Financial crisis boosts trade reform calls
By Jonathan Lynn - Analysis
GENEVA (Reuters) - The hurricane tearing through financial markets has had a muted impact so far on trade flows.
But with inadequate regulation widely blamed for the biggest financial disaster since the 1929 Wall Street Crash, the debacle is reinforcing calls to strengthen the rules of commerce by agreeing a new trade deal.
"If we can conclude the negotiation we can send a positive signal to the world economy, to business people, because the Doha round is a round of liberalization of trade and investment," said China's deputy World Trade Organization (WTO) ambassador, Xiang Zhang.
Conversely, failure to agree a deal now after seven years could lead to a new crisis of confidence in business, said Zhang, who was instrumental in steering China into the WTO.
WTO Director-General Pascal Lamy still hopes to reach an outline deal on agriculture and industrial goods by the end of the year in the WTO's Doha round, launched in 2001, even though ministers failed to secure a breakthrough in July.
Both Lamy and EU trade chief Peter Mandelson warned last week the financial crisis could fan protectionism, which would hurt economic growth, making a new trade deal to secure the benefits of globalization all the more urgent.
The crisis could also monopolize the attention of countries' leaders, distracting them from trade issues and getting a deal.
Agreement on a proposed $700 billion bailout for the U.S. financial industry, which could be announced on Sunday, would go some way to easing that concern.
DELAYED IMPACT
Any trade deal, which would not be finalized until well into 2009 or even 2010 at the earliest, would not have an immediate impact on flows because of implementation periods of 5 years for rich countries and up to 17 years for developing nations.
That delayed economic effect would also argue against any immediate financial market impact, as exchange rates or company earnings would respond only later to changing trade flows.
A deal would boost business confidence, by showing that barriers to business were coming down, that the world trading system was in good shape, and that the international community was able to cooperate to solve global problems, experts said.
In any case, existing WTO deals limit the extent to which countries can raise tariffs, said Fredrik Erixon, head of Brussels trade policy think-tank ECIPE.
"I don't think we are going to see a 1930s repetition where a financial crisis is going to lead to tit-for-tat economic nationalism as it did then," he said.
The prospects for a new trade deal opening up markets may not seem propitious in a climate where deregulation is blamed for the crisis, and Anglo-Saxon laissez-faire liberalization has come under attack from French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck. Continued...




