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Derniers articles :

Oxfam says US must reform illegal cotton subsidies, or lose credibility, following WTO panel ruling - - 15 October 2007
Non reprieve for small farmers in WTO draft text - - 18 July 2007
Reform of US cotton subsidies could feed, educate millions in poor west African countries - - 21 June 2007
Arrêtez les jeux de pouvoir de l’AGCS contre les citoyens du monde ! - 15 juin 2007
Les Syndicats appellent à une Action sur le Coton - - 16 mars 2007
Les pays riches trahissent leur engagement d’aider les pays pauvres à protéger la santé publique - - 14 novembre 2006
Rich countries betraying their obligations to help poor countries protect public health - - 14 November 2006
Cinq ans après, l’accord OMC sur l’accès aux médicaments est un échec - - 7 novembre 2006
Le Cycle de Doha est mort ! L’heure de la souveraineté alimentaire a sonné - - 27 juillet 2006
WTO talks collapse - - 25 juillet 2006
Trade talks deadlock brings new hope for the poorest and the environment - - 24 July 2006
Face it, Doha is dead: time to look at alternatives to WTO - - 24 July 2006


Voir également :


Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE : Les paysans ACP dénoncent la nouvelle approche de négociation de l’Union européenne
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE : La Commission européenne fait un pas en arrière sur les services et investissements mais veut imposer la signature immédiate des APE sur les marchandises
Afrique du Sud : COSATU statement on South Africa-India-Brazil Summit
République démocratique du Congo : 1ère édition du forum social congolais : les engagements des mouvements sociaux
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE : Agir Ici et maintenant pour arrêter les APE
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE : Act Now to Stop the EPAs!
Afrique de l’Ouest : Rencontre des syndicats de travailleurs et des organisations de producteurs agricoles sur les enjeux du développement agricole et de la sécurité alimentaire dans les négociation de l’APE entre la CEDEAO et l’UE
Sommet du G8 : De « nouvelles » annonces pour camoufler l’échec global du sommet
Forums sociaux : Déclaration du forum de Sikasso 2007
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE : Oxfam et TWN Africa interpellent l’Union Européenne en vue de l’extension de l’accès au marché si des APE ne sont pas conclus d’ici fin 2007
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE : Mobilisation mondiale contre les accords commerciaux inéquitables entre l’Europe et l’Afrique, les Caraïbes et le Pacifique
VIH - SIDA : Sortir de l’impasse : la voie du patent pool
Agriculture - Accès à la terre - Souveraineté alimentaire : Call for Action on the Crisis in Agricultural Commodities
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE : En avant avec la lutte pour arrêter les APE
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE : Forward With The Struggle to Stop The EPAs


Site(s) web :

Third World Network Africa :
http://www.twnafrica.org/
Dakar Déclaration - Pour des politiques agricoles et commerciales solidaires :
Unité de Recherche, de Formation et d’Information sur la Globalisation :
Gender and Trade in Africa (GENTA) :
Bilaterals.org :
Public Citizen - Global Trade Watch :
Action for Southern Africa (ACTSA) :
Alternative Information and Development Centre (AIDC) :
EcoNews Africa :
Integrated Social Development Center (ISODEC) :
International Labour Research and Information Group :
International NGO Campaign on Export Credit Agencies (ECA Watch) :
Stop-Think-Resist EPAs’ campaign :
Trade and Development Studies (TRADES) :
Water Not For Sale :


Dernier(s) document(s) :

Des brevets contre des patients: cinq ans après la Déclaration de Doha - Document d’information d’ - 14 November 2006 (PDF - 373.7 kb)
L’Afrique et le Cycle de Doha, Un combat pour la sauvegarde du développement - Document d’information - 14 November 2005 (PDF - 416 kb)
Africa and the Doha Round: Fighting to keep development alive - Briefing Paper - 14 November 2005 (PDF - 276.3 kb)

Oxfam warns of threat of regional trade deals for poor countries

4 August 2006
-


With negotiations at the World Trade Organization (WTO) suspended indefinitely, international agency Oxfam today warned of the danger posed to developing countries by the proliferation of regional and bilateral free trade agreements.

Free trade deals in the form favored by the EU and US pose a considerable threat to developing countries. Having caused the breakdown of Doha, rich countries are now competing to gain better access to developing country markets through regional deals that only serve their interests,” said Celine Charveriat, Head of Oxfam International’s Make Trade Fair Campaign.

Developing countries have less bargaining power in regional negotiations and are more susceptible to bullying. They are not guaranteed special treatment as they are at the WTO, and some of the issues most important for poverty reduction, like the reduction of agricultural subsidies are not addressed. Free trade deals deprive developing countries of the space they need to use trade policies as a tool for development,” she added.

Rich countries have made clear their intention to pursue regional deals more aggressively following the suspension of WTO talks. The US Trade Representative Susan Schwab said last week “you will see us going that way even more actively than we have” and the EU also confirmed its intention to look more closely at regional and bilateral deals.

Oxfam analysis reveals that these agreements often go way beyond what is demanded at the WTO and can have grave implications for poor people, especially in the areas of agriculture, access to medicines, and investment:

- The proposed free trade deal between Peru and the US could cause the price of medicines in Peru to rise by 10% in the first year of implementation, and 100% in ten years, as a result of strict patent protection for pharmaceutical companies.

- After signing a free trade deal with the US in 1994 (NAFTA), Mexico saw imports of subsidized US rice and wheat more than triple, with devastating results for nearly 15 million small-scale farmers and their families.

- Thousands of vulnerable workers and the environment could be put at risk in Asia, Africa and Latin America by lax investment rules allowing foreign companies to flout national regulation and ignore basic labor and environmental standards.

- EU proposals for Economic Partnership Agreements with Africa threaten countries’ chances to strengthen industry because they demand dramatic and rapid tariff cuts.

RTAs also undermine multilateralism and the web of different agreements creates complexity that does not serve anyone’s interests.

Celine Charveriat: “The outlook is bleak for developing countries in the post-Doha world. They have climbed out of the frying pan to be faced by hundreds of fires. If rich countries are serious about using trade as a way to help reduce poverty and meet the millennium development goals they must resist the temptation to push harmful free trade deals.

Instead they should concentrate on salvaging some of the good things from the wreckage of Doha: including increased market access for the poorest countries, more aid for trade and on continued reform of their harmful trade subsidies.

There are currently around 250 regional trade deals in force, with many more on the table for future negotiation.




For more information, please contact:
- Amy Barry on +55 (0) 6133 214044, or
- Matt Grainger on +44 (0)1865 339128



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