Okonjo-Iweala vs Myung-hee: How new WTO DG will emerge in November 2020

Okonjo-Iweala
L-R: Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and Yoo Myung-hee

The selection of a new director general of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) has entered its final stage, with only two candidates selected from the initial list of eight contenders.

The final two are Nigeria’s former finance minister, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and South Korean Trade Minister, Yoo Myung-hee.

Both are female which suggests that if members of the WTO will settle for one the two in the final stages of selection, that will make it the first time the job has been taken by a woman.

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala’s background

Okonjo-Iweala and Myung-hee both have political and international experience and both were students at American universities.

On her part, Okonjo-Iweala, who also has US nationality, has had two spells as finance minister and a short stint as foreign minister in Nigeria, and much of her career was spent as an economist at the World Bank.

There at the World Bank, Okonjo-Iweala rose to the position of managing director, which essentially made her the second in command at the institution. However, she has been an unsuccessful candidate for the top job at the bank.

But, currently she is the chair of the board of the international vaccines alliance, Gavi.

Okonjo-Iweala, with her work as a development economist and finance minister means she has often had to deal with international trade, but she has not spent her career immersed in the details of trade policy as some other candidates did.

She describes trade as “a mission and a passion,” and she would be the first African to be director general of the WTO.

Yoo Myung-hee’s background

Ms Yoo is much more of a trade specialist.

Her statement to the WTO’s general council hinted at a literal lifetime in the area – she said she was born the same year that South Korea acceded to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, which became one of the key elements of the WTO’s rule book.

ALSO READ: WTO hopeful Okonjo-Iweala balances Nigeria, US citizenships over protectionist sentiment

She started her career in trade, she said, in the year the WTO was born, 1995.

She has been involved in some of South Korea’s key trade negotiations in that period, including with China and the US. She makes a point of her “deep knowledge and insight into the details of various areas of trade agreements.”

Under stress

Both candidates were keen to point out their abilities in bringing sides together in negotiations.

That is a skill the successful candidate will have to draw on extensively.

It is important to remember that a WTO director general can only make progress if they can get the member countries on board.

It has been said that the DG has no executive power; that they are more like a butler announcing to the member countries) that dinner is served.

But the WTO is an organisation under stress. Two of the biggest commercial powers on the planet – China and the US – are embroiled in bitter trade conflict.

The US has some substantial concerns about the WTO. Many of them pre-date President Donald Trump, but his administration has taken a less collaborative approach to pursuing them.

The US has undermined the WTO’s ability to carry out one of its main functions – settling trade disputes between member countries.

It has refused to allow the body which hears appeals to appoint new members, effectively judges. That reflects US concerns that the body’s judgements were going beyond the WTO rulebook. The US block has left it unable to take new appeal cases.

It doesn’t mean the dispute settlement system doesn’t work at all, but it is seriously impaired.

In terms of diversity, the WTO seems to be heading into new territory. It will, almost certainly, have a woman as Director General for the first time a woman.

The regional representation might also break new ground, if the African candidate gets the job – there has been an Asian director general before, from Thailand.

If all goes to plan we will know who it is by early November.

Initial candidates for DG selection process 2020

The following candidates, eight in all, were initially nominated by their respective governments for the post of WTO Director-General to succeed the current Director-General, Mr Roberto Azevêdo, who has announced he will step down on 31 August 2020. The candidates are listed in the order the nominations were received.

8 June 2020

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Dr Jesús Seade Kuri

Mexico

9 June 2020

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Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala

Nigeria

9 June 2020

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Mr Abdel-Hamid Mamdouh

Egypt

16 June 2020

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Mr Tudor Ulianovschi

Moldova

24 June 2020

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Ms Yoo Myung-hee

Republic of Korea

7 July 2020

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Ms Amina C. Mohamed

Kenya

8 July 2020

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Mr Mohammad Maziad Al-Tuwaijri

Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

8 July 2020

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Dr Liam Fox

United Kingdom