| Mr. John Battle (Leeds, West): I welcome
the title of the debate; it is fresh and new. It is not often that a title
of a debate in the House is "Fair Trade". For hundreds of years,
we have constantly talked about free trade. The ultimate free traders
were the Liberals, when they were in power—hundreds of years ago.
For nearly 20 years, we heard nothing but free trade from the neo-Conservatives,
the new right. I welcome the fact that we are all fair traders now and
that we are campaigning for managed trade. We should be asking: how is
trade to be managed and who manages it? If we can find consensus on that
in this place, the debate will have moved on significantly and in a helpful
way for the 21st century.
When I first worked on development in the 1970s, someone sent me a cartoon.
It showed a man holding a teaspoon to a peasant's mouth. On the teaspoon
was the word "Aid". The man's other arm was around the peasant's
throat, in a stranglehold grip. Emblazoned on his arm was the word "Trade".
Sadly, nearly 30 years later, we have hardly moved on enough to realise
that the grip on the windpipe is the trade processes that undermine any
increases in the aid budget. That Mexican cartoon rings just as true today.
The campaign for increased overseas aid has taken on a new dimension.
It has shifted so that it includes a focus on the unfair workings of the
trade system. The Trade Justice Movement is to be congratulated on achieving
that nationally; it includes many bodies, non-governmental organisations
and faith communities, such as CAFOD, Oxfam, the World Development Movement,
Christian Aid or the Save the Children Fund. They are all to be congratulated
on shifting the focus and on getting across the message that trade relations
are as crucial to long-term sustainable development as any aid. There
is no trade justice in a world where 800 million go hungry. The trade
system is not delivering for the poor. The trade system is unfair; it
is weighted in favour of the rich countries and its massive in-built global
imbalance is likely to continue unless action is taken to give the poor
a break into the system.
It is to the credit of the Government that they recognised the need to
tackle unfair trade. In 2001, they published a helpful pamphlet, "Trade
matters, eliminating world poverty", which acknowledges that trade
can be a force for development, but only if it is fair and works for the
whole world, not just for rich countries and—I would add—multinational
companies. Central to the Government's development policy is a commitment
to the internationally agreed target to halve the proportion of people
living in extreme poverty by 2015.
Yes, the Government also have positive targets on basic health care provision
and universal access to primary education. Yes, there has been some progress.
Yes, there has been a welcome increase in the aid budget, ending a decade
of cuts imposed by the Opposition when they were in Government. However,
any current analysis of progress towards the millennium development goals
shows that, on current trends, there is hardly a cat-in-hell's chance
of halving poverty by 2050, never mind by 2015, unless there are radical
changes in the trading system and in debt as well.
Tragically, many poor sub-Saharan countries are struggling their way
up an overwhelmingly down-moving escalator. The situation is getting worse
for most sub-Saharan countries. Take health—some 7 million people
still die every year from preventable diseases. Take education—more
than 115 million children do not go to school, and 88 countries are nowhere
near achieving the targets in education, to give but two examples. So
without radical changes in the unfair trade balance, real and welcome
increases in the aid budget will make hardly any impact on development.
The preparations for the WTO round in Cancun in September—labelled
the development round—have hardly got anywhere so far. They have
not heralded much progress. Discussions on agricultural trade reform—a
basic building block for any fair trade system—are well behind schedule.
There are no signs of progress in dismantling the massive subsidies, which
many other hon. Members have mentioned, that go to American and European
agricultural production. The American Farm Bill and the European Union
common agricultural policy subsidies are being reinforced and strengthened,
rather than being dismantled.
Yes, to our credit, the Government are pressing for genuine CAP reform,
dismantling those subsidies that keep developing countries' products out
of Europe. In practice, those subsidies are generating a huge system of
agricultural dumping. That dumping is occasionally dressed up under the
heading of food aid or other aid, but it ensures that agriculture in poor
countries has no real chance of getting off the ground. In effect, it
is being killed off by dumping. EU Tomato paste is sold cheaply in Ghana
and subsidised EU dried milk powder is destroying the Jamaican Dairy Farmers
Federation, to give two practical examples.
While we press for CAP reform, let us not press on developing countries
methods of change that we have not adopted in the past. Let us not say,
"Do as we say, but not as we did." Let us not say, "You
liberalise, while we continue to subsidise." I shall give a quotation
from the US-based National Law Centre for Inter-American Free Trade:
"The historical record in the industrialised countries which began
as developing countries demonstrates that intellectual property protection
has been one of the most powerful instruments for economic development,
export growth and the diffusion of new technologies."
That is classic, so let us not ask developing countries to move faster
than they can. They need managed trade, but in the context of what they
can achieve; otherwise, in the words of one great writer on these matters,
we are simply "kicking away the ladder" and leaving developing
countries with no chance at all.
Finally, I recommend the Chancellor's International Finance Facility.
That is the way to get investment into the developing countries quickly,
effectively and for the longer term, rather than by being jumped into
a new framework. My hon. Friend the Minister referred to "an appropriate
framework", but let us take up the Chancellor's proposal on the international
finance facility as one means to put in more investment quickly. Perhaps
the WTO could take a leaf out of this debate. I close with this remark:
as well as adopting the millennium development goals—getting into
line on development would cost the WTO nothing—why does it not change
its name? Instead of being the World Trade Organisation, why does it not
call itself the fair trade organisation? In the meantime, we have much
work to do. |