and China on the sidelines are key. Global trade is

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