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A New Opportunity in Cancun's Failure
The failure of September's global trade talks in Cancun may have indicated disagreement on a global level, but the unified voice of
a small coalition of countries showed that smaller scale negotiations can be very effective. The emergence of the G-22 bloc of
smaller countries, says development expert Balakrishnan Rajagopal, harkens back to the Bandung meeting of 29 formerly
colonized countries in 1955. As with the Non-Aligned bloc that developed out of the Bandung meeting, the G-22 is fighting for fairer
rules and better positions vis-à-vis the giants of the current world order. One new turn of the G-22, however, is the rise of civil
society organizations that are able and interested in working with developing country governments on projects - such as poverty
alleviation - that serve all their goals. Moreover, the 'core' of the G-22 - India, Brazil, and South Africa - are industrial democracies
that are gaining more and more economic strength through trade with each other, bypassing the more traditional powerful
economies such as the US, the UK. If Cancun is any indication, Rajagopal says, these new coalitions may mean a stronger and
more effective voice for developing countries on the global trade scene. - YaleGlobal
Alliance of civil society and developing country governments could alter global trade rules
Balakrishnan Rajagopal
3 December 2003
CAMBRIDGE, USA: In 1955, twenty-nine nations from Africa and
Asia gathered in Bandung, Indonesia in the first-ever meeting of
the former-colonized, non-white nations. The emergence of the
bloc of G-22 countries at the recent Cancun World Trade
Organization meeting can be seen as a continuation of the spirit of
Bandung, a desire by Third World states to catch up with the
North and effectively challenge the overwhelming power of their
former colonial masters. And just as Bandung defined North-South
and led to the formation of the Non-Aligned Group of countries,
the new trade bloc will likely have a far-reaching impact.
Demonstrators clash with police in Cancun: Cooperation with
governments may be a better bet to improve the global trade
regime.
At Cancun, the G-22 group of developing countries, which
comprises well over 50 percent of the world's population and
includes Brazil, China, India and South Africa, was able to present
a coherent stand on a variety of issues that are of importance to
the Third World in trade negotiations. The issues of particular
concern were cross-border investment, competition policies, trade
facilitation, and government procurement. Cancun also marked a
new solidarity between G-22 states and a coalition of civil society
organizations from around the world.
How should we interpret
these new developments?
Is G-22 the re-initiation of a Third World bloc, carrying forward the spirit of Bandung? And
what is the significance of the new alliance between Southern states and a global social
movement focused on economic justice?
First, it is likely that the G-22 is here to stay, though some members of the group such as
Peru and Colombia have opted out under US pressure. The Chairman of the US Senate
Finance Committee, Charles Grassley, has warned that the behavior of Latin American
countries at Cancun would influence future decisions. Yet despite such pressure from the
US and the EU, the G-22 seems to have a core that is capable of holding on.
That 'core' consists of the three large Southern industrial democracies - Brazil, India and South Africa - which are now attempting
to challenge the hegemony of Northern democracies. They have recently formed a G-3 - perhaps as a counterweight to the G-7 -
and have announced a range of measures to strengthen their trilateral relationship. Trade
between the three has increased rapidly in recent years; Brazil and India are exchanging
top-level visits; and MERCOSUR is concluding preferential trade agreements with South
Africa and India. In 2002, Brazilian exports to India were larger in percentage terms than to
any other country. The total bilateral trade in 2002 reached US$1.2 billion. If similar
relations emerge between other members of the G-22, especially China, Egypt, and
Turkey, it would constitute a very significant challenge to Euro-American hegemony of the
world economy. Celso Amorim, the foreign minister of Brazil, doesn't hide that the G-3 aims
for expansion to China and perhaps even to Russia.
Consider this. Between 2000 and the end of 2002 China received 21 Brazilian trade missions, and Brazil received 24 Chinese
trade missions during the same period. In May of this year exports from Brazil to China increased by 375 percent compared to
three years previously. Moreover, Brazilian exports to India were larger in percentage terms than to any other country including the
US, UK, China, Germany, and Japan.
Along with their closer economic ties, the G-3 democracies may influence global politics as
well - all share an ideological critique of the current world order, which they perceive to be
western-dominated. They may jointly advocate for global changes, from the reform of the
UN Security Council to reduction of agricultural subsidies.
Secondly, the new alliance between civil society and Third World states at Cancun is also
likely to be a powerful world political player, and could last for decades. The civil society
movement began with the onslaught against the WTO meeting in Seattle in 1999, which
also collapsed without an agreement, and has continued in virtually every world economic
gathering. The World Social Forum in Porto Allegre gave shape to the institutionalization of "alternative-globalization" viewpoints.
For middle-ranking states such as India or Brazil, the emergence of this movement is a useful political development which gives
them additional tools. Civil society actors who may oppose the neoliberal reforms or right-wing rulers of host states are often willing
to work with their state representatives in international negotiations when doing so is clearly pro-poor or pro-environment. The
deepening of democracy in major Southern states has also led to linkages inside countries between ruling elites and civil society
actors. The clearest example of this comes from Brazil, where the Lula-led Workers Party continues to have strong links to trade
unions and to social movements of landless workers. In this sense, what these countries are now saying is not very different from
what the US used to claim in trade negotiations: we are a democracy and therefore it is harder for us to make too many painful
reforms. Also, in these Southern countries, democratic deepening is also a nationalist enterprise, which leads elites to strive for
grand bargains in trade negotiations as it solidifies their political gains domestically. The nationalist impulse in democracies such as
India comes from a sense that as large, important civilizations, they ought to assume their proper place in world affairs, and they
see their increasing economic power as key to that goal.
The civil society-state linkage has also emerged at a more pragmatic level. Organizations
such as Oxfam have often provided technical assistance on complex trade issues, such as
by providing background papers, to poor, smaller countries that lack such knowledge.
When global power depends so much on expertise, the provision of such assistance by
NGOs enables poor countries to have more say in negotiations. The civil society movement
is not without internal tensions, especially about attitudes towards the WTO and trade
liberalization in general. Nevertheless, the coalition of states and civil society organizations
seems likely to persist, and will affect future trade negotiations and exert a profound
influence on world politics.
Guessing the future course of the G-22 is hazardous, but if what happened in the recent
FTAA (Free Trade Area of the Americas) talks in Miami is any yardstick, the small countries are likely to be bullied into accepting
bilateral deals with the US and EU while the larger ones, facing domestic opposition to liberalization, will survive by accepting
whatever they can.
The meeting in Bandung in 1955 was a milestone simply because it took place - a meeting of the former colonized attempting to
define a 'third way' free of western and Soviet hegemony. It was also important because it placed on the global agenda issues such
as racism and decolonization, which had not until then been considered subjects of global politics. On its face, Cancun was less
momentous. Nevertheless, the emergence of state-civil society coalitions, aided by the increasing power of middle-ranking
countries, may mount a serious challenge to western hegemony over the long-term.
Balakrishnan Rajagopal is Ford International Assistant Professor of Law and Development and Director of the Program on Human
Rights and Justice at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is the author of "International Law from below: Development,
Social Movements and Third World Resistance" (Cambridge University Press, 2003).
Rights: © 2003 Yale Center for the Study of Globalization