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Completing the Doha Round: The U.S. Political Realities

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Trade technocrat with limited ties to Bush. Brand new in job ... Less momentum, legacy of Seattle. FTAs expanding. US dual track approach. Not a Bush priority ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Completing the Doha Round: The U.S. Political Realities


1
Completing the Doha Round The U.S. Political
Realities
  • James P. Durling
  • Willkie Farr Gallagher
  • Asia WTO Research Network
  • Taipei Conference
  • April 24, 2006

2
Introduction
  • Can we complete the Doha Round?
  • Important shifts in U.S. political realities.
  • Are the headlines correct?
  • Review where we stand in 2006.
  • Contrast 2006 with 1993, in the final stages of
    the Uruguay Round.

3
The President
  • Clinton 1993
  • First term, with strong party backing
  • Focus on economics from beginning
  • Viewed trade as one of his key issues as a new
    democrat
  • Engaged in issues
  • Bush 2006
  • Second term, with declining party support
  • Focus on security since 9/11 attacks
  • Realizes his entire legacy will be the Iraq War
  • Delegates most issues

4
Presidential Power
  • Clinton 1993
  • Trade and economic issues a priority
  • Approval ratings in the 40-50 range
  • Able to pressure Democrats
  • Aligned with Republicans on trade
  • Less partisan environment
  • Bush 2006
  • Trade secondary to security issues
  • Approval ratings in the 30-40 range
  • No credibility with Democrats
  • Weaker Republican support for trade
  • Extremely partisan environment

5
The USTR
  • Kantor 1993
  • Key political advisor, no trade experience
  • USTR from beginning
  • Signal of commitment to trade issues
  • Reputation for closing deals
  • Schwab 2006
  • Trade technocrat with limited ties to Bush
  • Brand new in job
  • Portman to OBM signals lower priority
  • Less political experience

6
The Congress
  • 1993 Reality
  • Not an election year
  • Democratic control of both houses
  • House D 258, R 176
  • Senate D 57, R 43
  • D did not anticipate 1994 dramatic shift
  • 2006 Reality
  • Election year
  • Republican control of both houses
  • House R 232, D 202
  • Senate R 55, D 45
  • R fear loss of control due to Bush problems

7
The U.S. Political Scene
  • 1993 Reality
  • Stronger President, focused on trade
  • Confident Democrats
  • Non-election year
  • Less attention on GATT, implications
  • Fast track simply assumed1993 extension passed
    House 295-126
  • 2006 Reality
  • Weakened President, focused elsewhere
  • Nervous Republicans
  • Election year
  • Growing attention on WTO
  • Fast track at risk lapsed 1994, 2002 passed
    House 215-212

8
The Status of the Round
  • The 1993 Draft
  • Dunkel had prepared complete draft in December
    2001.
  • Set a clear context for the remaining issues.
  • Dunkel took the criticism, Sutherland closed the
    deal.
  • The 2006 Draft
  • No such draft yet Lamy contemplating such a
    step.
  • Still very new in job, less experience than
    Dunkel.
  • Lamy has to close the deal.

9
The Challenges to be Met
  • 1993 Realities
  • Issues had been narrowed
  • Bringing areas within WTO disciplines
  • Developing countries less engaged
  • 2006 Realities
  • Many issues still open with diverging interests
  • Tightening those disciplines
  • Developing countries more engaged

10
Differing Political Imperatives
  • 1993 Realities
  • Sense of momentum, need to finish
  • FTAs less prevalent
  • US focus on multilateralism
  • Clinton priority
  • Always had fast track authority
  • 2006 Realities
  • Less momentum, legacy of Seattle
  • FTAs expanding
  • US dual track approach
  • Not a Bush priority
  • Fast track is running out of time

11
Conclusions
  • Weaker, less focused president just replaced
    USTR at critical stage
  • More partisan Congress focused on WTO in an
    election year
  • More ground to cover, in more challenging
    international environment
  • Little momentum notwithstanding impending fast
    track deadline.
  • The headlines are correct, but actually
    understate the challenges in 2006
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