ICC Denounces Growing Protectionist Trend in G20 Countries

June 2, 2011

The Paris-based International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) has issued a statement urging G20 leaders to “keep markets open to trade, following worrying results from a recently released WTO-OECD-UNCTAD report that G20 countries are increasing protectionist measures.”

The joint report by the World Trade Organization (WTO), the Organization on Economic Co-operation (OECD) and United Nations Committee on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) on G20 trade and investment measures, released 24 May 2011, concluded that “more new trade restrictive measures have been implemented in the past six-month period than in any previously reported period,” said the ICC. “From October 2010 to April 2011 alone, G20 members implemented 30 new export restrictions.”

The new measures contradict earlier pledges made by G20 countries at the 2010 Seoul Summit to resist protectionism until the end of 2013. The ICC explained that “G20 leaders had agreed early that year, at their Toronto Summit, to withdraw any protectionist measures in the pipeline, including export restrictions and WTO–inconsistent measures for stimulating exports. The WTO-OECD-UNCTAD report reveals that the exact opposite is taking place.

“The joint report further confirms an ICC-commissioned study, released by the Peterson Institute for International Economics in 2010, stating that all G20 countries have implemented protectionist trade measures since 2008. According to Global Trade Alert, G20 countries applied discriminatory measures worth US$1.6 trillion, or 10 percent of all world trade, in 2008 alone.”

ICC Secretary General Jean-Guy Carrier further observed: “Given that the results of the WTO-OECD-UNCTAD report are based on self-reporting from G20 countries, and that they most likely reported only what was necessary, we can assume that trade protectionism is actually worse. This worrying trend undermines policies for economic recovery and job creation, at a time when the world economy remains at risk.”

Concerns in the global business community about this protectionist trend have prompted the ICC to put into place its own indicator to monitor market openness. It said the “The Open Market Index will provide an annual ranking of the 50 top-trading countries by order of their openness to trade and investment. This private sector indicator to monitor protectionism will be launched ahead of the G20 Summit – being held in Cannes, France on 3-4 November 2011.”

ICC Chairman Gerard Worms called on G20 leaders to “come together to ensure the successful conclusion of the Doha Round.” He stressed that this is now “more critical than ever given that protectionist measures, which they had committed to scaling back, have actually been increasing since the financial crisis began. A successful conclusion of the Doha Round in 2011 would inject crucial trade growth into the global economy, boosting business confidence and fueling the private investment that is the key to creating jobs”.

Achieving the Doha Development Agenda would provide the world economy with a debt-free stimulus package, thereby sustaining global economic growth. Implementing what is already on the table would generate a US$68 billion annual increase in world exports. But, by some estimates, a final Doha Round agreement could eventually contribute as much as US$280 billion annually to global GDP.

Source: International Chamber of Commerce

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