Can this grandmother save the world?
Can this grandmother save the world?
AS the World Trade Organisation, WTO, formally announced the appointment of Dr.
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala as Director General this week, a Swiss newspaper received
her with a disgraceful headline: “This grandmother will become the boss of the
WTO,” with her photograph under the headline. The headline sparked an outrage,
forcing the editors to modify their position: “This 66-year-old Nigerian will
head WTO.” At least, three Swiss newspapers – Luzerner Zeitung, Aarguaer
Zeitung and St. Galler Tagblatt – fetched their headlines from the gutter,
making slight changes only after they were called out for racism.
They removed the sting but left the
poison. That’s their grief. The candidacy of Okonjo-Iweala for the position of
Director General has been one of the most contentious in the history of the
26-year-old organisation. And partly for the sort of maliciously dumb reason
reflected in the headline of the Swiss newspapers. Getting it Some folks just
can’t wrap their heads around the fact that a woman is taking the position.
That a Black woman is taking over only compounds their misery. Yet,
Okonjo-Iweala is not just any Black woman. She beat eight of the world’s best
contenders from four continents to clinch the position. And yes, two women
reached the final round, shattering the glass ceiling of chauvinism in the
global trading system. Since its founding in 1995, the WTO has been an
exclusive boys’ network running errands for the world’s richest countries who
won’t play by fair trading rules and its poorest who have no interest in the
rules because they believe the system is rigged against them. But even among
the rich countries, there’s no agreement on the rules. Donald Trump spent four
years of his presidency in a fierce trade war with China, claiming unfair
practices, currency manipulation and outright stealing of US patents and
copyright by Chinese companies.
Trump did many things wrong, and
precipitously, too – including, for example, the tearing up of the
Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal; the violation of the North Atlantic Free
Trade Agreement and everything else in between. His obsession with
protectionism perpetually kept the world on the verge of a global trade war. Yet,
a few of his complaints about China, especially on intellectual property
rights, were spot on. Of course, China, ever so eager and pleased to be
underrated, also had its own complaints against what it described as Trump’s
hard-headed protectionism, claiming in a legal case lodged with the WTO two
years ago, that US tariffs had affected $300billion of Chinese exports.
Elephants at war In the fight between the two elephants, worsened by Brexit,
the grass of shared global prosperity has suffered. At heart, WTO is a network
of 164 members and 25 observer governments with a deeply ingrained male culture
that behaves as if stability in the rules-based system is measured by brawn and
testosterone. We have seen what that culture is costing the world. It has endangered
the collective wisdom that produced the General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs,
GATT, after the Second World War derived from the understanding that shared
prosperity through free international trade could keep the world from another
catastrophe. GATT failed because it lacked the mechanism to negotiate and
settle legal disputes on trade, especially those related to agriculture and
textiles, among its members. A series of negotiations, famously called the
Uruguay Rounds which started in 1986, led to the birth of the WTO – a
rules-based system that is supposed to help liberalise international trade and
settle disputes among member states. WTO has done its best, helping, among
other things, to promote free trade which has led to a rising tide that has lifted
hundreds of millions from poverty across the world. British MP and also one of
the contenders for the DG WTO, Liam Fox, said in Rising Tides, that WTO “is the
best mechanism we have so far devised” in managing global trade. Yet, its
predominantly masochistic instincts have prevented it from looking beyond
pandering to the interests of its rich and powerful club members. The fear
among political leaders that WTO tends to promote globalisation and the “loss”
of sovereignty, has not helped matters. Between the arrogant pride of rich club
members who moan that WTO is not paying enough attention to the critical issue
of services and intellectual property and the mass of the developing countries
complaining about unfair trade and the fallouts of globalisation, the future of
the WTO hangs on a precarious balance. The absurd sentiment expressed in the
Swiss newspapers about a grandmother taking the job was not just a gender slur,
it also reflected the desperation of an old entitled guard determined to either
permanently hijack the WTO or else push it over the cliff. They fear that with
the confirmation of Okonjo-Iweala, their cozy world may fall off a cliff. Love
grandma But love her or despise her, this grandmother has come to stay. And
while we recognise that the gender bias is only a part of the problem of the
old boys’ network, there’s also a clear hint of racial prejudice which the
Swiss newspapers, based in the same country where the WTO has its headquarters,
were not ashamed to wear proudly on their sleeve. The newspapers could also not
endure the fact that not just a Black woman, but a Black African woman, is at
the helm. So, they had to exhume the worst metaphor possible from their closet
of scarecrows to make the point. As conservationist, Linda Klare-Repnik, said
on LinkedIn: “If it had been a White man, the title would have been along the
lines of ‘Harvard Economist, ex-World Bank Managing Director and ex Minister of
Finance…’” But Okonjo-Iweala is not White and would be judged, in the end, not
by her skin colour. She would be judged by her promise to reform the “broken”
system of international free trade, and by her pledge to build bridges and
create a platform “where all members, big and small, believe and trust in the
system and can use it”, as she told TIME.
Not that she’s on probation as she
more than proved herself as managing director at the World Bank and Nigeria’s
two-time minister of finance. That Nigeria emerged nearly debt-free and
Africa’s largest economy in the 2000s are largely credit to her and the
economic management team on her watch as finance minister. The point is that
she’s coming to her job at a time when confidence in the global trading system
is in shambles, partly inflicted by the conflict between the US and China,
worsened by indifference among developing countries, and gravely compounded by
the fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic. Joe Biden’s victory in the US
presidential election may lessen the trade conflict between of WTO’s largest
economies – the US and China – but indifference to the organisation among
developing countries and COVID-19 are still present clear and present dangers.
Yet these factors are also opportunities – at least in Africa where the impact
of the pandemic has been relatively under control. Also, the commencement of
the African Continental Free Trade Agreement, AfCFTA, signals a greater zeal
for more intra-regional trade. For decades, the continent has been shortchanged
just as much as it has shortchanged itself with leaders who trade empty
ideologies in the morning and peddle begging bowls by night. They expect
Chinese brains to build their roads and factories, yet have no qualms
implementing policies that impoverish their countries, while they stash money
away in economies that fund the grandmother insult. It’s a long road to
redemption, but hopefully, AfCTA is the beginning of the end of making
barriers, instead of making wealth through trade and innovation. Previous heads
of the WTO did what they could but Africa remained squarely at the fringe of
their map. If it will take a grandmother to shake things up, then
Okonjo-Iweala’s tenure is long overdue.
Nigeria News Paper
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