WTO’s Relevance in an Era of Geopolitics

wto’s relevance in an era of geopolitics

Syllabus: GS2/Global Groupings & Agreements Involving India

Context

  • The WTO’s 14th Ministerial Conference (MC14) is scheduled to take place from 26 to 29 March 2026 in Yaoundé, Cameroon to discuss the challenges and opportunities facing the multilateral trading system and to take action on the future work of the WTO.

WTO in Crisis: Structural and Functional Challenges

  • Paralysis of Dispute Settlement Mechanism: The WTO’s Appellate Body crisis has weakened rule enforcement.
    • Without binding dispute resolution, rules lose credibility and compliance declines.
    • It threatens the very foundation of multilateralism.
  • Stagnation in Rule-Making: WTO negotiations have failed to keep pace with digital trade expansion, and e-commerce governance gaps.
    • Existing rules reflect a 20th-century trade structure, inadequate for modern global value chains.
  • Decision-Making Deadlock: Consensus-based decision-making among 166 diverse members leads to slow negotiations, and diluted outcomes.
    • This institutional rigidity hampers timely reforms.
  • Rise of Protectionism and Geopolitics: Increasing use of unilateral tariffs, economic coercion, and bilateral trade arrangements.
    • It signals a shift from rules-based to power-based trade.

Changing Nature of Global Trade

  • Transformation of Production and Trade: Because of the emergence of the digital economy, and technology-intensive exports from emerging economies, the global supply chains are now network-driven rather than linear.
  • New Trade Issues: Climate-linked trade measures (e.g., carbon border taxes); data governance and digital flows; and investment facilitation.
    • These developments highlight the mismatch between existing WTO rules and current realities.
  • Transactional Politics: The global order is shifting toward ‘transactional politics’, where short-term gains override institutional commitments.
    • A weakened WTO risks dominance of powerful economies, and marginalization of developing countries.
    • WTO’s core role is to ensure trade is governed by rules, not coercion.

Need for WTO Reform

  • Restoring Dispute Settlement Credibility: Re-establish a binding and universally accepted dispute mechanism; reduce politicization of trade conflicts; and essential for rebuilding trust.
  • Ensuring Fairness Alongside Predictability: Address long-standing concerns ie agricultural subsidies, market distortions, and unequal market access.
    • Reform Special and Differential Treatment (SDT) to reflect current realities.
    • Developing countries emphasize that WTO must ensure not just rule of law, but rule of justice.
  • Enhancing Transparency and Accountability: Better reporting on subsidies; mechanisms to address unfair trade practices; and strengthened monitoring functions.
  • Institutional Flexibility: Encourage plurilateral agreements (e.g., e-commerce, services); and ensure they remain inclusive, transparent, and integrated into the WTO framework.
    • Flexible approaches can promote progress without fragmenting the system.

Conclusion & Way Forward

  • The WTO stands at a decisive juncture. Reform is not merely technical but systemic and normative. It requires political will, shared responsibility among members, and balance between flexibility and unity.
  • If MC14 succeeds, it can reaffirm the WTO’s role as the anchor of global trade governance. Failure, however, may accelerate the shift toward a fragmented, power-driven trading system, undermining stability, especially for developing nations.
Daily Mains Practice Question
[Q] Discuss the challenges faced by the WTO in the current global order. Examine whether WTO reforms can ensure its continued relevance in maintaining a rules-based trading system.

Source: TH

 

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