Statement by Secretary of Agriculture Dan Glickman World Trade Organization Ministerial Conference Plenary Session Seattle, Washington -- November 30, 1999 Release No. 0472.99 Statement by Secretary of Agriculture Dan Glickman World Trade Organization Ministerial Conference Plenary Session Seattle, Washington -- November 30, 1999 "Friends, colleagues and distinguished guests: "On behalf of the United States, as host and Chair of the World Trade Organization's Third Ministerial Conference, let me welcome all of you to Seattle. Let me also applaud and thank Director-General Moore, the members of the WTO Secretariat, the governments of the State of Washington and King County, and the Seattle community for the hard work they have done to prepare for this event. "As we meet today, we look ahead to the launch of the first multilateral negotiating Round since the creation of the WTO. We also look back, across the five decades to the day the United States joined 22 other nations to found the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. Over these fifty years, we have worked together each of us with our own individual goals in mind; but, at our best, mindful of a broader mission of mutual benefit, shared prosperity, and strengthening peace. And the accomplishment has been remarkable. "We have reduced tariffs by 90%, and broadened our agenda to address quantitative restrictions, technical standards, subsidies, government procurement, intellectual property, agriculture, sanitary and phytosanitary standards, services, and dispute settlement. We have expanded membership, from the original 23 GATT members to today's 135 WTO members, extending the trading system's principles of open markets, transparency and rule of law throughout the world. And as a result, we have given the people of all our nations an unprecedented set of opportunities for growth, prosperity, and confidence in the future. "Fifty years after the foundation of the trading system, therefore, we can take pride in the work we have done together. But we also must not let pride in our accomplishment make us complacent in the face of the challenges and opportunities before us today. "We note with applause, for example, the entry of the Kyrgyz Republic, Latvia and Estonia into the WTO since the last Ministerial. We also see progress toward entry for many other economies, for example in our conclusion of bilateral negotiations with China. "On a broader scale, we support and look forward to the launch of a new Round of trade negotiations: the ninth since the foundation of the trading system, and the first since creation of the WTO. Our goals are a negotiating agenda which is ambitious enough to meet the challenges of a new century and address the top priorities of all participants; focused enough to complete within a reasonable period; and able to achieve results that meet the standard our predecessors have set. In such a Round we can: Aggressively reform agricultural trade by lowering trade barriers, substantially reducing trade-distorting subsidies and other measures. Thus we can create opportunities for farm and ranch families worldwide, support rural prosperity, and increase food security and fight hunger by giving WTO members access to diverse sources of food at market prices. Further open world trade in services and industrial goods, helping promote worldwide growth and allowing more nations to gain access to new technologies, find new markets around the world, and create high-wage employment. Examine the basic questions of trade facilitation and customs, to ensure that trade proceeds as smoothly and easily as it should in today's high- tech world. Meet the challenge of the 21st century, notably by ensuring that electronic commerce develops as freely as it should, and by helping us to ensure that farmers and ranchers can use biotechnology products approved through transparent, science-based, and timely regulatory processes, and consumers enjoy the benefit of safe and beneficial products. Promote development worldwide, by opening markets more fully to products especially from the least developed countries, and offering significantly expanded technical assistance to ensure that all members gain the full advantage of the system. Ensure sustainable development, by opening trade in areas such as environmental goods and services that improve environmental protection; and eliminating environmentally damaging subsidies such as agricultural export subsidies and fishery subsidies that contribute to overcapacity; Create a Working Group on the links between trade and core labor standards; and Ensure that the WTO itself meets the test of a more open and democratic world, by improving transparency and accessibility to the public throughout the organization. "This is a broad, ambitious, and achievable agenda. We can give it momentum through specific accomplishments in market access and transparency in government procurement, and extension of the moratorium on application of customs duties to electronic transmissions which place us on the road to success. And we can proceed with the assurance that we are on the right course. We take pride in the record of the past; we see the opportunities of the present clearly; and we look to the future with confidence and hope. "Thank you very much." #