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Home arrow Trade Campaign arrow Agriculture arrow WTO: CALL FOR A STANDSTILL IN GATS NEGOTIATIONS

WTO: CALL FOR A STANDSTILL IN GATS NEGOTIATIONS PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 15 November 2005
15 November 2005
Dear Member of Parliament,
From 13-18 December 2005, Trade Ministers will meet in Hong Kong to decide the future course of global negotiations in the World Trade Organisation (WTO).
The undersigned social movements, trade unions and civil society organisations are writing to all members of the Indian Parliament with several urgent concerns on substantive issues with regard to India’s current position in one of the key negotiating areas: the WTO’s General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). Our concerns are further elaborated in Annexure 1, which is attached to this letter.
1. Undermining National Well-Being and Welfare
Over 160 services sectors are in the offing for liberalisation under the GATS and it seems clear that the Ministry of Commerce is not sufficiently equipped to understand the complex economic, social and environmental implications of bringing these sectors into the WTO framework.
It is crucial that lessons from already existing liberalisation and privatisation attempts inform India’s negotiating position in the GATS. This assessment is yet to be done by the Indian Government. Opening up the services sector through the GATS without adequate assessment of the impacts of liberalisation and privatisation on national employment, livelihoods, equity and welfare is likely to result in far reaching negative impacts to a broad cross-section of people, particularly those in the low-income brackets and situated in rural areas.
2. Undermining Policy Sovereignty
India’s GATS commitments will seriously compromise India’s policy sovereignty, and render the Indian state powerless to introduce new regulations, and to penalise foreign services providers for high costs, poor quality and inadequate access to services by Indian consumers.
Bound commitments under the GATS will limit the ability of the central and state governments to enact and enforce domestic regulations in the public interest relating to licensing, technical standards and qualification requirements. GATS clauses of market access and non-discrimination to foreign services providers will weaken the power of government to supply essential services to vulnerable sections of society through cross-subsidisation. They will also restrict the government’s ability to further develop capacity in the Indian services sector through public procurement of goods & services.
3. Who is driving the Negotiating Agenda?
An examination of present negotiations shows that the aggressive market access demands from developed country WTO members will not be beneficial to developing country members. Groups such as the EU are demanding aggressive liberalisation in Mode 3 (Foreign Direct Investment) and are calling for restrictions on foreign ownership to be removed. Making binding commitments under Mode 3 will seriously undermine the ability of governments to regulate foreign investment in the services sector.
Also questionable are the gains that India hopes to get from liberalisation through the Mode 4 route (temporary movement of labour). One of India’s key demands is that the US increase the quota of H-1B visas from its present GATS commitment of 65,000 to about 100,000. This mirrors the demands of big services corporations in the US. India has narrowed Mode 4 negotiations to the movement of highly skilled professionals and does not take into account unskilled or lower skilled workers. It is indeed unfortunate that India’s Mode 4 positions are ‘captured’ by business lobbies.
4. Breaking Ranks Outside and Within
India was at the forefront of resistance by developing countries in the Doha (2001) and Cancun (2003) Ministerial Meetings to attempts by rich WTO members to introduce investment into the WTO. However, it appears that India is now no longer interested in maintaining collective positions with other developing countries to resist pressures by developed countries for the indiscriminate liberalisation of services. India has joined a select core group that is now driving the negotiations in the direction of “benchmarking” or “complementary approaches.”
5. The Urgent Need for Parliamentary Scrutiny
Larger public interest cannot be traded away to maintain the myth of multilateralism through India’s commitments in the WTO, or to benefit a handful of domestic commercial enterprises that seek to expand their business opportunities to other countries. We must bear in mind that commitments under the WTO are irreversible and that policy actions have far reaching impacts, some of which may not be visible in the short term. Allowing water, energy, credit and banking to come under a weak regulatory environment that is biased towards corporate control will further undermine the productive capacities of India’s communities, workers and farmers (majority of Indian farmers are subsistence oriented peasant producers). Access to affordable services is crucial to building strong, healthy and productive societies. To defend the integrity of the services sector is to defend life.
Though able and intelligent, trade officials in the Commerce Ministry are not the best judges of ground level impacts of possible liberalisation commitments. Substantive consultations with regional and local governments, policy makers in critical sectors such as health, education, water and sanitation, environment, financial services, labour and social welfare, and with a broad cross section of civil society--including workers, unions, farmers, fisher-folk groups, women’s organisations and urban poor groups--is absolutely critical to fill these knowledge gaps. But to date, the few attempts by the Ministry of Commerce to engage in such discussions have been restricted to an extremely narrow base of constituencies and biased towards pro-GATS lobbies, while apprehensions voiced by those who would be most negatively affected by GATS commitments are not reflected in the Ministry’s positions.
Given this situation we urge you as an elected representative of the people of India to:
1. Call for an immediate halt on negotiations on services liberalisation under the GATS.
2. Unequivocally oppose all proposals for “benchmarking” or “complementary approaches” to services liberalisation.
3. Reject Mode 4 concessions as an incentive to open up India’s services sectors to liberalisation. Mode 4 does not promise any relief for the unemployment problem in India, since the EU, US and other rich countries will likely liberalize entry only for the most highly skilled professionals from India and other developing countries, thus worsening brain drain.
4. Demand that an inter-sectoral team appointed by the Indian Parliament conduct a comprehensive assessment of the impact of past liberalisation and privatisation of services.
5. Ensure that the Indian Governments position towards Hong Kong is comprehensively debated and decided in the Parliament
Services are, in one sense, the backbone of our societies and economies. Every aspect of our lives, from education, health, environment and transportation to energy, water, food, hotels and finance, are dependent on services. We cannot let these be taken out of democratic control and into the hands of a few Commerce Ministry bureaucrats to be signed away as trade-offs in the WTO.
This time around, the people of India refuse to be confronted with a “fait accompli” as in India’s previous WTO commitments. India’s citizens will challenge any commitment made without due democratic processes.
We appeal to parliamentarians to call for a complete standstill in GATS negotiations until the above issues are appropriately addressed.

SIGNATORIES AS OF NOVEMBER 16 2005

1) Adivasi Jangal Janjeevan Andolan, Dadra & Nagar Haveli
2) Akshara- Women's Resource Centre, Mumbai
3) All India Bank Officers Association (AIBOA)
4) All India Bank Employees Association (AIBEA)
5) All India LIC Employees Federation
6) All India Port and Dock Workers Federation (Workers)
7) Avani Organic Producer Company Limited, Maharastra
8) Bharat Krishak Samaj Maharashtra State, Jalgaon
9) Bombay Urban Industrial League for Development, Mumbai
10) Brihan Mumbai Mahapalika Shikshak Sabha, Mumbai
11) Central Government Employees Coordination Committee
12) Capital Foundation Society, New Delhi
13) Centre for Education and Communication
14) Centre for Indian Trade Unions (CITU)
15) Centre for Organisation Research and Education (CORE), Manipur
16) Centre for Study of Global Trade System and Development, New Delhi
17) Combat Law Magazine
18) Corporate Accountability Desk of The Other Media, Chennai
19) Delhi Science Forum
20) DET, India
21) Equitable Tourism Options (EQUATIONS), Bangalore
22) Environment Support Group, Bangalore
23) Explorations, Mumbai
24) General Insurance Employees All India Association
25) GAIA (Global Alternate Information Applications), Thrissur
26) Girni Kamgar Sangharsh Samiti, Mumbai 
27) Gram Panchayat Leaders Association, Madurai
28) Green Brigade, Karnataka
29) Focus on the Global South, Mumbai
30) Hind Khet Mazdoor Sabha (HKMS)
31) Hind Mazdoor Sabha
32) Human Rights Law Network
33) India Centre for Human Rights and the Law, Mumbai
34) Indian Farmers Movement, (INFAM) Kerala
35) Indian Social Institute, New Delhi
36) Institute for Community Organisation and Research, Mumbai
37) Kabani –The other direction, Wayanad
38) Kamgar Va Majur Sangh, Thane
39) Karnataka Rajya Ryota Sangha (KRRS)
40) Kashtakari Sanghatna, Maharashtra
41) Kaviri Trust, Trichy
42) Kerala Swantantra Matsya Thoyillali Federation (Kerala Independent Fishworkers Federation)
43) Kisan Vigyan Kendra, Uttar Pradesh
44) Labour File Magazine
45) Lok Raj Sangathan
46) Maharastra Bandhkam Va Lakud Kamgar Sanghatana (MBLKS), Maharashtra
47) Maharastra State Government Employees Confederation,
48) Maharastra State Zilla Parishad Employees Confederation
49) Mahalir Vilipunarvu Sangam (Women Awareness Association) Namakkal, Tamil Nadu
50) Malabar Coastal Institute for Training Research & Action (MCITRA), Kerala
51) Narmada Bachao Andolan (NBA)
52) National Alliance of Peoples Movements (NAPM)
53) National Campaign Committee for Rural Workers (NCCRW), Maharashtra
54) National Forum of Fishworkers (NFF)
55) National Union of Seafarers of India (NUSI)
56) National Working Group on Patent Laws
57) National Confederation of Officers Associations of Central Public Sector Undertakings (NCOA) New Delhi
58) Open Space, Bangalore
59) Pasumai Trust, Tamil Nadu 
60) People’s Forum for Human Rights, Tamil Nadu  
61) Peoples' Political Front ( PPF)
62) Plachimada Solidarity Committee, Kerala
63) Rozgar Hakk Samiti, Mumbai
64) Samajwadi Jana Parishad (SJP)
65) Samatha, Hyderabad
66) Shetkari Shetmajdoor Panchayat, Maharastra
67) SRED, Arakkonam
68) Success Trust, Pudukkottai
69) Sudar Society, Karur
70) Tamil Nadu Fish Workers Union
71) Tamil Nadu Kalludaikkum Tholilalar Sangam (TKTS)
72) Vesa, Nagappattinam
73) Vikas Adhyan Kendra, Mumbai
74) Youth for Unity and Voluntary Action (YUVA), Mumbai 

 
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