Posted By David Bosco Share

In today's world, one of the basic identities that a country has is its position on the continuum from less developed to developing and, finally, to developed. The working assumption is that a country wants to move from one category to the next. And in terms of a country's economic output, that's probably reasonable.

But it turns out that wanting to develop and wanting to be classified as "developed" are two quite different things. Particularly when it comes to international trade, there are pocketbook reasons that a country might prefer to remain "developing" long after economic data and common sense remove it from that category. Some of the key international trade agreements underlying the World Trade Organization, in particular, offer special benefits to developing countries:

Developing country status in the WTO brings certain rights. There are for example provisions in some WTO Agreements which provide developing countries with longer transition periods before they are required to fully implement the agreement and developing countries can receive technical assistance.

It all sounds fair enough. The catch is that there's no standard system--such as a GDP per capita figure or a certain volume of exports--for determining when a country has passed from developing to developed. Different international organizations apply different standards. The United Nations maintains a list of the world's least developed countries, and it also divides the globe into developing and developed regions, although not countries.  The World Bank maintains slightly different categories of low, middle, and high-income. The International Monetary Fund has its own hybrid system of classification.

For its part, the WTO has no classification system. Instead, countries declare their status and, consequently, their eligibility for the trade benefits accorded to developing countries. They often do so à la carte, claiming developing country status for certain agreements but not others. This murky honor system produces some odd results.  South Korea, Mexico, and Turkey are members of the elite G-20 and the OECD (traditionally thought of as the rich-country club) but when it comes to WTO matters, they sometimes claim to be developing. Israel is another OECD member that has taken advantage of developing-country benefits.

Some observers believe that the dysfunctionalities of the self-declaration system go even deeper. Gary Clyde Hufbauer, a former U.S. Treasury Department official now at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, argues that the special allowances were originally designed to give breathing space to countries that had trouble entering the world trading system. He sees no reason that exporting powerhouses like China and Brazil--let alone the aforementioned OECD members--should be able to claim special trade privileges.

That kind of complaint normally elicits an empassioned defense from these emerging economies: We may be coming economic powers, they insist, but we are have millions of poor citizens. It's an argument that still carries moral weight, although less than in the past. As China and other emerging economies grow healthily, the West is less and less sympathetic to their claims of penury.

Not that there's much Washington, Tokyo or Brussels can do about it. The practice of self-declaring is by now built deep into the WTO structure, and attempts to reform the system have gotten nowhere. For the time being, a developing country at the WTO is whoever claims to be one.

 

SLIGHTLY_OPTIMISTIC

1:34 PM ET

February 18, 2011

Public goods

Fascinating subject. It's indeed a pity that no standard system exists for classifying a country as 'developed'.

But regardless, developed or developing, the provision of key public goods such as payments to the United Nations system and international aid is still left largely to the discretion of each government. Maybe France plans to change this at its G20.

 

GRANT

9:37 PM ET

February 18, 2011

France seems to have plans to

France seems to have plans to change everything at the G20.

 

DAVID BOSCO

10:18 PM ET

February 18, 2011

Yes indeed. The French argue

Yes indeed. The French argue that there's no reason not to at least start talking about significant changes to the global governance architecture.

 

GRANT

6:37 AM ET

February 19, 2011

I have to admit I would be a

I have to admit I would be a great deal more sympathetic (even though I think such ambitions are impractical) if I didn't suspect that Sarkozy is thinking more about his legacy.

 

D. DARKO

2:29 PM ET

February 20, 2011

Good Point!

Having lived in S. Korea for a number of years, I've had this thought myself in the past. Walk down the streets in Kangnam - one of the downtown areas in Seoul, past the glittering and beautiful skyscrapers, and you would never, ever think it's a developing country. Can a country that has be best broadband connectivity, and the highest per capita Phd level be developing?

 

TAJO

3:01 PM ET

February 20, 2011

Meanwhile, outside of Seoul...

While it's true that the Seoul metropolitan area (which is about 20% of the country's population) is a highly developed metropolis, a trip through the countryside of South Korea will give you second thoughts as to whether deeming itself a developing country is really so absurd. Judging South Korea by Seoul alone is like judging China by Beijing, Hong Kong, and Shanghai...although my only issue here is whether claiming such status does anything to alleviate the gap that creates such a stark contrast. In any case, the gap between "developed" and "developing" is so large that there really needs to be a term for the middle ground.

 

VVARMONGER

3:32 PM ET

February 20, 2011

Outside of Seoul My Hairy Bottom

TAJO i'm not sure you've ever been to Korea. Let's try some other cities besides Seoul. Taegu, Inchon, Wonju, Ouijongbou, Tongduchon, Busan, Kangneung, Pyongtaek, Suwon, Yeoju, Chuncheon.(The list goes on) All modern cities with superb infrastructure, flawless communications, high rise condos, and busy department stores. Don't go feeling bad for people living in the countryside either. They might not have ultra fancy double wide trailers but with industrial complexes popping up faster then you can count the real estate values have surged to ridiculous heights for farm land. You don't get a 40acre lot there for less then a million no matter where it's located. South Korea is a model country for the benefits of aggressive infrastructure spending but they left the developing stage more then a decade ago.

 

LWEATHERS

5:15 PM ET

February 20, 2011

I would say this is

I would say this is deplorable, because I think everyone should be held to the same standards, but I wouldn't want the US government to be working on a unifying standard when we here in America have much bigger fish to fry. Call me a realist, but these are issues come hand- in- hand with the current world system, and I can't say that the US has never claimed benefits we're not entitled to. Our government is currently free- riding off of China until it can pull itself together... so even if Seoul is claiming benefits it is not entitled to, with all of America's issues, I'm not going to point fingers.

 

IMEENSMITH

2:25 AM ET

February 21, 2011

htc mytouch 3g

HTC myTouch 3G 3.5mm jack is a sleek and excellent design device that runs on Android 1.6 and a better version of its predecessor the myTouch 3G.

http://www.cellhub.com/T-mobile-cell-phones/htc-mytouch-3g-35mm-jack-black.html

htc mytouch 3g

 

SYNTAX

9:34 AM ET

February 21, 2011

New Category

I just typed up a huge comment and lost it all when I pushed the back button by accident. (FML >.< )

The gist of it was an idea for a need of a fourth categorisation such as a 'Regressing Country'. Essentially, I was thinking that maybe the US was entering this stage, what with increasing unemployment, increasing percentage of employed under the poverty line, increasing number of people reliant on food stamps etc.

I got this information from an article (can't remember which) discussing the idea of the corporations and upper class, big earners essentially, being in good recovery from the recession, whereas the rest of the Americans are still feeling the brunt of it.

Forgive me if I'm wrong on this, I read mostly articles from FP regarding these issues. If you can point me to other reliable/accurate news and foreign policy (not just US, but also maybe European) sources then I would appreciate that.

Discalimer: I am not American :P So I do not say this stuff from personal experience. Just the feeling I get from reading FP, various blogs and local news sources.

 

GRANT

3:19 PM ET

February 21, 2011

That's mostly from a

That's mostly from a recession (which all nations experience) and the fact that other nations are (slowly) taking up some of the global market. If we based it on that we'd have to also call the U.K a 'regressing country' in the 1950s because it didn't have the economic power it used to. There are a few states where it seems like things will keep getting worse (Japan perhaps) but the U.S really isn't one of them.

 

David Bosco reports on the new world order for The Multilateralist.

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