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1. We
stress our faith in and commitment to the multilateral trading system,
which has contributed so much to international growth, stability and sustainable
development for over fifty years. We believe that continued trade opening,
combined with stronger international trade rules and disciplines, represents
the optimum path to global growth, both in the G8 countries and elsewhere,
and particularly in developing countries. The multilateral system embodied
in the World Trade Organisation (WTO), and the current Doha Development
Agenda, is thus central to the G8's approach to energising the global
economy, increasing employment, spurring sustainable development, improving
international governance, and eradicating poverty.
2. We
will promote the multilateral system by providing leadership in the ongoing
negotiations so that improved access to markets for all WTO members is
realised, particularly for the poorest, to ensure their integration into
the multilateral system, and their development more broadly. We are therefore
committed to delivering on schedule, by the end of 2004, the goals set
out in the Doha Development Agenda, and to ensuring that the Cancun Ministerial
Conference in September takes all decisions necessary to help reach that
goal.
3. To
these ends, we direct our ministers and officials to pursue urgently with
WTO partners the actions outlined below:
3.1 Work
towards an agreed framework for finalising the negotiations to achieve
further substantial opening of trade in all areas, including in agricultural
and non-agricultural goods, and in services, in order to benefit economic
growth, trade and employment. In so doing, we will pay particular attention
to those areas of interest to developing countries;
3.2 Work towards strengthening the existing WTO rules and disciplines,
as well as developing further multilateral rules, so as to provide fairer,
less distorted, more transparent and more predictable conditions for world
trade, and as a contribution to improved international governance;
3.3 Establish a multilateral solution in the WTO to address the problems
faced by developing countries with insufficient or no manufacturing capacities
in the pharmaceutical sector, before the Cancun Ministerial, rebuilding
the confidence of all parties involved in this issue. Pending a WTO solution,
to address the practical problems faced by such countries, we note that
many of us have instituted moratoria on challenging any Member of the
WTO that, according to the scope and modalities defined in their respective
moratoria, would want to export to a country in need medicines produced
under compulsory license for addressing public health crises, including
those relating to HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria and other epidemics.
3.4 In accordance with the Doha mandate, seek agreement on the negotiating
modalities for each of the four Singapore issues of investment, competition,
transparency in government procurement and trade facilitation;
3.5 Deliver capacity building technical assistance to developing
countries in need to help them participate fully in WTO negotiations,
implement trade agreements, and respond to the trade opportunities created,
in co-operation with other bilateral and multilateral donors; US$ 1.7
billion has been provided in 2002, representing a 16% increase over 2001.
3.6 Better integrate trade, finance and development policies, and
by using relevant institutions, make trade an engine for economic growth
and help developing countries make the transition to full participants
in the global economy;
3.7 In recognition of the fact that preference programmes for poor
countries have an important transitional role in bringing them into the
global trading system, improve our preferential trade agreements and/or
programmes with developing countries, in terms of increased market opportunities,
stimulating regional integration and trade between developing country
partners, and ensuring that the rules and procedures underpinning programmes
and/or trade agreements do not constitute barriers to the enjoyment of
the preferential benefits nor impede multilateral trade liberalisation
envisioned as part of the Doha agenda. We will each work to ensure that
the rules (particularly rules of origin provisions and documentation requirements)
do not inadvertently preclude eligible developing countries from taking
advantage of preference programmes.
Source
: 2003 G8 Summit documents
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