WTO chief stresses need to learn from history on US push for import substitution

New York: Director-General of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, has said there is a need to learn from history in regard to the US federal government’s push for wholesale re-industrialisation or import substitution.

 

Import substitution stories in countries like Brazil and Nigeria didn’t go so well and “we need to learn from history,” Okonjo-Iweala said on Wednesday at a dialogue organised by the Council on Foreign Relations.

The US has to look at not just trade but also technology, which substitutes certain manufacturing jobs, according to Okonjo-Iweala, who is also an economist from Nigeria.

“Sometimes, trade is unfairly blamed for things that are due to technology,” and there would be more of that substitution from technology, she said.

Okonjo-Iweala added that there is a need to retrain the people who are impacted by new approaches and new techniques, Xinhua news agency reported.

She stressed that service jobs pay more than manufacturing jobs while the service sector accounts for about 80 per cent of the US economy.

Other countries are looking at how to emulate US strength in innovation and creativity in the service sector, and “this is something you need to safeguard, not destroy because that’s the future,” said Okonjo-Iweala.

She added that she can understand the efforts to maintain an edge in some types of manufacturing for security reasons via wholescale industrialisation and import substitution.

The WTO Chief urged the US to pay attention to the service sector, which is growing naturally in trade.

The international trading system was built for interdependence, not overdependence and the trade issues between the US and China are not purely the fault of trade policy, noted Okonjo-Iweala.

She again warned of the adverse impacts of potential decoupling of US-China trade given the current high level of tariffs.

“That was also a little bit comforting that there may be ways for the two to get to talk to each other and to avoid this situation, that would be very good for the world,” she said.

Trade is a strong driver of global growth and there is no country that can exist completely by itself in this day and age, Okonjo-Iweala said.

“Trade is important because it gives you an outlet and that’s what interdependence is about,” she said, citing US recent imports of eggs from Turkey to help solve the egg crisis as an example.

IANS

 

US Fed keeps interest rates unchanged, flags oil shock risks

Washington: Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the US central bank was keeping interest rates unchanged as it monitored the fallout from higher oil prices and broader uncertainty linked to...

Rupee hits record low of 92.63 amid firm dollar, import pressures

Mumbai: The rupee on Wednesday touched a fresh record low of 92.63 against the US dollar, amid a firming greenback and continued foreign fund outflows. At the interbank foreign exchange,...

Gold, silver fall up to 2 pc amid fading Fed rate cut hopes, geopolitical tensions

New Delhi: Gold and silver prices declined on Monday amid fading hopes of a near-term interest rate cut by the US Federal Reserve, while escalating tensions in West Asia kept...

Cyrus Mistry says won’t take up chairmanship of Tata Sons

Jan 5, 2019 New Delhi:  In a major turn in the Tata-Mistry saga, Cyrus Mistry on Sunday said that he would not take up the chairmanship of Tata Sons or...

Tata Motors produced zero Nanos in 2019, sold just one

Jan 7, 2020 Mumbai:Tata Motors did not even produce a single unit of its entry-level offering, Nano, during 2019, while it managed to sell just one unit during the year....

Growth estimate subdued, can force fiscal stimulus in Budget

Jan 7, 2020 New Delhi: The government on Tuesday forecast 5 per cent growth for the current financial year, which is the slowest pace in 11 years, and may force...

‘Lack of credit, lower consumption led India’s growthrate to 5%’

by Arul Louis Jan 9, 2020 United Nations: The World Bank says that a lack of credit and drop in private consumption have led to a gloomy growth outlook for...

December auto sales decline by over 13%

10, 2020 New Delhi: The domestic automobile sales continued to decline in December with the overall sectoral off-take plunging 13.08 per cent on a year-on-year basis, data showed on Friday....

Amazon CEO Bezos’s India visit crucial as ecommerce space gets fierce

Jan 10, 2020 New Delhi: As the Indian ecommerce market enters into an interesting phase with Reliance firming up its mega plans with launching JioMart, Amazon Founder and CEO Jeff...

Star unicorn Oyo shuts door on employees in India, China

Jan 13, 2020 New Delhi: Ritesh Agarwal-led Indian hospitality unicorn Oyo, currently the second top unicorn after Paytm and valued at nearly $10 billion in the country, has acted tough...

US ends China’s designation as currency manipulator

Washington: The US has dropped its designation of China as a "currency manipulator", just two days before the two countries were scheduled to sign an agreement at the White House...

Amazon to invest $1 bn to digitise Indian SMBs: Bezos

Jan 15, 2020 New Delhi: In a major announcement showing Amazon's support for Indian MSMEs, CEO Jeff Bezos on Wednesday said that the company would invest $1 billion in digitising...

Read Previous

Russia to elevate Afghan diplomatic mission to ambassador level

Read Next

12 US states sue Trump administration over ‘illegal tariffs’

WP2Social Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com