World Trade Organization Director-General
Mike Moore warmly welcomed the U.S.-China accord on Chinese accession to
the WTO, but he cautioned that substantial work remained before Beijing
becomes a member of the organization. The Director-General expressed
confidence that this work could be completed in a relatively short period
of time.
The bilateral agreement on market access is
significant, Mr. Moore said, given the size and importance of the two
economies. Moreover, he said, the deal announced in Beijing today would
give increased momentum to China's accession negotiations with other WTO
member governments.
"This is a major step forward in China's
accession to the WTO. I have said many times that we are not a World Trade
Organization until China has joined. China must still reach agreement with
other member governments and we need to complete important technical talks
before China can take her rightful place at the table of great trading
nations. But this significant breakthrough has certainly given this
process real momentum. A door to history has been opened and now member
governments must walk through it together," Mr. Moore said.
The Director-General said he hoped this
important agreement would also stimulate breakthroughs in accession talks
with the other 30 governments negotiating to join the WTO. While stressing
the importance of candidates joining on a sound commercial and legal
basis, Mr. Moore said it was vital that as many governments as possible be
granted accession in the very near future.
"Governments representing 1.5 billion
people are working hard to join us. Virtually all of these governments
represent developing countries or economies in transition. This is a
strong referendum in support of this organization as an important tool in
development, growth and better jobs. Bringing these governments into the
multilateral trading system ranks among my top priorities," Mr. Moore
said.
China, which has been negotiating entry
into the WTO and its predecessor organization the General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade for 13 years, must conclude bilateral market access
agreements with dozens of other member governments. Following completion
of these bilateral talks, the process moves to a multilateral setting in
Geneva where member governments must agree on technical protocol of
accession issues. These discussions, held in the WTO's Working Party on
Chinese accession, centre on establishing the legal framework for China's
entry.
Given the substantial amount of preparatory
work involved, a meeting of this Working Party will not be convened until
after the WTO's 3rd Ministerial Conference in Seattle 30
November-3 December. Mr. Moore said China's status as an observer nation
at the Ministerial Conference will take on much greater meaning following
the agreement in Beijing.
The Seattle meeting of trade ministers from
the 135 WTO member governments will set the agenda for trade negotiations
over the next few years in agriculture, services and perhaps other
sectors.