Thank you very much, and thank you for the invitation to appear.
As you heard, this is a decisive year for the Doha negotiations. The expiry of the U.S. fast track negotiating authority in July 2007 sets an effective deadline of the end of this year, at the latest early next year, for wrapping up the talks. While the impasse over agriculture understandably attracts the most attention, services are also a major component of the Doha agenda. In the GATS negotiations, key demandeurs are still pressing for ambitious results, and I'd like to speak to you about some of the implications of that today.
If there is a breakthrough in the agricultural and NAMA negotiations this year, Canada and other countries will be under strong pressure to increase gas coverage and to agree to new rules, currently under negotiation, restricting domestic regulation. In contrast with goods, as Rob Ready alluded to, where the main barriers to international trade are border measures such as tariffs and quotas that are easy to identify and quantifiable, the obstacles to trade in services usually involve more complex issues of national, provincial, and local government regulation.
WTO rules addressing services are fairly recent, since the mid-1990s. They're still largely untested, they're broad in scope, they cover investment in addition to cross-border trade, they apply a tough test of non-discrimination, and they even restrict certain government measures that are non-discriminatory, such as you can't put limits on the number of service providers in committed sectors, and that includes monopolies, like public insurance monopolies and so on.
In my view, Canada should be very cautious about making additional GATS commitments. Canada has commitments today in just over 100 of the 160 service subsectors. Many of the remaining subsectors are among the most sensitive ones. The policy implications even of the existing commitments have not been properly debated. Furthermore, Canada should stop pressuring developing countries into making GATS commitments that many clearly are not comfortable with. That was obvious at Hong Kong. The full policy implications are not understood for them as well.
Developing countries are being pressed hard on a wide range of fronts--environmental services, postal and courier, financial, telecommunications, transportation, distribution, maritime, education, and more. The issues at stake are not mainly about opening markets. Foreign companies, including Canadian companies, already have access to these markets, in most cases, or as much access as foreign companies have, say, to the Canadian market. The issues are really about government measures and policies and the ability of governments to regulate and to shape their own economic development and to take steps to ensure that liberalization benefits their citizens.
I would say that by pressing others too hard, Canada may be even undermining its own interests, and I'll just give a quick example. We joined in one of these plurilateral requests on telecommunications. We were a co-sponsor. Among the demands in that request was that countries allow majority foreign ownership of telecommunications companies, which of course existing Canadian law does not permit. Now, to my mind, either you're applying a double standard or Canada is also a recipient of this request, what's called a deemed recipient. Even though it's sponsoring the request, it's also a recipient of the request. So in a sense, the government's negotiating position is undermining our own domestic law. This is one of the reasons I think parliamentarians need to have a careful look at some of the details of these negotiating positions.
Many Canadians are concerned about the encroachment of these services, trade treaty rules, into public services. The exemptions for public services in the GATS are highly qualified and they are untested in dispute settlement. I can go into that if you want.
There are legitimate concerns that the agreement will lock in commercialization of public services, where they occur, and make it much more difficult to expand services, or to reverse commercialization or privatization, where it occurs. There's an ebb and flow in democratic governments that has to be respected.
The federal government has pledged that it will take no commitments in health, social services, and public education--which would leave open the door to private education--during the current round. It has also, so far, resisted demands to cover audio-visual and culturally related services, pending the negotiation of an international instrument to protect cultural diversity.
To give credit where credit is due, Canada has also pledged and has not made requests of other countries in these sectors, which it would have been free to do. You could make requests even in areas where you're not prepared to make commitments, but they've taken what I think is a good position, a principled position, not to make requests in areas where they're not prepared to make commitments, with the exception of these plurilaterals, which I just referred to.
But few Canadians, and I wonder how many parliamentarians, are aware that Canada already has, in the last round, covered health insurance and automobile insurance under the GATS. Once a country schedules a commitment, the market access rule of the GATS prevents governments at all levels--provincial and federal--from operating monopolies. So the existing system of public health insurance and provincial auto insurance in four provinces was excluded. It was exempted in the 1990s. But for another province, the one I come from--Prince Edward Island--or New Brunswick or others, or if Quebec were to expand its current system, which is a mixed system, that would become a WTO-litigated issue. To me, again, this is a good example of how these treaties have overreached and are infringing on what is the proper domain of elected governments.
Another important area in the current negotiations is for new disciplines on explicitly non-discriminatory domestic regulation. These rules are under negotiation today. Right now, as we speak, there's a commitment to come up with these rules, which would discipline non-discriminatory regulation affecting standards and affecting licensing of services. That could be facilities licensing, if you want to set up a toxic waste dump. It could be professional licensing. Standards could be everything from the quality of an educational service to pipeline safety, things like that. This is very sensitive stuff.
A majority of developing countries, in a very recent development, have come out strongly against the application on the necessity test. That happened at a meeting in early May. The United States has also spoken strongly. But at that meeting, anyway, Canada was silent, and that concerns me. Again, I think there is a role for Parliament in pressing the Canadian government and Canadian negotiators to explain the issues, their position, and why they are not moving now to put an end to what could be rules that we would regret if they're developed.
In closing, because services rules are novel and deal with regulatory issues that go to the heart of democratic decision-making, I believe it's particularly important that parliamentarians, and this committee in particular, play an active role in overseeing these negotiations. I hope you will dig deeper than indisputable claims that services comprise the largest share of developed economies, that services trade is growing strongly, and that Canadian service providers need to be active in the international markets.
All that is true, but Canada and other governments still need to proceed cautiously. The new services trade treaty regime raises many questions about public services, about public interest regulation of private services, and especially in underdeveloped countries and regions, including some regions of Canada, about the role of governments in ensuring that services liberalization benefits the broader community.
Thank you.