Episodi

  • Over the past 30 years, economic growth has improved living conditions for many people. However, not all individuals, regions and economies have benefited equally from the changes brought about by more open trade. The World Trade Report 2024 highlights trade’s role in supporting inclusiveness across and within economies. It was launched during the opening day of the 2024 WTO Public Forum by Ralph Ossa, Chief Economist of the World Trade Organization. Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala gave opening remarks.

    Watch the full session here.

    For more details about the World Trade Report 2024 and to download the publication, visit this link.

    Speakers in this podcast:

    Peter Vanham, moderator

    Business Journalist and Author, Fortune magazine

    Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala

    Director-General of the WTO

    Ralph Ossa

    Chief Economist of the WTO

    Host: Javier Gutiérrez

    Counsellor in External Relations, WTO

  • The World Trade Organization (WTO) and the UN Trade and Development (UNCTAD) share a long history of collaboration in promoting international trade as a driver of economic development, particularly in supporting developing countries. In the episode “The Economic Case for Inclusivity”, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Director-General of the WTO, and Rebeca Grynspan, Secretary-General of UNCTAD, share insights from a high-level panel exploring the economic imperative of mainstreaming inclusivity policies in global trade.

    Speakers in this episode:

    James Baxter, moderator,

    Australia’s Permanent Representative to the WTO

    Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala

    Director-General of the WTO

    Rebeca Grynspan

    Secretary-General of UNCTAD

    Host: Javier Gutiérrez

    Counsellor in External Relations, World Trade Organization

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  • On the last day of the Public Forum 2024, we brought together a dynamic group of young entrepreneurs and activists from around the world for the plenary debate titled “Re-globalizing trade for an inclusive tomorrow: the youth perspective”. This episode brings their concrete proposals to shape a more sustainable and inclusive global economy that better serves future generations.

    Watch the full session here.

    Speakers in this podcast:

    Nicolás Albertoni, moderator

    Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, Uruguay

    Simon Berthoud

    Head of Communication and Member Engagement, Climate Alliance Switzerland

    Bonnie Chiu

    Owner and Managing Director, The Social Investment Consultancy (TSIC)

    Stephanie Eyram Akrumah

    Director, Centre for Green Growth (CenGG)

    Gerardo Matteo

    Director of Government Platforms, GLASS

    Lili Vessereau

    Teaching Fellow, Harvard University

    Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala

    Director-General, World Trade Organization

    Host: Javier Gutiérrez

    Counsellor in External Relations, World Trade Organization

  • This September, during the WTO Public Forum, we looked at the WTO's achievements since 1995, and what lies ahead for the world trading system.

    Discussions began with a plenary called “Re-globalization: Trade in a Geopoliticized World”, co-organized with the Peterson Institute for International Economics, and it brought together five of the most respected voices in international economics, to reflect on how trade remains a source of opportunities, jobs, and peaceful development, and how it benefits billions of citizens all over the world.

    Watch the full session here.

    Speakers in this podcast:

    Richard Baldwin, moderator

    Nonresident Senior Fellow, Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE)

    Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala

    Director-General, World Trade Organization

    Anabel González

    Vice President for Countries, Inter-American Development Bank

    Cecilia Malmström

    Nonresident Senior Fellow , Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE)

    Mari Pangestu

    Distinguished Visiting Fellow and former Indonesia's Minister of Trade, Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE)

    Adam Posen

    President, Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE)

    Xiaozhun Yi

    Former Deputy Director General, World Trade Organization

    Host: Javier Gutiérrez

    Counsellor in External Relations, World Trade Organization

  • Last year, on International Women's Day, the WTO community was treated to a special event. Two prominent women in the global economy came together for a candid conversation about women's economic empowerment, gender balance in the workplace, and more. The discussion with Christine Lagarde, who serves as the President of the European Central Bank, and Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Director-General of the World Trade Organization, was moderated by CNN International's Eleni Giokos.

    The event was held on 8 March 2023.

    You can watch the full event, including the segment with questions from the audience, here:

    https://www.youtube.com/live/l61qfHp32Bg?si=NOOakQF_wTQpiIPz

    Learn more about the Women Exporters in the Digital Economy (WEIDE) Fund, launched at the sidelines of the WTO's Thirteenth Ministerial Conference in February 2024, here:

    https://www.wto.org/english/news_e/news24_e/women_25feb24_e.htm

  • Food safety is a collective responsibility. Producers, businesses, , governments, and international agencies all contribute to ensuring that the food consumers receive is safe to eat. In this podcast episode, our guest, Francis Chama of York Farms, a Zambian agricultural producer, sheds light on how his company tackles the issue of pest management. Adherence to sanitary and phytosanitary measures is key to accessing export markets explains Simon Padilla of the Standards and Trade Development Facility at the WTO. Simon offers context about the trade policies and collaborative efforts at the international level that enable businesses like York Farms to supply agricultural produce to consumers worldwide and locally.

    In the podcast

    Francis Chama, Packhouse Manager, York Farm, Lusaka, Zambia Simon Padilla, Economic Affairs Officer, Standards and Trade Development Facility Section, Agriculture and Commodities Division, WTO Kimonique Powell, Podcast Host, WTO Young Professional

    Links

    Explainer video about the SPS Agreement

    Let's Talk Food Safety

    WTO SPS Agreement

    WTO | Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures - text of the agreement

    Standards and Trade Development Facility

    STDF (standardsfacility.org)

    False Codling Moth

    False codling moth, photos and article - Wikipedia

    Pest fact sheet from Stellenbosch University, South Africa

    False Codling Moth

    U.S. Department on Agriculture

    False Codling Moth | National Invasive Species Information Center

  • The people of Tonga, a Small Island Developing State in the Pacific, know a thing or two about living with natural disasters. In 2022, their archipelago was first hit by a giant volcanic eruption and then went through a prolonged period of drought. Farmer and entrepreneur Minoru Nishi Jr is not prepared to give up on expanding his export activities in the face of natural hazards. Minoru is joined in this episode by Esterlina Alipate, a Tongan trade official who currently is with the Institute for Training and Technical Cooperation at the WTO. Esterlina explains how natural disasters and climate change constitute a setback for the development efforts of her country.

    In the podcast:

    - Minoru Nishi Jr, farmer and entrepreneur, Managing Director of Nishi Trading Co. Ltd, Tonga

    - Esterlina Alipate, principal trade officer of the Ministry of Trade and Economic Development of the Kingdom of Tonga. Esterlina is currently stationed at the WTO under the Netherlands Trainee Programme where she works with the Aid for Trade Unit and the Trade Facilitation Unit.

    - Kimonique Powell, Podcast Host, WTO Young Professional

    If you want to go deeper on the topic, here are a few reading suggestions:

    Minoru Nishi Jr's family-owned agricultural business:

    Nishi Trading Co. Ltd

    Satellite animation of the initial ash plume and shockwave on 15 January 2022:

    The Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai eruption

    Developing, stimulating, and promoting economic development in Tonga:

    Ministry of Trade and Economic Development

    The Tonga Trade Portal is a trade facilitation platform implemented by the government of Tonga:

    Tonga Trade Portal

    A dedicated WTO website on trade and natural disasters provides access to research papers and WTO-organized symposia dealing with this topic:

    Research on natural disasters and trade

    What is the scope that exists under WTO Agreements for Members to adopt trade measures in support of disaster response, disaster recovery and disaster resilience?

    Natural disasters and trade: a legal mapping

  • Digitally transmitted services are the fastest-growing segment of international trade. They offer huge opportunities for SMEs in emerging markets and developing economies. But how do you convince potential clients that you offer cutting-edge IT services when your country is mainly known as an exporter of pineapples and coffee? In this episode we talk to Albán Sánchez, an IT entrepreneur from Costa Rica who decided that the way to deal with outdated perceptions of his country was to establish a business presence in his target market. Albán is joined by Antonia Carzaniga of the WTO's Trade in Services Division who puts his experience into the bigger services trade context.

    In the podcast:

    - Albán Sánchez, Co-Founder and CEO of Lantern Technologies and LinkAmerica Labs, Costa Rica and Dallas/Texas.

    - Antonia Carzaniga, Counsellor, Trade in Services and Investment Division, WTO

    - Kimonique Powell, Podcast Host, WTO Young Professional

    The IT business of Albán Sánchez

    LinkAmerica Labs

    Costa Rica's Trade Promotion Agency

    Procomer

    Find out more about services trade and the WTO

    Services Trade

    The future of services trade

    World Trade Report 2019

    The contribution of services to economic growth and development

    Trade in services for development

  • Cocoa is an important export crop for West African countries. Yet, many of the smallholder cocoa farmers struggle to earn a decent livelihood. Assata Doumbia, president of the ECAM cooperative in Côte d'Ivoire, applies a mix of strategies to obtain higher and more predictable incomes for her fellow farmers. The cooperative works with trusted international partners, invests in improving productivity and enables women to join the workforce. Assata even tackles the challenge of moving up the cocoa value chain through a cacao-processing business. In this podcast episode, she is joined by Kobby Bandoh, Economic Affairs Officer in the Agriculture and Commodities Division of the WTO.

    In the podcast:

    - Assata Doumbia, President of the ECAM cooperative (Entreprise Coopérative des Agriculteurs de Méagui) and founder of "La Paysanne"

    - Kobby Bandoh, Economic Affairs Officer in the Agriculture and Commodities Division of the WTO

    - Kimonique Powell, Podcast Host, WTO Young Professional

    Links :

    Website of the ECAM Cooperative (in French)

    https://www.ecam-meagui.com/

    Tony's Chocolonely, a Netherlands-based chocolate producer, and a major business partner of ECAM

    https://tonyschocolonely.com/nl/en/strong-farmers-professional-cooperatives

    The chapter on "Cacao" is co-authored by podcast host Kimonique Powell

    Sustainable Production and Trade: Perspectives from the Commonwealth

    A report about how voluntary sustainability standards (VSSs) can enhance farmers' livelihoods, promote trade, and provide price transparency across value chains.

    Global Market Report: Cocoa prices and sustainability | International Institute for Sustainable Development (iisd.org)

    Reorganizing the cocoa farming business to enable farmers to obtain higher prices:

    Cocoa Industry: Integrating Small Farmers into the Global Value Chain | UNCTAD

    One example of a certification scheme that monitors social, economic, and environmental standards in the cocoa sector

    Cocoa - (fairtrade.net)

  • Lack of information about export procedures is a known obstacle to trade for micro, small and medium-sized enterprises. But there are learning tools available to get newcomers started.

    Confronted with the need to cut costs during the pandemic, Natali Tjahjadi, Operational Manager of CV Triguna Widya, a garment manufacturer in Bali, Indonesia, took things into her own hands. In this episode, Natali talks about her learning experience and the thrill she gets from successfully handling trade-related paperwork herself. Kathryn Lundquist, economic affairs officer at the WTO, joins in to fit Natali's experience into the bigger picture of small businesses in international trade.

    In the podcast:

    - Natali Tjahjadi, Operating Manager, CV Triguna Widya, a garment manufacturer in Bali, Indonesia.

    - Kathryn Lundquist, Economic Affairs Officer at the WTO

    - Kimonique Powell, podcast host, WTO Young Professional

    The Global Trade Helpdesk is a multi-agency initiative jointly led by ITC, UNCTAD, and the WTO that aims to simplify market research for companies, and especially micro, small and medium Enterprises (MSMEs), by integrating trade and business information into a single online portal.

    Another gateway to trade information is trade4msmes.org with guides and resources for MSMEs, policymakers, and researchers on topics of international trade.

    This website also includes a Trade Game.

    Learn about what the WTO does for Small business and trade

    More about Natali Tjahjadi's family business CV. Widya Triguna

  • In the face of recent crises in geopolitics, public health, and the environment, are people better served by the fragmentation of trading relationships or by a new kind of globalization? The WTO’s World Trade Report 2023 tackles the debate head on, as presented by Chief Economist Ralph Ossa.

  • Mia Mottley, Prime Minister of Barbados, delivered a thought-provoking Presidential Lecture on "Reinventing the global order" at the WTO in March 2022. In her speech, she explored how the rules-based trading system can be part of the solution to the major problems facing the world today. In her introductory remarks, WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala had this to say: "She is fearless. She speaks truth to power on issues like climate justice, vaccine inequity, sovereign debt and the unique vulnerabilities facing small economies. She makes Barbados punch above its weight."

    Presidential Lecture Series with Mia Mottley, Prime Minister of Barbados:

    https://bit.ly/3XG3ZEj

  • Without rules and referees there would be no game. Each football match is policed by a cwho has full authority to enforce the law of the game. In multilateral trade, we have plenty of rules but no all-powerful referee to supervise them. The ultimate control on trade disputes remains with the WTO members themselves. In this episode of the Trade Goals podcast, Michael Roberts and Antonia Carzaniga look at how football and trade disputes arise and how they are resolved.

    We talked to:

    Philippe Senderos, Sporting Director of Servette FC, Geneva

    Sean Cottrell, Founder and CEO of the sports law knowledge hub LawInSport

    Carol Etter, Swiss Attorney-At-Law specialised in sports law and board member of FC Basel

    Clarisse Morgan, Director of the WTO Rules Division

    Valerie Hughes, Senior Counsel with law firm Bennett Jones, former Director of the WTO Legal Affairs and Appellate Body Divisions

    Show notes

    A world-famous football referee with a degree in economics

    Pierluigi Collina (Wikipedia)

    Peruvian and Chilean Football Associations file appeals with Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS)

    Media release by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) on 30 September 2022

    CAS ruling in the matter of the player Byron Castillo

    Media release by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) on 8 November 2022

    Rules-based trade explained (video)

    Video "Let's Talk Rules-Based Trade"

    Learn more about the WTO dispute settlement mechanism

    The WTO dispute settlement mechanism explained

    Understanding the WTO: the agreements

    Overview of WTO agreements

    Laws of the Game 2021/2022

    Download link to the Laws of the Game 2021/2022 from the FIFA website

  • Football video games are popular wherever people have access to the internet. The games are part of the much larger e-sports universe of competitive video gaming. In this episode of the Trade Goals podcast, Michael Roberts and Antonia Carzaniga explore how playing the beautiful game in a virtual format brings together the different strands of trade law dealing with merchandise goods, services, and intellectual property.

    We talked to:

    Chester King, Founder and CEO, British Esports Association, Vice President of the Board of the Global Esports Federation

    Brendan Vickers, Adviser and Head, International Trade Policy, Commonwealth Secretariat, London

    JJ Shaw, Senior Associate at the international law firm Lewis Silkin, London.

    Special thanks to Melissa, Tamara, Tobias and Tosson and all the others who shared their video game experience with us during the "Futur en Tous Genres" day 2022, when children of staff members visited the WTO to get a better idea of the organization as a workplace.

    The FIFAe Nations Cup 2022™

    Brazil crowned world’s best FIFA esports nation

    Global Entertainment & Media Outlook 2022-2026

    Report by consultants Price Waterhouse Coopers

    50 years of gaming history visualized

    50 Years of Gaming History, by Revenue Stream (visualcapitalist.com)

    A short history of gaming (1970-2020)

    50 Years Of Gaming History, By Revenue Stream (1970-2020) - Phil Davis (thestreet.com)

    Lear more about the ITA agreement:

    WTO | Information Technology Agreement

    Artificial Intelligence and Intellectual Property Policy

    WIPO conversation on intellectual property (IP) and artificial intelligence (AI)

  • Football fans' love of the game generates plenty of revenue. The major sources of income in football are merchandising, sponsoring and broadcasting rights. All of these rely on intellectual property (IP) rights. In this episode of the Trade Goals podcast, Wolf Meier-Ewert and Jana Borges cast light on how the WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights, also known as the TRIPS Agreement, enables players, clubs and football associations to monetize their IP through the sale of branded goods and broadcasting deals.

    We talked to:

    Loic Luscher, Media & Communications Manager, Servette FC, Geneva

    Alex Kelham, Commercial and IP lawyer, Head of Sports Business Group at international law firm Lewis Silkin

    Víctor Umaña, CEO FIFA U20 World Cup Costa Rica.

    Show notes:

    View of Geneva from Mont Salève

    The WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS): The TRIPS Agreement explained

    WIPO reference guide: Sports and Intellectual Property

    Poster with Servette FC jerseys from 1890 (in French): Shop du Servette FC

    Lewis Silkin sport business homepage: Lewis Silkin - Sports Business

    The relative financial performance of the highest revenue generating clubs in world football: Deloitte Football Money League 2022

  • A football game is a service and the clubs that are organizing football matches are providing recreational services. International trade rules may apply when the players on the pitch come from different countries, when a club is foreign-owned, when matches are broadcast internationally or when fans travel abroad to watch their favourite teams play. In this episode of the "Trade Goals" podcast, Markus Jelitto and Antonia Carzaniga explore how the WTO’s Services Agreement (the GATS) applies to the beautiful game.

    We talked to:

    Philippe Senderos, Sporting Director of Servette FC, Geneva

    Raffaele Poli, Head of the Football Observatory at the International Centre for Sports Studies(CIES) in Neuchâtel, Switzerland

    Carol Etter, a Swiss Attorney-At-Law specialised in sports law. Carol is also a board member of FC Basel

    José Francisco Manssur, a Brazilian lawyer specialized in sports law

    Fernando Roitman, Founder of CIES Sports Intelligence at the International Centre of Sport Studies (CIES) in Neuchâtel

    Learn more about the WTO's Services Agreement (GATS):

    The General Agreement on Trade in Services explained

    WTO video about the GATS:

    "Let's Talk Services Trade"

    Statistical analysis of the football players’ labour market, the technical analysis of player performance and the scientific estimation of transfer values:

    The Football Observatory

    Facts and figures about global football:

    FIFA Professional Football Report 2019

    Deloitte Football Money League profiles the relative financial performance of the highest revenue generating clubs in world football:

    Deloitte Football Money League 2022 | Deloitte UK"

    More about foreign investment in Brazilian football clubs:

    Football corporations in Brazil (SAF): new perspectives for foreign investment in Brazilian football teams | International Bar Association (ibanet.org)

  • An incredible amount of work is needed to create a perfect football pitch. A lot of international trade is involved, too. In this episode of the "Trade Goals" podcast, players rave about fast pitches, tournament organisers praise robust playing surfaces and seed industry representatives explain how international phytosanitary standards facilitate trade in turf. We will also touch upon the gender dimension of playing on the best possible pitch.

    We talked to

    Philippe Senderos, Sporting Director of Servette FC, Geneva

    Pierre-Yves Bovigny, Maître d'enseignement HES, Institute of Landscape, Architecture, Construction and Territory (HEPIA), Geneva

    Darrell Dziver, Vice President of Brett Young, Chair of the Forage and Turf Advisory Group for the International Seed Federation, Canada

    Rose Souza Richards, Seed Health Manager, International Seed Federation, Switzerland

    Carrie Serwetnyk, player with the Canada women's national soccer team 1986-1991, founder of "Equal Play FC"

    Víctor Umaña, CEO FIFA U20 World Cup Costa Rica

    Learn more about:

    Sanitary and phytosanitary measures explained

    Video "Let's talk Food Safety"

    The natural-versus-artificial-pitches controversy at the 2015 Women's World Cup in Canada

    FIFA standard on pitches

  • Footballs are an indispensable item in the global value chain of the beautiful game. Manufacturing, distributing and selling the balls is a complex international business.

    It is difficult to pinpoint where in the world a ball is actually made because the sourcing of raw materials, the design and the production happen in different countries. But one thing is certain: WTO agreements play an important role in easing trade in footballs.

    WTO experts Roy Santana, Michael Roberts and Úna Flanagan trace the global value chain of footballs from the Servette Football Club in Geneva via Herzogenaurach, Germany to Sialkot, Pakistan. Stopovers in Uganda and Uruguay show how international standards ease trade.

    We talked to:

    Philippe Senderos, Sporting Director of Servette FC, Geneva

    Qasim Malik, Vice President of the Sialkot Chamber of Commerce, Pakistan

    Nouman Butt, CEO of Capital Sports, Sialkot, Pakistan

    Gerardo Cal, Guide at the Estadio Centenario Football Museum in Montevideo, Uruguay

    Robbert de Kock, President and CEO of the World Federation of the Sporting Goods Industry, Switzerland

    George Opiyo, TBT National Enquiry Point, Uganda National Bureau of Standards

    Oliver Hundacker, Senior Director of product operations at Adidas, Germany

    Special thanks to Arshad Nawaz, Intern at the WTO Institute for Training and Technical Cooperation (ITTC)

    Links:

    One match, two balls. The 1930 World Cup in Uruguay featured two footballs with different designs in the final match:

    Photo of the ball team Argentina used in the first half of the final of the 1930 World Cup in Uruguay

    Photo of the ball team Uruguay used in the second half of the final of the 1930 World Cup in Uruguay

    About the famous Wembley goal — or “Hurst's overtime goal” — in the final of the 1966 World Cup between England and Germany:
    England v Germany (1966): The Most Controversial World Cup Final

    Learn more about rules of origin:

    Rules of origin explained

    Learn more about Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT):

    Technical barriers to trade explained

    Video "Let's Talk Product Quality"

    Learn more about tariffs:

    Tariffs explained

    Video "Let's Talk Tariffs"

  • There is probably no group of people who will talk with more passion and expertise about trade-related aspects of the game of football than soccer enthusiasts within the WTO.

    In this first episode of "Trade Goals", we introduce a group of WTO pundits with deep knowledge in realms such as trade in goods, trade in services, trade-related aspects of intellectual property and communications who talk about what football means to them, both personally and professionally. Throughout the podcast season, they will try to make sense of the global value chain of the beautiful game.

    Setting the scene are Michael Roberts, Roy Santana, Antonia Carzaniga, Wolf Meier-Ewert, Jana Borges, Markus Jelitto, and Una Flanagan.

    The figure about the size of the global football economy comes from FIFA President Gianni Infantino, who visited the WTO in September 2022.

    Football and trade for development. WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and FIFA President Gianni Infantino at the Public Forum 2022

  • International trade has progressed enormously since the founding of the WTO in 1995. The world trades a lot more – from just over 5 trillion dollars' worth of goods in 1995 to more than 22 trillion dollars in 2021. The world also trades in new ways - e-commerce accounts for more than 20 percent of total retail sales worldwide. Supply chains have also revolutionized trade, leading to the rise of products made "in the world".
    Despite this radical transformation, the WTO and the rules of trade remain largely unchanged. Ambassador Didier Chambovey of Switzerland, the General Council Chair, and the WTO's Joan Apecu talk about the efforts to keep the organization fit for purpose and ready to respond to the realities of 21st century commerce.