Tag: trade policy

  • Our top 7 global trade policy developments in 2020

    Our top 7 global trade policy developments in 2020

    Image by druckfuchs from Pixabay

    Alicia Nicholls

    Season’s greetings! It is that time of the year when we on the CTLD blog do our annual Global Trade Policy Year in Review! And wow, has it been a year! In the Caribbean, we saw the renewal by the United States (US) of the Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act (CBTPA) extending preferential access to the US market for qualifying goods from beneficiary Caribbean countries up until 2030. We also saw a formalisation of greater collaboration between the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) and the regional private sector. But what about the global stage?

    In our final blog article for the year, we will look at some of the top trade policy developments globally which impact on the Caribbean and on which we will be keeping an eye in 2021.

    1. COVID-19 impact on global trade and FDI

    This time last year we heard rumblings of a new virus which had broken out in Wuhan province in China. However, most of us did not foresee that a year later the world would be in the grip of a full-blown pandemic which has, at the time of writing, killed 1.69 million people globally.

    Globally, the pandemic has had a significant impact on global supply chains and global travel trade. In its October 2020 forecast, the WTO predicts a 9.2% decline in the volume of world merchandise trade for 2020, followed by a 7.2% rise in 2021. According to UNCTAD’s October forecast, global FDI flows contracted 49% in the first half of 2020 due to the COVID-19 outbreak.

    While the COVID-19 death toll in the Caribbean still compares ‘favourably’ to other regions internationally, the economic toll on the region, especially its tourist-dependent economies, has been less forgiving. The region’s tourism-based economies are predicted by the IMF to contract significantly (-9.9%) in 2020.

    The good news is that there are now two promising vaccines which have already gotten approval by the UK and US governments so far. However, with on-going spikes, the news of a new variant of the virus affecting the UK and uncertainty over how soon poorer countries will have access to a vaccine, the COVID-19 pandemic and its fall-out will be with us well into 2021 with implications for both policy makers and businesses engaging in cross-border trade.

    2. WTO at a cross-roads

    With the WTO celebrating its 25th anniversary of existence this year, one would be forgiven for having some optimism that there would be some progress on the myriad of issues facing the organization, of which the Appellate Body crisis is among the most dire. However, many of the problems plaguing the guardian of the rules-based multilateral system have spilled over into this year, while some new problems have cropped up.

    Perhaps, most frontally is that the WTO now faces a ‘leadership void’ following the surprise resignation by then Director-General Roberto Azevedo in May 2020 and the US’ blocking of the appointment of Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala who beat out seven other candidates to be deemed the candidate most likely to achieve consensus. A highly qualified development economist, Dr. Iweala’s appointment would have been historic for being not only the WTO’s first female DG, but its first from Africa. The question of the DG selection has been postponed to next year, another item on the WTO’s growing list of unfinished business.

    Negotiations on eliminating harmful fisheries subsidies will continue next year as the much hoped for breakthrough on an agreement did not materialise. WTO Members also failed to agree on a proposed waiver to the Trade-related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) Agreement to temporarily exempt COVID-19 drugs, vaccines etc from intellectual property rights to assist developing countries’ ability to access to these drugs. The WTO Twelfth Ministerial Conference due this year had to be postponed owing to the COVID-19 pandemic. According to Bloomberg’s reporting, a special General Council meeting will be held early next year to decide on the location and date.

    That is not to say that there has not been some progress, however. Joint Statement Initiative negotiations have begun with the hope of an agreement on investment facilitation for development, for example. Some WTO members, spearheaded by the EU, were able to agree on a workaround to the Appellate Body crisis by creating the Multi-Party Interim Arbitration Appeal (MPIA) mechanism but this is only a temporary solution and still has not received significant uptake by the WTO membership as yet.

    Without doubt, the WTO remains at a cross-roads which puts the efficacy and future of the rules-based multilateral trading system at stake. What direction the WTO will take hinges a lot on what will be the incoming Biden/Harris administration’s approach to these issues.

    3. US Election – A reverse course in US trade policy?

    Come January 20, 2021, President-elect Joseph R. Biden will be the new President of the US and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, the daughter of Indian and Jamaican parentage, will be the VP. President-elect Biden has openly embraced a return to multilateralism, a stark departure from the ‘America-first’ policies pursued by his predecessor.

    On China, however, there might not be much policy divergence between the Biden and Trump administrations, at least not initially. The nomination of Taiwanese-American attorney and chief trade counsel for the United States House Committee on Ways and Means, Katherine Tai, as the next US Trade Representative (USTR) demonstrates that China will be an important policy issue for the incoming Biden/Harris administration. Ms. Tai was formerly the USTR’s chief counsel for China trade enforcement, signaling a possible continued hard-lined stance towards China under the administration.

    Importantly, as noted previously, it remains to be seen what will be the incoming Biden/Harris administration’s approach to the current crises facing the WTO, including the WTO DG and Appellate Body issues.

    4. RCEP Signed

    China, Japan and South Korea – three of the countries in Asia with which the Caribbean has the most trade with that region – were among the signatories on November 15, 2020 to the long-awaited Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) agreement on the sidelines of the virtually held 37th Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) summit. RCEP is the first mega-regional trade agreement (MRTA) to be concluded since the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) was signed in 2016. The benefits of RCEP to the parties extend beyond merely lowering tariffs. Although, some parties to the RCEP agreement already have FTAs with each other, RCEP will streamline customs procedures, converge rules of origin requirements and promote regulatory harmony across the fifteen parties. India, notably, has not signed on to the agreement, having pulled out of the negotiations last year. As Caribbean countries seek to expand and diversify their trade with non-traditional partners, such as with those in the Asia-Pacific region, the region should consider what possible opportunities RCEP might pose for Caribbean-Asia/Pacific relations.

    5. Post- Brexit Negotiations: Still no deal

    The UK’s departure from the EU on January 31 this year triggered an eleven month transition period due to end December 31 and during which time the UK remains in the EU customs union and single market and is bound by EU rules as if it were still an EU member.

    As at the time of writing this article, the UK and EU are still in the throes of negotiations to conclude a trade agreement which would ensure a smooth transition, especially for UK and EU businesses reliant on EU-UK trade. The negotiations will continue this Monday after another deadline (Sunday) was missed. The talks are reportedly hung up on three main issues: fishing, ‘leveling the playing field’ and governance. Both the EU and UK have announced contingency measures in the event of a ‘no deal’ scenario.

    From January 1, 2021, the UK will no longer benefit from EU third country agreements. In order to maintain preferential access to those markets, the UK has been signing roll-over agreements, largely replicating the provisions of the existing EU agreement with that third State. The UK signed a similar agreement with CARIFORUM countries – the UK-CARIFORUM EPA – which rolls over the provisions of the EU-CARIFORUM EPA (which remains in force for CARIFORUM and the EU-27 countries) to ensure that CARIFORUM firms and traders would have continued preferential access to the UK market and vice versa.

    6. UNCTAD XV postponed to April 2021

    UNCTAD XV, which was due to be hosted this year in Barbados, has been postponed to October 2021 due to uncertainty surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic. Barbados would be the first small State to host an UNCTAD quadrennial. Hosting and chairing the UNCTAD XV will give Barbados the opportunity to influence UNCTAD’s global trade and development agenda for the next four years and will definitely be a space to watch in 2021.

    7. Post-Cotonou agreement reached between EU and ACP

    On December 3, negotiators from the European Union (EU) and the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States (OACPS) (formerly known as the ACP) finally reached a twenty-year post-Cotonou partnership agreement. Though the post-Cotonou Partnership Agreement is not a trade agreement, it is an overarching framework for the relationship between the EU-27 and the 79 members of the OACPS and covers issues such as human rights, sustainable development, the environment, among other things. The agreement will be signed later in 2021. The OACPS, whose name was changed and a revised Georgetown Agreement adopted at its December 2019 meeting, is currently embarking on a restructuring to make the organisation ‘fit for purpose’.

    We look forward to monitoring these developments in 2021.

    Alicia Nicholls, B.Sc., M.Sc., LL.B. is a trade and development consultant with a keen interest in sustainable development, international law and trade. All views herein expressed are her personal views and should not be attributed to any institution with which she may from time to time be affiliated. You can read more of her commentaries and follow her on Twitter @LicyLaw.

  • Caribbean Trade and Development News Digest – June 28-July 4, 2020

    Caribbean Trade and Development News Digest – June 28-July 4, 2020

    Welcome to the Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest for the week of June 28- July 4, 2020! We are happy to bring you the major trade and development headlines and analysis from across the Caribbean Region and the world from the past week.

    THIS WEEK’S HIGHLIGHTS

    The UNCTAD-OECD-WTO Report on G20 Trade and Investment Measures released June 29, 2020 found that during the review period, G20 economies implemented 154 new trade and trade-related measures, 95 of them trade-facilitating and 59 trade-restrictive. It further found that “of these measures, 93 – or about 60% – were linked to the COVID-19 pandemic”. Read the full report here.

    The USMCA, the replacement for NAFTA, has taken effect but there is no end to the trade tensions among the three parties.

    This week the Hague-based International Court of Justice (ICJ) held its first virtual hearing on whether it has jurisdiction in the territorial dispute between Guyana and Venezuela to find that the 1899 arbitral award is binding. Read here

    The big news this week in the Caribbean has been the decision by leaders of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) to dissolve regional air carrier LIAT. However, not all leaders are in favour. Antigua & Barbuda Prime Minister Gaston Browne has indicated his disagreement with giving up on the regional airline.

    CARICOM leaders met virtually on Friday, July 3. Barbados Prime Minister, Mia Amor Mottley, who held the six month rotating chairmanship of the regional bloc since January 2020, officially handed over to incoming chairman St Vincent & the Grenadines Prime Minister, Ralph Gonsalves. Watch a video from the Hand Over here.

    REGIONAL NEWS

    Guyana short-lists 19 companies to market its oil

    Reuters: A group of 19 companies including oil majors, trading houses and state-run firms were approved by Guyana’s government for the next phase of a competitive process aimed at selecting an agent for marketing its share of crude produced in the country. Read more

    Guyana Wants World Court To Confirm Border With Venezuela

    News Americas Now: Guyana may be embroiled in its own election fiasco, but it took time out Tuesday to urge the world court, the International Court of Justice (ICJ), to confirm the border between Venezuela and the then-colony of British Guiana once and for all. Read more

    Tourism bodies get funding to help in fight against illegal trade in wildlife

    Stabroek: The Tourism and Hospitality Association of Guyana (THAG) and the Guyana Tourism Authority (GTA) have received funding from the Latin American Trade Association (LATA) Foundation to create a Counter Wildlife Trafficking Communications Toolkit. Read more

    MSME Sector hard hit by COVID-19

    Barbados Advocate: The micro, small and medium enterprise (MSME) sector has been hard hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, as businesses have reported a fall-off in revenue due to measures taken to curb the spread of the virus and employers opted to go the route of layoffs rather than implementing pay cuts for their employees, during the lockdown period. Read more

    Government initiatives to help struggling small businesses coming soon

    LoopBarbados: Government will be rolling out a variety of programmes and initiatives to help Micro, Small, and Medium-Sized Enterprises (MSMEs) over the next few months. Read more

    PM Minnis: No Free Trade Zone for Andros

    EyeWitness News: Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis yesterday assured that the government will not approve a free trade zone in Andros and insisted his administration will not sell vast tracks of Bahamian land. Read more

    Saint Lucia launches ‘I AM CARICOM’ campaign

    St Lucia News Online: The Regional Integration Unit in the Office of the Prime Minister, in collaboration with the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Secretariat, announces the launch of the ‘I AM CARICOM’ Communications Campaign in Saint Lucia. Read more

    Challenges of 2020 Amplify Importance of Regional Cooperation – CARICOM Outgoing Chair

    CARICOM: Outgoing Chair of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), Prime Minister Mia Mottley of Barbados, has expressed profound gratitude to the organisation and institutions that have steered the Community through the unprecedented challenges posed so far by the year 2020. Read more

    PM Gonsalves Praises CARICOM Achievements, says Challenges Must Strengthen Movement

    CARICOM: The challenges of nature and the global political economy must serve as driving forces to build a stronger, better Caribbean Community (CARICOM), said Dr. the Hon. Ralph Gonsalves, Prime Minister of St. Vincent and the Grenadines. Read more

    CARICOM to conduct survey on impact of COVID-19 on food security

    NYCaribNews: The Guyana-based Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Secretariat Monday announced the launch of the second round of the Caribbean coronavirus (COVID-19) Food Security and Livelihoods Survey. Read more

    New models needed to encourage FDI in agriculture

    Barbados Today: The agriculture sector, which makes a significant contribution to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in many Caribbean economies, must look at new financing models to encourage foreign direct investment (FDI), as it seeks to rebuild from the fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic. Read more

    Imports down 39.7% in May, says SIB

    Amandala: The Statistical Institute of Belize (SIB) reported that Belize’s imports for May 2020 saw a dramatic decrease of $67.3 million, down 39.7% from the $169.4 million worth of goods we imported in May 2019. The SIB attributes most of this decrease to the COVID-19 pandemic, which resulted in an economic slowdown. Read more

    Jampro Pitching Seven Limestone Packages To Big Investors

    Jamaica Gleaner: Jampro on Wednesday pitched seven limestone packages to local and investors geared at exploiting around 50 billion tonnes of reserves laying idle across Jamaica. Read more

    We Gatherin’ could restart

    Barbados Today: Government has not closed the door on the possible restart of its Vision 2020 We Gatherin’ campaign that would see Barbadians from the diaspora returning to connect with their heritage, according to Project Coordinator for the campaign Selma Green. Read more

    Caricom SG says last four months exceptional for region

    NYCaribNews: Caribbean Community (Caricom) Secretary-General Irwin LaRocque said yesterday that the past four months have proven to be the “most exceptional periods” for the 15-member regional integration movement. Read more

    INTERNATIONAL NEWS

    The WTO needs a shake up before it’s too late

    Telegraph: Our global trading system is in trouble, and it’s only going to be made worse by the coronavirus pandemic. Read the full op-ed by Liam Fox here.

    EU trade chief Hogan says he will not seek to head WTO

    Euractiv: European Trade Commissioner Phil Hogan said on Monday (29 June) he would not seek to become the next director-general of the World Trade Organisation, despite having previously stated he was looking into the possibility. Read more

    Who Will Lead the WTO and Help It Avoid Collapse?

    Washington Post: The campaign to lead the World Trade Organization during the most turbulent period of its 25-year existence has officially begun. Playing out against the backdrop of a pandemic, a worldwide recession, the U.S.-China battle for trade supremacy and the American presidential election, there couldn’t be more at stake. Read more

    WTO needs urgent reform, says Saudi trade group

    Arab News: The World Trade Organization (WTO) requires urgent reform in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the Think20 (T20) engagement group. Read more

    As New NAFTA Takes Effect, Much Remains Undone

    New York Times: The beginning of a new trade deal does not signal an end to trade disputes between United States, Canada and Mexico. Read more

    Justin Trudeau might skip US-Canada-Mexico summit due to tariff and coronavirus

    New York Post: Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau might be skipping the United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement (USMCA) summit in Washington DC next week. Read more

    Brexit: Serious differences over trade deal, say UK and EU

    BBC: The UK and EU have said serious differences remain over a post-Brexit trade deal, following the latest negotiations in Brussels. EU negotiator Michel Barnier said the bloc’s position needed to be “better understood and respected” by the UK if an agreement is to be found. Read more

    U.K., Kenya to Negotiate Post-Brexit Trade Deal

    Bloomberg: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta agreed to start negotiations for a post-Brexit trade agreement between the two nations. Read more

    UK sets September deadline for EU trade deal

    Euractiv: The UK has earmarked September as its deadline for agreeing on a new trade deal with the EU after negotiators held their first face-to-face meetings since the start of the coronavirus pandemic. Read more

    A ‘new Cold War’?: How the US-China trade dispute is deepening

    Al Jazeera: More industries are being penalised as bipartisan anti-China sentiment rises before the November polls in the US. Read more

    Niue ratifies regional PACER Plus trade agreement

    Radio New Zealand: Niue has ratified the regional trade agreement PACER Plus, pushing it closer to implementation. Read more

    China and India are sparring but neither can afford a full-on trade war

    CNN: Last month’s deadly border battle between India and China has already begun to affect business and technology. But the world’s two most populous countries have a lot to lose should the dispute escalate into a full-on trade war. Read more

    Why Accelerating Implementation of AfCFTA Must Remain a Top Priority

    Inter-press Service: 1 July 2020 was supposed to be the official date to start trading under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA). It was a much-anticipated follow up to the 2019 African Union Summit, that launched the operational phase of the AfCFTA in a colorful ceremony in Niamey – Niger. Read more

    India may invoke GATS security exception at WTO to justify ban on Chinese apps

    Hindu Business Line: India may use its right to invoke security exceptions under the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) at the World Trade Organization (WTO), if required, to justify the ban on 59 Chinese mobile apps, including the popular TikTok app, imposed by the Centre earlier this week, a government official has said. Read more

    UK statement to the WTO Committee on Trade and the Environment

    Gov.uk: The UK’s Ambassador to the WTO and UN in Geneva, Julian Braithwaite, delivered this statement at a meeting of the WTO Committee on Trade and the Environment on 3 July 2020. Read more

    STRAIGHT FROM THE WTO

    NEW ON THE CTLD BLOG

    The Caribbean Trade & Development Digest is a weekly trade news digest produced and published by the Caribbean Trade Law & Development Blog. Liked this issue? To read past issues, please visit here. To receive these mailings directly to your inbox, please subscribe to our Blog below:

  • Caribbean Trade and Development News Digest – June 21-27, 2020

    Caribbean Trade and Development News Digest – June 21-27, 2020

    Welcome to the Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest for the week of June 21-27, 2020! We are happy to bring you the major trade and development headlines and analysis from across the Caribbean Region and the world from the past week.

    THIS WEEK’S HIGHLIGHTS

    The number of nominees for next World Trade Organization (WTO) Director-General continues to increase. This week, South Korea nominated its trade minister, Ms Yoo Myung-hee.

    The candidates have been making their case to the public on their vision for the WTO which is currently in crisis. For example, Nigerian candidate Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala penned an op-ed on reviving the WTO here. Egyptian candidate, Hamid Mamdouh, participated in a WITA Webinar to discuss his candidacy and vision for the WTO which you can watch here.

    Yesterday, June 27 was UN Micro, Small and Medium-sized Enterprise (MSME) Day. Read some of our previous posts on MSMEs and the COVID-19 crisis here:

    COVID-19’s Impact on Micro, Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises (Guest contribution by Deah James)

    COVID-19 and MSMEs: Impacts and Options

    On a final editorial note, this publication announces its solidarity with the movements currently taking place across the US and the world for racial equality and justice #blacklivesmatter.

    REGIONAL NEWS

    CARICOM’s stake in the WTO Director-General Race

    Barbados Today: Incumbent World Trade Organization (WTO) Director-General (DG) Mr Roberto Azevedo’s recent announcement of his resignation a full year before concluding his second term of office took the world by surprise and presents another plot twist among the mounting challenges confronting the guardian of the multilateral trading system. Read more

    DR has opportunity to attract investment due to COVID-19

    Dominican Today: The Dominican Republic has the opportunity to attract foreign investment from multinationals that will seek to have their factories close to the United States due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This was stated by Ana Arias Urones, Senior Specialist of the Trade and Investment Division of the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), who stressed that in the next six months the country will have the opportunity to take advantage of post-covid-19 recovery scenarios to position itself as a foreign investment destination. Read more

    C’bean among countries unfairly targeted by US senators over Cuba

    Jamaica Observer: Three US senators — who have done little to advance the interests of the Caribbean and with whom requests for meetings by many Caribbean ambassadors are usually shunted to their staff — are now proposing US Government punishment for Caribbean countries that request assistance from Cuba for medical personnel. Read more

    EU seeking to improve on its financing conditions

    Barbados Advocate: The European Union has a vision to provide grants and loans together in a financing package so that it can improve the financing
    conditions that it offers its partner countries. Ambassador Daniela Tramacere, Head of the EU Delegation to Barbados, the Eastern Caribbean States, the OECS and CARICOM/CARIFORUM noted the
    above as she spoke recently during the launch of the Barbados Water
    Supply Infrastructure Rehabilitation Project by the Barbados Water
    Authority. Read more

    Operations Of 20 Entities To Be Digitised Under Single Window Initiative

    JIS: The operations of approximately 20 State entities that facilitate imports and exports are earmarked for digitisation under the Jamaica Single Window for Trade (JSWIFT) initiative, which is being implemented by the Jamaica Customs Agency (JCA). Jamaica. Read more

    US$12.5 billion limestone potential

    Jamaica Observer: As the country seeks to expand its investment opportunities, stronger calls are being made for investors and exporters to take advantage of the emerging benefits in the value-added limestone industry. Read more

    Shaw denies companies leaving Ja due to cannabis regulation lag

    Jamaica Observer: MINISTER of Industry, Commerce, Agriculture and Fisheries Audley Shaw has denied claims that cannabis companies are leaving Jamaica as a result of the country’s failure to implement import/export regulations. Read more

    Region Cannot Return To Pre-COVID-19 Era – Bartlett

    Jamaica Gleaner: Jamaica’s Tourism Minister, Edmund Bartlett, says for the first quarter of this year, international tourism has recorded 67 million fewer arrivals and a loss of US$80 billion in exports. Read more

    Tian Qi | Enhancing China-Caribbean Cooperation In Building Belt And Road

    Jamaica Gleaner: On June 18, the high-level videoconference on Belt and Road international cooperation was held in Beijing under the theme ‘Belt and Road International Cooperation: Combating COVID-19 with Solidarity’. Read more

    INTERNATIONAL NEWS

    Ottawa Group Recommends Actions on COVID-19, Signals Continued Interest in WTO Reform

    IISD: The Ottawa Group, comprised of 13 World Trade Organization (WTO) members, has released a statement outlining six action areas to focus on in light of COVID-19. Formed in the wake of the Ottawa Ministerial on WTO Reform, held 24-25 October 2018, the Group seeks to address specific challenges that are putting the multilateral trading system under stress. Read more

    Liam Fox and Peter Mandelson compete to be next world trade chief

    The Sunday Times: Ministers are considering whether to nominate Liam Fox, the former international trade secretary, as Britain’s candidate to become the next head of the World Trade Organisation (WTO). Read more

    Kenya-U.S. Trade Talks to Start Next Month, President Kenyatta Says

    AllAfrica: President Uhuru Kenyatta has said the much-anticipated trade talks between Kenya and the United States of America will start on 7th July 2020. Read more

    RCEP members to keep aiming for deal this year, with hopes India will rejoin

    The Japan Times: Ministers from 15 Asia-Pacific countries negotiating a sprawling free trade agreement agreed Tuesday to continue aiming for a deal by the end of the year, while keeping the door open for India to return to the talks. Read more

    U.S. Still Committed to Digital Tax Talks, OECD Tax Chief Says

    Bloomberg: The U.S. is still actively participating in OECD negotiations on global digital tax rules, the organization’s top tax official said Wednesday. Read more

    USTR Lighthizer and US trade policy: Right goals, wrong strategy

    VoxEU: Joshua Meltzer argues that the Trump administration has failed to provide a coherent vision for maintaining and expanding US competitiveness in the 21st century, including through its trade policy. Read more

    China ‘interested’ in Trans-Pacific trade deal but keen to gauge Japan’s ‘attitude’ ahead of potential talks, ex-minister says

    South China Morning Post: China is keen to first understand Japan’s “attitude” before beginning formal negotiations to join the Comprehensive Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement, according to former commerce minister Chen Deming. Read more

    COVID-19, trade war take toll on trans-Pacific volumes through April

    JOC: Total container volume carried by the top 15 lines in the US trade with Asia fell 7.2 percent through the first four months of the year, but a recent spike in imports from Asia and a cut in blank sailings this summer should stem declines going forward. Read more

    Trump threat to ‘decouple’ U.S. and China hits trade, investment reality

    Reuters: Conflicting talk from Trump administration officials about “decoupling” the U.S. economy from China is running into a challenging reality: Chinese imports of U.S. goods are rising, investment by American companies into China continues, and markets are wary of separating the world’s biggest economies. Read more

    Despite Economic Turmoil, Indonesia-Australia Trade Agreement Pushes Ahead

    The Diplomat: In the midst of COVID-19, an unlikely trade agreement breaks through. Read more

    ECOWAS endorse Okonjo-Iweala as DG of the World Trade Organization

    Nairametrics: The West African Regional political and economic block, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), has announced the backing of the candidature of Nigeria’s former Finance Minister, Ngozi Okonjo Iweala, as the Director-General of World Trade Organization (WTO). Read more

    The WTO’s Fall from Grace: Disputes About Dispute Settlement

    McGill International Review: The future of the World Trade Organization (WTO) has come under recent scrutiny, with its Director General (DG), Roberto Azevêdo, announcing plans to resign one year early. Yet the demise of the WTO has been a long-standing issue, particularly linked to the lack of support shown for the organization by one of the world’s largest economies, the United States. Read more

    Support for Brexit is collapsing as poll finds big majority of British people want to be in the EU

    Business Insider: A newly released survey found just 35% of British people supporting Brexit, with 57% wanting to rejoin the European Union. Read more

    Brexit: Angela Merkel says Britain must ‘live with the consequences’ of Boris Johnson’s decision to ditch close alignment with EU

    The Independent: Angela Merkel has said that Britain will have to “live with the consequences” of Boris Johnson’s decision to ditch Theresa May’s plans for close alignment with the European Union after Brexit. Read more

    STRAIGHT FROM THE WTO

    NEW ON THE CTLD BLOG

    The Caribbean Trade & Development Digest is a weekly trade news digest produced and published by the Caribbean Trade Law & Development Blog. Liked this issue? To read past issues, please visit here. To receive these mailings directly to your inbox, please subscribe to our Blog below:

  • Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest – January 1-11, 2020

    Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest – January 1-11, 2020

    Happy New Year! Welcome to our first Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest for the year 2020! We trust you all had an enjoyable holiday season! We are happy to bring you the major trade and development headlines and analysis from across the Caribbean Region and the world for the first two weeks of 2020!

    There will be much to watch in trade this year so we look forward to you following the developments with us from week to week.

    HIGHLIGHTS

    The beginning of the year saw US-Iran tensions hit a boiling point. These tensions have simmered somewhat, and oil prices, which rose but not as high as expected, have since lowered in light of the ease in tensions.

    Global growth is set to rise by 2.5% this year, a small increase from 2.4% in 2019, as trade and investment gradually recover. This is according to the World Bank’s semi-annual Global Economic Prospects released January 2020.

    Regionally, on January 1, 2020, Barbados’ Prime Minister the Hon. Mia Amor Mottley took over the chairmanship of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) under that organisation’s rotating chairmanship system. Read more here.

    A three-day CARICOM workshop was held this to discuss World Trade Organization (WTO) issues. It was hosted by the SRC and WTI in Barbados and attended by ambassadors, technocrats and other high-level trade professionals.

    A significant oil discovery has been made offshore another CARICOM Member State. This time, it is Suriname. Read here. Also recall that Guyana is now an oil producing nation.

    REGIONAL NEWS

    Caricom raises external tariffs on pasta, cement

    Newsday TT: CARICOM’s Council for the Trade and Economic Development (COTED) has increased the common external tariff (CET) on pasta and cement for one year. It came into effect on January 1. Read more

    Food, drink labelling to change

    Barbados Today: Makers of packaged food and drink products may be required to have front-of-package nutrition labels by year end, Barbados TODAY has learned. But manufacturers are said to be concerned that having to revamp their labels could come at a major cost with business still slow in a tight economy. Read more

    Two faces of WTO emerge at meeting

    Barbados Today: Even as the world’s major economic powers abandon the global rules-based system in ongoing trade feuds, an international think tank’s advisor has urged officials here and in the region not to give up on the World Trade Organisation (WTO). Read more

    Walcott insists multilateral trade must benefit all

    Barbados Today: Multilateral trade must redound to the benefit of all, regardless of size. Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade, Senator Dr Jerome Walcott, made this declaration at a three-day CARICOM workshop held to discuss World Trade Organization (WTO) issues at the Savannah Beach Hotel, recently. Read more

    Poultry investor halts $7-$8 million investment over WTO uncertainty

    Eyewitness News (Bahamas): A poultry investor said yesterday it has put ‘on hold’ its $7-$8 million investment until the government makes clear its position going forward on the World Trade Organization (WTO). Read more

    Guyana rice exports valued at more than US$200 million

    Jamaica Observer: The Guyana Rice Development Board (GRDB) said it recorded a 20 per cent increase in revenue after exporting more than half a million tonnes of paddy, rice and rice by-products last year. Read more

    CARICOM needs united voice on global issues

    Barbados Advocate: If it has not been done already, the Caribbean Community and Common Market (CARICOM) states have to devise a strategy for the global political and economic tensions and developments which continue to characterize the world in which we live. Read more

    CARICOM countries need to prepare for fallout of US and Iran situation

    St Lucia News Online: A sug­ges­tion that CARI­COM heads meet as soon as pos­si­ble, and come up with a strat­e­gy to deal with any pos­si­ble fall­out or dan­ger­ous sce­nar­ios, re­sult­ing from the re­cent dé­tente be­tween the Unit­ed States and Iran. Read more

    CARICOM heads chided for lack of sports investment

    Caribbean Life News: Caribbean heads of governments have been accused of not keeping pace with their sportsmen and women because the politicians are failing to provide facilities to support athletes consistent with their worldwide successes. Read more

    Will the EU care about the Caribbean after Brexit?

    The Voice: It’s not just Britain’s attitude towards its former colonies that may change with its geopolitical divorce. Lyndon Mukasa says the European Union’s position is also of growing interest. Read more

    UK expands its presence in Commonwealth countries

    Barbados Advocate: THE United Kingdom’s representation in the Commonwealth countries of the Eastern Caribbean has expanded over the last year. Read more

    Venezuela remains one of Guyana’s biggest rice buyers, despite no PetroCaribe deal

    Demerara Waves: Venezuela is Guyana’s biggest rice market, accounting for 34 percent or 177,682 tonnes of all that grain exported to several Latin American countries the Guyana Rice Development Board (GRDB) said in a statement. Read more

    INTERNATIONAL NEWS

    Oil rises as US-Iran conflict eases, focus turns to trade deal

    CNBC: Oil prices rose slightly on Monday as investors shift their focus away from easing Mideast tensions to this week’s scheduled signing of an initial U.S.-China trade deal which could boost economic growth and demand. Read more

    Brexit: MPs give final backing to Withdrawal Agreement Bill

    BBC: MPs have given their final backing to the bill that will implement the UK government’s Brexit deal. The Commons voted 330 to 231 in favour of the Withdrawal Agreement Bill and it will now pass to the House of Lords for further scrutiny next week. Read more

    Grassley pins blame for USMCA holdup on impeachment

    Politico: Senate Finance Chairman Chuck Grassley on Friday blamed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for holding up passage of the new North American trade pact after she held off sending the articles of impeachment to the Senate. Read more

    IMO 2020: New Shipping Fuel Requirements Enter Into Force

    Hellenic shipping news: January 1, 2020 marked the implementation of the new sulphur oxide limit for shipping fuel imposed by the International Maritime Organisation under the MARPOL Convention, often referred to as IMO 2020. Read more

    US-China Trade War Seen as Boosting Vietnam Growth

    VoA: Vietnam has been a beneficiary of the China-U.S. trade war, enjoying a boost in services and exports that should drive economic growth to 7% this year, HSBC economist Yun Liu said last week. But she said the country remains vulnerable to economic risks including trade protection and inflation. Read more

    Brexit: EU ‘won’t be rushed’ on trade deal, says Simon Coveney

    BBC: The EU “will not be rushed” on a trade deal with the UK after Brexit, according to Ireland’s deputy PM. Boris Johnson says a deal can be agreed by the end of 2020 and has included a pledge in his Brexit bill not to extend any transition period to secure one. Read more

    Europe, Scotland and Brexit – what next?

    EU Observer: Last month’s UK general election will undoubtedly be remembered for the Conservative Party’s historic victory and the long-awaited clarity on Brexit. Yet the vote was not uniform across the UK. In Scotland, the Scottish National Party (SNP) secured an even more emphatic result, taking 47 of the nation’s 59 Westminster seats. Read more

    Here’s how the WTO can help address plastic pollution

    World Economic Forum: Trade plays a central role in plastic pollution and in the global plastics economy. Amid impressive and multiplying efforts across the globe to address plastic pollution, however, the relevance of trade to the production, consumption and disposal of plastics has been underestimated. Read more

    What to Expect in the January 2020 Session of UNCITRAL Working Group III on ISDS Reform

    IISD: In January 2020, Working Group III (WG III) of UNCITRAL will convene in Vienna to work on possible ISDS reform. Read more

    STRAIGHT FROM THE WTO

    NEW ON THE CTLD BLOG

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