OUTCOME OF THE MEETING
OF THE OECD COUNCIL AT MINISTERIAL LEVEL
26-27 June 2000
EVALUATION
By the TUAC Secretariat
Overview
1. The theme of this year's OECD Ministerial Council was “shaping globalisation”,
a political message concerning “governance” expressed in the overview paragraphs
(1-4) of the final communiqué. The seven sections that follow show
the increased importance that the OECD is now attaching to our priorities
and concerns. The first three sections - sustainable development and social
cohesion; the (favourable) world economic development; the “new economy”
and sources of new growth, are all subjects high on the trade union agenda.
On European economic policy, initially strong messages for further monetary
tightening were eventually softened. This viewpoint was jointly emphasised
by TUAC and BIAC during consultations with the Ministers.
2. The section on trade liberalisation is an attempt to pick up the
pieces after Seattle. But it is clear from the Ministerial discussions
that negotiations on a new trade round are still a distant prospect. The
communiqué recognises the need for more co-operation among international
institutions including the ILO. The communiqué raises a wide range
of key issues of “global governance”. These include:- OECD work with non
members to set up a common governance agenda in consultation with civil
society; the OECD Guidelines on Multinational Enterprises adopted by all
OECD governments plus Argentina, Brazil, Chile and the Slovak Republic
and applicable on a worldwide scale; the elimination of harmful tax competition;
the fight against bribery and corruption and money laundering; international
co-operation against cartel pricing practices; OECD Principles of Corporate
Governance; food safety and genetically modified organisms (GMOs). The
sections on development co-operation and Co-operation with Non-Members
reiterate statements made in previous years, but make reference to human
rights (paragraph 38).
3. The OECD's recognition of its need to engage in dialogue with civil
society was reflected by the holding of the “OECD Forum 2000” which took
place in parallel to the Ministerial Council. The Secretary-General was
asked by Ministers to further strengthen consultations with NGOs, though
not for the moment through the establishment of a third official advisory
committee to the OECD. For the time being, TUAC and BIAC will remain the
consultative bodies and NGOs will be consulted on an issue by issue basis.
4. Despite the overall optimistic tone in the communiqué, the
OECD now officially recognises “the serious concerns felt by many” (paragraph
3) over globalisation, as OECD countries are facing “the most profound
transition in decades”. Globalisation is not regarded as a case of markets
dominating policies, but rather OECD governments having a priority task
to maximise the benefits while limiting the costs of globalisation. This
is the substance behind the overall theme for the Ministerial of “Shaping
Globalisation”. Another “first” in years is that OECD Ministers felt that
returning to full employment is possible - though only if the old supply
side recipes of the (now dated) OECD Jobs Strategy are put in place (paragraph
6). Labour market flexibility is not mentioned in the text, however it
is agreed that “barriers to work” need to be removed.
Economic Policy
5. Strong economic growth - the strongest since 1988 - with low inflation
and falling unemployment is the overall picture the OECD is painting for
2000-2001. However, the OECD area reflects different stages of the economic
cycle, and the outlook for non-OECD countries is more uncertain. Commodity
and financial market developments continue to carry considerable risks
(paragraph 7) and the least developed countries remain excluded from the
benefits of globalisation.
6. For the United States, the OECD acknowledges that a higher non-inflationary
growth potential exists. This is translated into a lower than previously
estimated NAIRU which constitutes an implicit self-critique for OECD economists.
For the immediate period, however, the OECD sees mounting inflationary
pressures (“demand still running ahead of supply”) and expresses worries
about the rising current account deficit. Implicitly the OECD is advocating
a tightening of monetary policy in order to squeeze internal demand growth
(paragraph 8).
7. For Europe, growth and employment prospects are seen as “better than
at any time since the late 1980s” (paragraph 9). Employment is increasing
without generating inflation. Initial drafts of the communiqué contained
a disguised recommendation to the ECB to further increase interest rates
(to “a more neutral monetary stance”). Following pressure from some governments
including the US and from both TUAC and BIAC, the communiqué now
stresses the ECB's policy goal of “maintaining price stability”. Fiscal
revenues resulting from higher growth should be used to reduce public debt.
Otherwise European governments are called on to continue fiscal consolidation
with the goal to “transform the current expansion into a lasting one”.
While the tone is still overly cautious, it should be noted that the former
OECD belief of a European trend potential growth rate at 2 - 2 ½
per cent maximum may be revised upwards. The advocated “further progress
on structural reform” does not specify further labour market deregulation.
8. For Japan, the outlook is less certain and views of governments appear
divided. The cautious communiqué language does not reflect earlier
debates on Japan at the time of the OECD Economic Policy Committee in May.
These focused on ways to lead the Japanese economy out of the deflationary
trap while avoiding a further rise of the Yen and a steep increase in public
debt. A recommendation to the Bank of Japan to inject more money into the
economy by “monetising” parts of the public debt was not upheld. The communiqué
thus calls for “accommodative monetary conditions” to be maintained and
issues a clear message for public policy that “fiscal consolidation is
not appropriate in the short run”. Significantly, the OECD acknowledges
that a full recovery will have to be led by private demand and accompanied
by further reform of the banking sector and corporate restructuring (paragraph
9).
New Economy
9. A full OECD report on the new economy and growth will be presented
to the 2001 OECD Ministerial. The project’s focus is to examine whether
a trend increase in productivity growth is occurring due to spread of information
and communication technology. The communiqué already notes the importance
of “growth and stability-orientated macroeconomic policies”; flexible markets
and entrepreneurship. This is a different and less interesting message
from initial OECD work on the project which emphasised the importance of
“social capital” and physical investment. The communiqué does recognise
that the risk of a growing “digital divide” is real.
Trade
10. The trade section in the communiqué (paragraphs 16-24) recognises
that any new Round of negotiations is not imminent and calls for “flexibility
... if we are to build consensus for a new Round” (paragraph 16). It says
the lessons of Seattle “are clear”. Significantly the communiqué
calls for enhanced co-operation among international organisations - WTO,
IMF, World Bank, UNCTAD, ILO, WHO, UNEP and OECD. It sets the OECD’s role
as doing analytical work including that on trade and core labour standards.
Disputes over support for agriculture left the communiqué saying
little in detail on specific trade issues.
Governance Issues
11. The “governance” agenda of rule setting is becoming more concrete
with the Guidelines and the report on tax havens and tax competition as
being the two significant new achievements of the Ministerial.
Guidelines on Multinational Enterprises
12. The endorsement by all OECD Ministers along with Argentina, Brazil,
Chile, and the Slovak Republic of the outcome of the Review of the OECD
Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises is a welcome step towards the
establishment of new rules governing social, environmental and other key
policies in a globalising economy. The decision recognises that a business
as usual approach to governing the activities of multinational enterprises
has failed. The real challenge now facing the OECD is to work with trade
unions and others committed to making the Guidelines work at the national
and international levels, both within and beyond the OECD area, so as to
ensure that they are implemented and enforced in practice. The TUAC Secretariat
will prepare a discussion document for affiliates setting out a range of
options to consider on work regarding next steps on the Guidelines.
13. In the wider field of international investment Ministers called
on the OECD to tackle the social and environmental dimensions, including
“harmful forms of policy-based competition to attract investment” (paragraph
27). TUAC will seek to ensure that this includes, among other things, work
on the impact of such competition on core labour standards, especially
as applied to export-processing zones.
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