It was heralded as the greatest and most important tariff-cutting meeting in the history of world trade, but it began with the style and promise of a shotgun wedding. As 300 delegates from 66 nations gathered in Geneva last week for the long-awaited trade talks under the General Agreement on Tariff and Trade (GATT)— labeled the Kennedy Round because the late President gave them impetus —the air was heavy with torpor and reluctance. After more than a year of preliminary parleys that tried to lay a groundwork on which the conference could proceed, all the delegates had really agreed on was that they still have monumental disagreements to over come. GATT Executive Secretary Eric Wyndham White, whose job was to open the conference with a ringing keynote, had to admit the seriousness of the fail ure to set so much as the terms for negotiating. “This is disappointing,” he said, “and it would be foolish to pretend otherwise.”
Even the setting was unsettling. Because the United Nations trade conference had pre-empted the grandiose Palais des Nations, the GATT delegates had to forgo the peacock lawns and lakeside vistas to meet amid six scraggly potted palms in the salon of the BatimentElectoral, where the Swiss hold cantonal elections. On a floor below, the brass band of the Geneva Landwehr could be heard holding its rehearsals. The remarks of Chief U.S. Negotiator Christian A. Herter were punctuated by the faint oom-pah-pahs of the Landwehr as he warned: “The longer we procrastinate in setting the formulas by which these negotiations will proceed, the more we risk the success of the entire negotiations.”
Disparities Despair. Fundamental to the lack of progress so far is that the U.S. Congress passed the Trade Expansion Act that inspired the Geneva talks for the express purpose of breaking down Common Market trade barriers to expand U.S. exports. The U.S. thus wants to negotiate a flat across-the-board percentage cut on 5,000 items in international trade. The Six, understandably, want to open up world markets for their own industry and farmers. Since their tariff walls are already generally lower than the U.S.’s, they reject a flat cut that would only perpetuate the disparities, prefer instead a selective approach that would make progress to ward equalizing all trade barriers. Further complicating the talks is the failure of the Eurocrats to set a Common Market farm pricing policy, without which it is impossible to discuss agricultural tariffs—an issue vital to the U.S. be cause it sends $1.2 billion worth of farm exports to Europe yearly.
The world economic situation has changed since the Trade Act was passed. Then it looked as if the Common Market, with its lower labor costs, would chop away U.S. world markets; instead, inflation is now racking most of the Six, while U.S. prices have remained relatively stable. Result: U.S. trade and payments balances are improving against the Common Market’s, a fact that makes the Six all the more wary of dismantling their trade barriers.
No Blast. The first week’s talks did produce one agreement: after a battle of semantics, the negotiators agreed to accept as a “working hypothesis” the aim of reducing tariffs by 50%, the goal set forth in the U.S. Trade Act. On the surface, it looked like a clear U.S. victory; actually, it was a mere formalism that left the big questions still open. The fact is that the U.S. has been forced to move closer to the European point of view. It has conceded that items on which tariff disparities exist should be dealt with separately, after long opposing any such concession. A tacit understanding is also developing that the U.S. will allow negotiations over agricultural tariffs to be put off until Europe’s farm quarrels are settled. To cast the week’s efforts in the most encouraging light, Christian Herter was driven to new heights of diplomatic doubletalk. The agreement, said he, was “a definite step toward moving ahead.”
The event that caused the most stir last week was one that did not take place at all. France’s Charles de Gaulle has few good wishes for the success of the talks, and no one in Geneva would have been particularly surprised if he had scuttled the whole conference with a single blast. Instead, French Finance Minister Valéry Giscard D’Estaing bided his time, made no statement at all. “I think,” said he after the meeting, “that St. Thomas Aquinas was right: Talk only when you have something to say to someone.’* I had nothing to say.” This was encouragement of a sort, and the general dissatisfaction expressed by the delegates over the lack of real progress so far provided grounds for further hope. At least no nation is deluding itself that the negotiations will be anything but long and arduous, and that many compromises must be patiently worked out if the Kennedy Round is ever to come close to fulfilling its great promise.
* A loose rendering of a letter said to have been written by Aquinas to a Dominican novice, in which he advised: “I exhort you to be chary of speech, and to go into the conversation room sparingly.”
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