WTO's Role in Strengthening Pandemic Policies
Discover the role of the WTO in shaping effective pandemic policies and international trade agreements, aiming for equal vaccine distribution and promoting global health diplomacy.

Discover the role of the WTO in shaping effective pandemic policies and international trade agreements, aiming for equal vaccine distribution and promoting global health diplomacy.
“Export restrictions really provide a false sense of security,” says Anabel Gonzales, Senior Fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. “They raise prices, they discourage investment and they invite retaliation. They are nothing but a lose-lose proposition.”
Currently, the international world faces another challenge related to COVID-19. Gonzales sounded the alarm at an international webinar organized on 10 December 2020 to suggest what to do before the next pan(dem)ic: “The tragedy of vaccine nationalism must be avoided at all costs,” she said, “with equal distribution guaranteed across all countries.”
A petition signed by over 900,000 people was delivered online to the Geneva-based World Trade Organization (WTO) the day before urging all governments, including WTO members and pharmaceutical companies, to “ensure access to lifesaving COVID-19 vaccines, treatments and equipment for everyone in the world”.
The Council for Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) was meeting in Geneva on 10 December. WTO members are in discussion (still) on a proposal to waive obligations in the TRIPS Agreement in relation to the prevention, containment or treatment of COVID-19. WTO has admitted: “Considerable differences remain between members over this proposal” (LINK).
India Today’s website declares: “it’s rich vs. poor” (LINK). India and South Africa are co-sponsors of the proposal. “Most developing countries are in support of the proposal but rich and developed countries, such as the European Union nations, the US and Canada oppose it,” the site says.
In the meantime, WTO’s latest figures show “signs of a rebound” back from the national decoupling from international trade in the first months of COVID-19. “The WTO now forecasts a 9.2 per cent decline in the volume of world merchandise trade for 2020, followed by a 7.2 per cent rise in 2021,” it said on Friday, 11 December. “Current data suggests a projected decline for the current year that is less severe than the 12.9 per cent drop foreseen under the more optimistic of two scenarios outlined in the WTO’s April trade forecast” (LINK).
The previous estimate for 2021 was 21 per cent growth, and GDP (gross domestic product, a standard gauge of economic health) “fell more than expected in the first half of 2020,” said WTO, which downgraded its earlier estimate of a 2.5 per cent decline to -4.8 per cent. “Global merchandise trade recorded its sharpest ever one-period decline [since 2005] in the second quarter, falling 14.3 per cent compared to the previous period, but the impact differed strongly across regions. The steepest declines were in Europe and North America, where exports fell 24.5 per cent and 21.8 per cent, respectively.
By comparison, Asian exports were relatively unaffected, dropping just 6.1 per cent. During the same period imports were down 14.5 per cent in North America and 19.3 per cent in Europe but just 7.1 per cent in Asia.” But WTO also noted indications of unexpected resilience, particularly in Asia. “The trade decline in Asia of 4.5 per cent for exports and 4.4 per cent for imports in 2020 will be smaller than in other regions,” it noted. (See Parag Khanna’s article in Global Geneva on the multi-speed world of regional disparities)
Risks remain. But resilience and rebound were [also] the message from tje WTO webinar of international exports held on 10 December. The 75-minute session is now available on YouTube (LINK).
For example, WTO’s new trade barometer suggests: “World merchandise trade appears to have rebounded strongly after plummeting in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic…A sharp rise in the barometer index was driven by a surge in export orders.”
The barometer has a current reading of 100.7 for goods – “a dramatic improvement from the 84.5 recorded last August. All of the barometer’s component indices were rising in the latest months.” The services trade, as you might expect, was harder hit. “But the latest reading from the WTO Services Trade Barometer also shows modest gains in some key sectors, suggesting a degree of resilience in the face of the pandemic” (LINK).]
The webinar viewers had the rare opportunity to hear from a developing country about the impact of COVID-19 and the pan(dem)ic on its economic life. Thailand has gained plaudits for its handling of the health crisis in the midst of political turmoil over the power of its military-backed royalty. This has tended to put its economic performance in the shade, apart from the dramatic shutdown of its international tourist industry. (See Global Geneva article on Thailand, the pandemic and tourism)
But in her webinar presentation, Ambassador Sunata Kangvalkuki pointed out that motor vehicles, machinery and equipment as well as electrical goods are major exports for Thailand. These are down 11.6 per cent for the third quarter, as against 8.2 per cent in the second quarter. Its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has been contracting by 6.7 per cent compared with a 2.7 per cent increase last year. By contrast, the Bangkok government has been “relatively successful” in controlling the spread of COVID-19 with only 4,400 cases and 60 deaths. (See Global Geneva article comparing the relative success of select East Asian countries in dealing with the coronavirus in comparison to Switzerland’s broadly poor if not dangerous approach.)
Thailand has imposed restrictive measures on exports, but only temporarily, she noted. For one month, at the end of March, it banned the export of eggs, a critical product for Thais. It also blocked exports of surgical face masks for one year, due to end next February. At the same time, it increased productive capacity which has led to rising supplies. So the government is looking at relaxing the restrictions.
As facilitative measures, the government temporarily exempted tariffs on imports of products for treatment and testing for COVID-19 as well as imports to produce masks. These measures ran out in September but Thailand is committed as a member of ASEAN (the Asian Economic grouping) and other states to collaborate on keeping markets open and encouraging investment.
Webinar moderator Robert Koopman, chief economist of World Trade Organization, pointed out that many of the national restrictions on trade in essential goods have already been removed. Though the argument for restrictions was the fragility of essential supply chains, these proved resilient during the crisis, he commented, and the organization reported that WTO members and observers had introduced the lowest number of “regular” trade-related measures since 2012 (that is, those unrelated to the COVID-19 pandemic). As the WTO report noted: “Of the 335 COVID-19 trade and trade-related goods measures recorded since the outbreak of the pandemic, 58 per cent were of a trade-facilitating nature and 42 per cent were trade restrictive…Around 39 per cent of restrictive measures on goods adopted by WTO members and observers in the immediate wake of the pandemic were repealed by mid-October 2020.”
Even more significant, over 1,000 support measures put into place up to mid-October, and collectively worth several trillion US dollars, are “greater than [than the number and variety of measures] witnessed during the 2008-09 global financial crisis,” the WTO’s Annual Overview observed. The report was presented at a 11 December meeting of the WTO’s Trade Policy Review Body (TPRB).
Stéphanie Leupold of the European Commission (EC) Trade Strategy Unit agreed at the webinar that keeping trade going in the crisis was key for recovery: “Export restrictions were actually having a chilling effect because they do create uncertainty which is the contrary of what the companies needed,” she said. “We received many letters urging a stable and predictable environment.” Responding to this particular situation, the EC established an internal clearing house to increase cooperation on measures, match supply and demand, set up joint procurement schemes and tackle obstacles at the borders. These could also be useful in the future, Leupold said.
“What did we learn? We need to be very clear about what the problem really is before we devise a solution for it.” Rather than reshoring, the answer might be perhaps diversifying supplies and furthering international cooperation, “in particular a predictable framework in which production can thrive and the distribution can flow”.
The EC’s experience was that risk assessment is mainly for businesses to take care of, “moving from just in time to just in case,” she added. Meanwhile, the European Union on 23 November put forward a Health and Trade Initiative to other WTO members to underwrite supplies and cooperation in the next crisis (LINK).
The international McKinsey consultancy group has produced a report on risk management from interviews with supply chain executives in many companies. Knut Alicke of McKinsey reported to the webinar that disruptions to business have become more frequent, even before COVID-19. Every four years, companies in the affected regions expect to lose two months of their earnings, he told the gathering. “You basically erase 45 per cent of a year’s EBIDA (earnings before interest, depreciation and amortization) in a decade, 4.5 per cent in a year,” he said.
What made this pan(dem)ic different, compared to the 2011 Fukushima radiation scare or Iceland’s 2010 volcanic eruption, for example, was that the damage have been global. Roughly half of the companies interviewed said their planning was fine. But companies are still looking to nearshoring supplies and services as an immediate solution, or increasing their inventories (pharmaceutical companies, for example). “Transparency [about trade supplies] is a super-important measure,” Alicke declared.
But in many industries this difficult to apply. The motor industry often has eight layers of companies along its supply chain, he noted. This has made it difficult for the industry to ramp up again after lockdown. As a result, collaboration is equally important, he argued. “In the pandemic forecasting was impossible” because some companies did well and some did badly.
But in some sectors, companies did well because of digital tools, such as apps to tell manufacturers of the border waiting times for their parts from abroad. (Something Britain may have to institute with Brexit). One result was that some companies in six months achieved a “digital maturity” that would have otherwise taken them three or four years. “We need to leverage that,” he advised.
At the international level, the United Nations has at least one example of crisis management it can point to. Boubaker Ben-Belhassen, Director of the Trades and Markets Division in FAO (the Food and Agriculture Organization), drew some lessons from the success of the AIMS (Agricultural Information Management Standards) platform. He pointed out that AIMS has 28 participating countries, accounting for 80-90 per cent of global production, and 77+ per cent of international trade in its four staple foodstuffs: wheat, maize, rice and soybeans.
His first message: focus on key players and precise products.
His second: political support and stakeholder buy-in are essential. This, he said, was largely the result of a French initiative in 2011 when it was heading the G-20 group of major industrial nations. From this he concluded: “It is important to have a championing country.”
For a project to succeed information needs to be reliable and globally relevant, the FAO official added. But he conceded that work on other global value chains could be more challenging, perhaps because of the range, or much larger number of players, or competing interests. “Many factors ensured [AIMS] got off to a good start,” he observed. Nevertheless, the project was “helping prevent the health crisis from becoming a global food crisis,” he said and ended optimistically: “COVID-19 could be a catalyst to increase the transparency of value chains of essential goods.”
Within WTO, Willy Afaro of the Trade Policy Review Division, which produces WTO’s trade monitoring reports, noted that gathering all the information was currently “very time consuming” and perhaps the organization and its members need better automation tools. Similarly, simply reproducing the results was not all he would like to see WTO do. Members also need to see the impact of trade facilitation measures, particularly those that are more harmful.
Anabel Gonzales even spelled out five concrete steps for WTO members to take:
Koopman commented that the pan(dem)ic had produced a range of new solutions to social issues: remote working, finding ways for your children to be educated out of school, takeouts, firms doing more remote servicing of customers, others using 3D printing to produce parts. These were not necessarily long-term solutions but they are “practical, mitigating steps”.
Within WTO Secretariat, he observed, the debate on issues such as using artificial intelligence to get real-time data was whether officials should take action themselves or “do we need to wait for members to tell us it’s OK?”
One final, complaining, comment about the webinar. If everyone was going to read from notes (as they did), why not make the information available online beforehand, so that presentations could be much shorter, more spontaneous, and even more useful for a real dialogue?
Peter Hulm is deputy editor of Global Insights Magazine and the Geneva Geneva newsportal.
Switzerland and the pandemic: Does the economy matter more?
From Scotland to Uganda, climate catastrophe to female exploitation: these young people are making a difference
Why Climate Change matters to your security, health & wealth
Letter from Thailand: Tourism and the pandemic – until we’re back
Thailand and the pandemic: Lessons in containment
Covid-19 : l’électrochoc pour un rééquilibrage entre environnement, être humain et économie (French edition)
POLAR FOCUS: Iceland Exceptionalism – Renewable energies, effective pandemic measures and careful tourism.
Could better-funded journalism have prevented the pandemic?
Masks yes, but SWISS Air still refusing to social distance on flights posing a severe risk to passengers. (Updated 12 August 2020)
Post-pandemic: welcome to the multi-speed world of regional disparities
The 2020 IB: an institution that betrayed its students
Pangolins and pandemics: digging for the roots of COVID-19
Bangkok is Sinking, but so are other Southeast Asian megacities…
A chance for high school students worldwide to get published
The United Nations should be supporting – not blocking – independent journalism.
Parag Khanna’s Latest Book: The Future is Asian
COVID-19 and climate change: the planet’s twin crises
Chronic diseases are the real pandemic: join the healthy food movement
Botswana’s rhino poaching crisis: COVID-19 increases the pressure