India Champions Global South Rights in WTO Reform Push at Cameroon Meet

India has strongly advocated for WTO reforms that prioritize the development needs and special rights of developing countries. Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal emphasized that reforms must be transparent, inclusive, and keep foundational principles like non-discrimination at their core. He highlighted long-pending issues critical to the Global South, including a permanent solution for public food stockholding and a functional dispute settlement system. Goyal also called for a careful review of the moratorium on customs duties for electronic transmissions and stressed that the trading system must equitably share innovation and opportunity.

Key Points: India's WTO Reform Stance: Protect Global South, Says Goyal

  • WTO reforms must be member-driven
  • Special & Differential Treatment for developing nations is key
  • Deliver on agriculture, fisheries, dispute settlement
  • Plurilateral outcomes need consensus
  • Moratorium on e-transmissions duties needs review
3 min read

India backs focus on Global South in WTO reforms

India's Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal outlines key demands for WTO reforms, emphasizing development, equity, and special rights for developing nations.

"Agriculture is critical to the livelihoods of millions. For the Global South, a permanent solution on public stockholding for food security purposes... is a long-pending mandated issue. - Piyush Goyal"

New Delhi, March 26

India came out strongly on Thursday for WTO reforms to be carried out through a transparent, inclusive and member-driven process that keeps the special rights of developing countries at its core in accordance with the foundational principles and objectives of the multilateral organisation.

Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal, in his address at the WTO ministerial conference in Cameroon, said that the WTO reforms must be centred around development and focus mainly on non-discrimination and consensus-based decision-making that assures equity.

He said that the provisions for Special and Differential Treatment provisions within WTO agreements that accord special rights to developing countries and allow other members to treat them more favourably, "should be precise, effective and operational".

"Agriculture is critical to the livelihoods of millions. For the Global South, a permanent solution on public stockholding for food security purposes, a special safeguard mechanism, and cotton are long-pending mandated issues. We must deliver on them on priority," Goyal said.

India remains committed to negotiating a comprehensive Fisheries Subsidies Agreement that balances current and future fishing needs, protects the livelihoods of poor fishers, with appropriate and effective Special and Differential Treatment (S&DT), he further stated.

"The past mandates should be delivered on priority. A dysfunctional Dispute Settlement system has deprived members from effective redressal. We must restore the automatic and binding dispute settlement system," the minister said.

He further stated that the incorporation of plurilateral outcomes into the WTO framework should be based on consensus and not impair existing rights of non-parties or cast additional obligations on them.

Goyal also said that in the absence of a common understanding among members on the scope of the moratorium on customs duties on electronic transmissions, and given its potentially significant implications, the continued extension of this moratorium warrants careful reconsideration.

He highlighted that, guided by Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the recent Global AI Impact Summit, India believes that emerging technologies must serve 'Sarvajan Hitaya, Sarvajan Sukhaya' (welfare for all and happiness of all). The multilateral trading system must also ensure that innovation, development and opportunity are shared equitably among members.

Goyal underscored the need to engage constructively to show that the WTO remains central to global trade and strives to reform it so that it remains responsive, performs in delivering on development, equity, and inclusiveness, and transforms the system to better serve the interests of the poor, vulnerable, and marginalised people, anchored in consensus and multilateralism.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Finally, someone is saying it clearly! The WTO reforms must protect developing countries. The special safeguard mechanism for agriculture is crucial for us. Hope the developed nations listen this time and don't just pay lip service to 'inclusiveness'.
R
Rohit P
The point about the moratorium on customs duties on electronic transmissions is very important. We can't let our digital sovereignty and potential revenue be compromised indefinitely. Careful reconsideration is the right approach.
S
Sarah B
While I appreciate India advocating for the Global South, I hope the focus on consensus doesn't lead to complete paralysis. Sometimes the need for unanimous agreement lets a single country block progress for everyone. The system needs reform, but it also needs to be functional.
K
Karthik V
'Sarvajan Hitaya, Sarvajan Sukhaya' – this ancient principle guiding our approach to AI and trade is brilliant. Technology and trade rules should uplift everyone, not just create more billionaires in Silicon Valley. India's voice is getting stronger on the world stage. 👏
M
Michael C
The fisheries subsidies point is critical. Overfishing by large, subsidized fleets from developed nations is devastating for coastal communities in the Global South. An agreement with real teeth and protection for small-scale fishers is long overdue.
N
Nisha Z

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50