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Smith
Faculty Opinion Article
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September
17, 2007
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor
of International Business
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Democratic Accountability and the Doha
Round
History teaches that open markets
best promote economic progress, but
markets without good rules can pitch us
into chaos, and the rule makers must be
broadly accountable or tyranny will
follow. In our effort to bring order and
fairness to global markets, the Doha
Round of World Trade Organization
negotiations could sabotage democratic
accountability by relegating tough
issues to unelected bureaucrats in
Geneva.
WTO agreements circumscribe much of
what national governments may do to
promote public welfare while managing
competition across international
borders.
For example, the Agreements on
Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT) and
Sanitary and Phytosanitary Standards
(SPS) permit the United States to blocks
imports of tainted food and toys
containing lead paint, but require that
safety regulations be backed by science
and be evenly applied between domestic
and imported products.
The WTO Appellate Body struck down an
EU ban on imported beef from cattle
treated with growth hormones, because
the EU could not produce convincing
scientific evidence of threat to human
health, and the EU permits the sale of
European pork from pigs treated with
hormones.
Other WTO rules ensure fair
competition in transnational markets,
much as competition and antitrust laws
do inside the EU and United States. U.S.
antitrust laws prohibit a Denver tire
manufacturer from using profits it may
obtain by selling at high prices in
Seattle, where it may face little
competition, from selling at prices
below cost and driving out other
businesses in Los Angeles, where
competition may be intense.
Similarly, the WTO Anti-Dumping Code
permits the United States to impose
duties on tires manufactured in Kyoto,
if those are sold in Los Angeles at
prices less than in Japan or below the
Kyoto firms cost of production, if that
harms the U.S. industry.
The application of WTO rules to
national policies, whether to ensure
public health or fair competition, is
complex and often arcane. It can lead
WTO bureaucrats, who settle disputes
among governments, to impose maddening
conditions.
For example, U.S. dumping laws,
written to comply with WTO rules, do not
give the Kyoto tire manufacturer much
credit for charging higher prices in
Seattle if it dumps tires and harms
competitors in Los Angeles by charging
prices there below its costs. Quite
elegantly, less importance is attributed
to the higher prices charged in Seattle
than the predatory prices charged in Los
Angeles when computing the antidumping
duties.
The logic is compelling. You cant
justify speeding at 90 miles an hour in
Los Angeles by driving 15 miles an hour
in Seattle.
This practice is called Zeroing and
makes dumping laws consistent with U.S.
and EU antitrust laws. The WTO Appellate
Body struck down this approach in the
application of both U.S. and EU dumping
laws in a series of decisions from 2001
to 2006.
It is an absolute puzzle why a Denver
tire manufacturer cannot use profits
from sales in Seattle to drive out
competitors in Los Angeles, but the WTO
requires the U.S. government to permit a
Kyoto manufacturer to practice the same
predation.
Whether it is product safety,
antitrust or regulations to protect
public morals, national policies differ
among countries and are not easily
generalized into reasonably fair
international rules.
As with Zeroing, WTO Agreements may
be vague. WTO officials may be forced to
resolve particular disputes, but their
findings can establish quite perverse
competitive rules.
Domestically, national legislatures
make new laws when courts make bad
rulings, and in the WTO, there is always
the next round of multilateral
negotiations to further refine the
rules.
Predictably, the United States wants
to address Zeroing in Doha Round of
negotiations but Japan and Brazil argue
that since the WTO Appellate Body has
ruled, the issue is closed.
That is folly. Zeroing is just the
kind of issue national legislatures
address when judges hand down bad
decisions, domestically, and it is ripe
for renegotiation in the Doha Round.
Similarly, other countries may have
their own frustrations with exasperating
WTO decisions, and those should be
addressed too.
WTO Codes are general and in many
places vague. Failure to review dispute
settlement findings in multilateral
negotiations would turn over too much
rulemaking to unelected bureaucrats in
Geneva. That is a sure prescription for
bad rules and tyranny.
Conceding to Japan and Brazil, by
taking Zeroing off the Doha agenda,
would set a dangerous precedent. It
would undermine confidence that the WTO
can provide sound, democratic
governance, and could ultimately result
in a dismantling of the benefits the
institution provides.
Posted September 17, 2007; revised
September 18.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of
Business and former Chief Economist at
the U.S. International Trade Commission.
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