Transforming the WTO for Inclusive and Resilient Globalisation
Yose Rizal Damuri, Sanchita Basu Das Policy Brief
This Policy Brief is offered to the Saudi T20 process, as a recommendation to the G20 in 2020.
Since the end of WWII, multilateralism has been a pillar of global peace and prosperity. Recent disaffection with globalization and global governance threatens the rules-based order and makes it difficult to address inherently globalized problems such as pandemics and climate change. To safeguard the benefits of globalization and ensure it “leaves no one behind”, this policy brief recommends the establishment of a G20 Working Group on the Future of Multilateralism tasked with making the global governance architecture fit for the 21st century, with an eye toward accommodating institutional diversity and demands for policy autonomy while preventing beggar-thy-neighbor policies and ensuring the provision of global public goods. The mandate of the working group will be to draft and agree on a set of G20 Principles for Sustainable Multilateralism to make the multilateral system effective, legitimate, and sustainable.
Over the last 75 years, multilateralism has been a strong driver and pillar of global integration, peace, and prosperity. It has also been central to the past successes of the G20 in addressing the global financial crisis and promoting international financial stability since then.
Recently, however, disaffection with globalization and current forms of global governance has emerged, threatening the very edifice of the rules-based multilateral order, partly because of competing economic models that have opened up issues of fairness and of the distribution of the costs and benefits of maintaining the existing multilateral system. The political discontent with multilateralism, most notably in the United States, is associated with the failure of the post-Bretton Woods system to stem the tide of slow growth, rising inequality, rising migration, social fragmentation and job insecurity associated with technological change, offshoring and automation.
Many of the world’s biggest challenges are not a result of disagreements about how to cooperate, but a profound loss of direction about why to cooperate in the first place. A sense of multilateralism creeping beyond the boundaries set by the principle of subsidiarity has created a backlash of populism, protectionism, and nationalism. The core goals and values of multilateralism have been forgotten, and a growing number of governments lack the domestic backing required to forge stronger multilateral ties. Unfortunately, while stakeholders debate the merits of global cooperation, the window of opportunity to address a myriad of inherently globalized problems––such as climate change, financial fragility, and pandemics––is closing and important institutions like the WTO can no longer carry out core functions of trade dispute resolution.
For the past two decades, calls have grown louder to reform the current multilateral system to reflect changes in the economic, demographic and political weight of advanced and emerging economies. Political rigidities in multilateral organizations – such as the IMF, World Bank, UN, WTO and others – have prevented adequate reform from being achieved. At the same time, disillusionment with multilateralism led to consideration of various alternatives, such as replacement of multilateral agreements by bilateral deals or the replacement of multilateral rules by rules for likeminded or geographically proximate countries. None of these alternatives can substitute for true multilateralism, however, since a globalized world facing inherently global challenges requires globally concerted action.
All too often treated as an end in itself, multilateralism must be reimagined as a means to empowering citizens and enhancing social prosperity. While in practice this may entail a thinner globalization, a scaled back but inclusive and sustainable multilateralism is preferable to no multilateralism at all. The challenge is to find a set of legitimate general principles to guide and constrain global rulemaking that all nations can agree on and that “leaves no one behind”.
The COVID-19 catastrophe has laid bare key vulnerabilities in today’s hyper-globalized mode of production as well as important gaps in the global governance architecture. The current configuration of economic globalization was designed to maximize efficiency, minimize transaction costs, and reap the benefits of scale. Politicians promised that the rising tide would lift all boats. But while global GDP has risen quite rapidly over the past decades, globalization also resulted in widening inequalities within and across countries, exposed nations to unquantifiable levels of systemic fragility. Not surprisingly, COVID-19 and the resulting economic downturn are only aggravating existing social inequalities within and among countries. Once again as in the aftermath of 2008, it is the most vulnerable and marginalized—poor countries as well as vulnerable people within richer countries—that are hit the hardest.
Moreover, the ever-widening scope of globalization also undermined democracy by reducing nations’ sovereign policy autonomy, inhibiting often desirable policy diversity and experimentation in the process. As Dani Rodrik has argued, there is a trilemma preventing simultaneous achievement of deep globalization, national sovereignty and democracy. Far too often, small and medium sized nations (particularly in the Global South) have been forced to choose between gaining access to global markets and keeping policy space for the pursuit of their national development strategies.
While COVID-19 is holding up a magnifying glass to deep- and hard-set structural problems in the global governance architecture, even before its emergence the world was already fast approaching irreversible thresholds and tipping points on several global challenges, most notably in the realms of climate change and artificial intelligence. The window of opportunity to address some of these problems is closing; the catastrophe brought on by COVID-19 has only added greater urgency to the need for a multilateralism that can deal with the huge dangers that lie ahead.
To safeguard its benefits and ensure it works in the service of all nations and people, multilateralism needs to address its discontents and evolve to be fit for purpose in an era of renewed great power competition and a decoupling of economic prosperity from social prosperity. A multilateralism fit for the 21st century ought to prioritize the wellbeing of the worst-off, build much more robustness into the global system, and accommodate legitimate demands for policy autonomy, while ensuring the prevention of beggar-thy-neighbor policies, the provision of global public goods, and the management of the global commons. This new compromise should be bound by a negotiated understanding of where to position international institutions within the globalization trilemma.
Recommendation
To lay the groundwork for an inclusive dialogue in the G20, we recommend the establishment of a G20 Working Group on the Future of Multilateralism to develop a set of principles that can be built on to create a new pact on multilateralism, with an eye toward accepting institutional diversity while preventing beggar-thy-neighbor policies and ensuring the provision of global public goods and management of the global commons.
The concrete mandate of the G20 Working Group on the Future of Multilateralism would be to design and achieve consensus on the traffic rules needed to achieve adequate multilateral cooperation and coordination while ensuring that the multilateral system remains democratically legitimate and politically sustainable. To this end, the Working Group should seek to elicit, classify, and compare the views of stakeholders from a broad range of geographies and substantive policy areas on multilateralism and new paradigms of institutional governance.
What are the major normative gaps today related to the global governance system and its role? In what policy domains does it make sense for global rules and institutions to constrain national action? What are the appropriate criteria for selecting them? Does the current multilateral system suffer from a democratic deficit? If so, can it be made democratically legitimate and politically sustainable simply by granting nation-states more policy space? In such a world of potentially democracy-enhancing global governance, what essential traffic rules or general principles are needed to ensure basic cooperation and coordination? How can greater robustness be achieved? How must existing institutions evolve and adjust, and where are new institutions required? Given the desirability of subsidiarity, what is the role of subnational actors in this framework? Should non-state actors (including civil society and corporations) use market and social mechanisms to catalyze collective action? The Working Group should address these and related questions.
Looking to 2021, a key outcome of this Working Group could be the consensus drafting and approval of G20 Principles for Sustainable Multilateralism that respond to the above realities, challenges and opportunities. These Principles would act as a set of general “traffic rules that help vehicles of different size and shape and traveling at varying speeds navigate around each other, rather than impose an identical car or a uniform speed limit on all”.
The following are suggested guidelines for such a set of generalizable principles that all countries could agree on to deliver a more inclusive and sustainable multilateralism.
This list is by no means exhaustive; its purpose is to identify consensus “north stars” for guiding a G20 exercise to imagine a better multilateralism for all.
The G20 is the only existing forum in which consensus for a systematic and coherent reform of the multilateral system could plausibly be achieved. While the new multilateralism may need to build on the existing patchwork of plurilateral, multi-level, multi-channel coalitions and alliances designed to address specific overlapping interests governed by general principles and guided by multilateral consensus, only the G20, with its economic and geopolitical weight and its myriad engagement groups, has sufficient scope and scale to police compliance with such principles and to serve as platform for the multi-stakeholder dialogue needed to achieve consensus.
