WTO public forum begins tomorrow

The largest outreach event of the

World Trade Organization (WTO) will start tomorrow at the multilateral trade

organisation’s secretariat in the Swiss city of Geneva.

Under the theme of ‘Re-globalization: Better Trade for a Better World,’ this

year’s forum will explore how re-globalization can help make trade more

inclusive and ensure that its benefits reach more people.

In particular, the forum will delve into how green policies, services, and

digitalisation can contribute to this objective.

The sub-themes of the forum are green policies to maximise the benefits of

trade, services trade to build progress and enhance welfare and

digitalisation as a catalyst for inclusive trade.

The public forum will feature 139 sessions from September 10-13. Sessions are

organised by WTO member governments, businesses, non-governmental

organisations, academia and international organisations with many sessions

livestreamed on the WTO website.

The forum will kick-off with the launch of the World Trade Report, whi
ch this

year will explore the complex interlinkages between trade and inclusiveness

across and within economies.

The forum will also feature a lecture by Jason Furman, Aetna Professor of the

Practice of Economic Policy at Harvard University and former Chairman of the

Council of Economic Advisers during Barack Obama’s tenure as President of the

United States.

Following his presentation, Professor Furman will have a fireside chat with

Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, giving participants the opportunity to

witness a candid exchange on the potential of re-globalization at a time of

geopolitical uncertainty.

Several interactive activities will be organised throughout the forum,

including an immersive exhibition by the International Trade Centre (ITC) to

celebrate their 60th anniversary.

Representatives from civil society, academia, business, government,

international organizations and the media have already arrived in Geneva to

participate in the forum.

The organisers have set up a packed sch
edule, anticipating a hectic week

ahead.

Talking to BSS, Barkat Ullah Maruf, director-partnerships and development

communication, COAST Foundation, said that the public forum offers an

opportunity to gather views, opinions and analyses from different

stakeholders in global trade.

“In a sense, it is an agenda-shaping exercise for the ministerial conference

which is the highest decision-making event of the organisation,” he added.

Maruf will attend the forum as a moderator at a panel on “Trade rules for

supporting small-scale farming as contributors to green trade in agriculture:

Which way forward?”

Maruf, however, said challenges posed by climate change and environmental

degradation have become a persistent determinant of the global agricultural

production and trade system.

Small farmers, across the developing and developed world, including

Bangladesh, have been at the heart of this discourse, he mentioned.

He informed that the farmers have been major contributors to sustainability

but have su
ffered most from the effects of climate change and environmental

devastation.

At the same time, their engagement in global trade has been rather limited

and precarious, made more vulnerable by global price volatility and an

uncertain global market, he added.

Barkat Ullah Maruf said the forum will also explore how small farmers can be

better integrated into the global production and trading system, how they can

contribute more and benefit from greener production and trading systems, how

the WTO as an institution and its Membership can cater to their needs, and

how trade policy outside the realm of the WTO can be synergised to better

deliver on both sustainability and food security.

Source: Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha

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