In the wake of the WTO’s 14th Ministerial Conference (MC14) held in Yaoundé, Cameroon this past March, critics have lined up to label the gathering a failure, a broken effort, and a total flop. Against a backdrop of roiling global trade tensions – from Washington’s controversial “reciprocal tariffs” that have upended market predictability to oil price shocks stemming from the ongoing conflict in Iran and disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz – questions about the very relevance of the World Trade Organization have reemerged with new urgency. But in a June 2026 analysis from the Shridath Ramphal Centre (SRC) Trading Thoughts series, trade expert Alicia Nicholls makes the case that even with its well-documented flaws, the rules-based multilateral trading system overseen by the WTO remains an irreplaceable lifeline for small developing economies, particularly those across the Caribbean.
For most people across the Caribbean, even many in the private sector, WTO negotiations based in Geneva have long felt like an abstract, distant process. Many in the region associate the organization only with past disappointments: the decades-long EC Bananas dispute that ended preferential European Union market access for African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) commodity exporters, and Antigua and Barbuda’s high-profile victory over the United States in an online gambling dispute that Washington has largely refused to implement. It is no surprise that these experiences left a bitter legacy for many stakeholders in the region.
Still, it is easy to overlook the quiet, consistent value the WTO has delivered for global trade over the past three decades. Built on the foundation of the earlier General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), the WTO’s negotiated rules have sustained a relatively predictable, smooth trading framework that has benefited countries of all sizes for decades. These common rules make cross-border access to imported goods and services simpler for consumers and businesses, and guarantee exporting producers a baseline set of fair market access conditions when selling abroad. For decades, the WTO’s dispute settlement system also provided a widely respected neutral forum for resolving trade conflicts without resorting to unilateral power plays.
MC14’s lack of substantive progress, however, lays bare just how much accumulated strain the 31-year-old multilateral institution is currently grappling with. As the WTO’s highest decision-making body, the Ministerial Conference, convened every two years, brings together trade ministers and senior delegates from all member states to forge agreements on core multilateral trade priorities. This year, the only outcomes adopted in Cameroon were minor procedural decisions that had already been finalized during pre-conference negotiations in Geneva, leaving major policy initiatives deadlocked.
Conference leaders highlighted three modest takeaways from the week of talks. First, members reaffirmed the long-running Doha Development Agenda mandate to support better integration of small economies into global trade, approving a new mandate for the WTO Secretariat to conduct factual analysis of barriers facing small economies. This research could lay the groundwork for more inclusive policies to help these countries tap into global trade flows down the line.
Second, members agreed to move forward with operationalizing long-standing special and differential treatment (S&DT) provisions embedded in the Agreement on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (SPS) and the Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT) Agreement. These provisions are designed to give developing countries extra time and policy flexibility to build domestic capacity to meet food safety and product standards, but they have long been criticized as overly broad and vague, making them effectively unenforceable in practice. How this operationalization will actually be carried out remains to be seen.
Third, ministers agreed to continue negotiations on the second phase of fisheries subsidies disciplines (known as Fish II), which aim to curb subsidies that drive overcapacity and overfishing. The core WTO Fisheries Subsidies Agreement was finalized at MC12 and entered into force in September 2025, but additional rules targeting harmful subsidies remain to be negotiated. For small island developing states (SIDS) like those across the Caribbean, fisheries are a critical pillar of both livelihoods and national food security. While the renewed commitment to continuing talks is a welcome procedural step, meaningful progress will require negotiating strong rules that rein in harmful subsidies from large economies while protecting the policy space small vulnerable economies need to support their domestic fishing sectors.
Beyond these modest outcomes, all of the most critical, high-stakes issues facing the WTO remained unresolved when delegates left Yaoundé. A decades-long moratorium on imposing customs duties on electronic transmissions, which has been in place and regularly renewed since 1998, expired after members failed to reach consensus on extending it. The lapse opens the door for WTO members to impose new tariffs on digital products including e-books, streaming films and music. The broader WTO Work Programme on E-commerce, which was tied to the moratorium’s renewal, was also sidelined as a result.
Another long-running problem remains unsolved: the ongoing paralysis of the WTO Appellate Body, the institution’s highest trade dispute appeals body, which has been crippled for years by Washington’s repeated refusal to approve new judge appointments. Without a fully functioning dispute settlement system, the vacuum created by inaction is increasingly filled by power-based unilateralism. A small group of member states including Barbados have launched an interim workaround called the Multi-Party Interim Appeal Arbitration Arrangement (MPIA), but this arrangement remains only a temporary stopgap, not a permanent solution.
The conference also failed to reach agreement on a proposed package of measures to support Least Developed Countries (LDCs) integrate into the global economy – a matter of direct importance to the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), which counts Haiti as an LDC member. For the first time since it was instituted in 2001, the moratorium on non-violation and situation complaints under the Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPS) Agreement, which protected developing country policy space around intellectual property regulation, also lapsed. Additionally, the Investment Facilitation for Development Agreement, which six CARICOM states have participated in negotiating, was once again blocked from being formally adopted into the WTO’s legal framework.
Despite these glaring shortcomings from MC14, Nicholls argues that it would be a mistake to write off the WTO entirely, particularly from the perspective of small Caribbean states. The WTO is far from perfect, but it still offers far more protection for small economies than the alternative: a global trading system ordered purely by raw power, where large nations can set the terms to benefit their own interests. Crucially, the WTO is the only major multilateral economic rule-making forum where small states hold formal equal status alongside the world’s largest economies. Beyond negotiating and enforcing trade rules, it also serves as a unique convening platform for member states to address cross-cutting trade-linked challenges from climate change to public health – a role it fulfilled during the COVID-19 pandemic, when it provided a space for countries to coordinate on trade-related pandemic response measures. This core value is why the SRC continues to bring its Masters in Trade Policy students to Geneva every year to study the WTO’s operations firsthand.
MC14’s underwhelming outcome has undoubtedly eroded further confidence in the WTO’s negotiating capacity, but Nicholls notes that disappointing ministerial outcomes are not unprecedented for the institution. When members can summon the necessary political will to compromise, progress is still possible. Even the most vocal critics of the WTO continued to participate in MC14, and the growing queue of small jurisdictions seeking WTO accession – including Curaçao, which is currently in the process of joining – demonstrates that the organization is still viewed as a valuable institution to be part of, even for the smallest economies.
Looking ahead, as Caribbean states continue to engage with the WTO and support efforts to reform the multilateral trading system, Nicholls outlines four key recommendations for the region to protect its interests. First, regional leaders must guard against “wolf in sheep’s clothing” reform proposals that would erode core protections for small economies. Any WTO reform must not weaken core guarantees including most favoured nation (MFN) treatment, the legally embedded right to special and differential treatment, and consensus-based decision-making, which gives small states a voice in outcomes. It is also critical that Caribbean states continue to prioritize issues of regional interest including agriculture reform, fisheries subsidies, digital trade, food security, and trade-linked climate action in all reform discussions.
Second, the region must sustain coordinated cooperation through the CARICOM Ambassadors’ Caucus based in Geneva, and continue building cross-group coalitions with the ACP group, the G90, the group of Small Vulnerable Economies, and other like-minded negotiating blocs within the WTO to amplify the region’s voice.
Third, there is an urgent need for greater transparency around the negotiating positions Caribbean states take in WTO talks. The ultimate goal of participating in the multilateral trading system is to deliver benefits for domestic businesses and improve living standards for the region’s people. If other WTO members publish public explanations of their negotiating priorities, Caribbean citizens, businesses and researchers deserve equal access to information about what their delegations are advocating for on their behalf.
Finally, the region should increasingly leverage the domestic analytical capacity that already exists within the Caribbean. The University of the West Indies, and specifically the Shridath Ramphal Centre, is well positioned to provide CARICOM delegations with evidence-based, independent analysis on emerging trade issues to support regional negotiating positions.
In conclusion, the question of whether the WTO still matters to the Caribbean in today’s fractured global trading order has a clear answer: yes. The WTO and the broader multilateral trading system are under unprecedented strain, but they are far from dead. For Caribbean states, the path forward is to continue deliberate engagement to push for meaningful reforms that make the system work better, while protecting the core rules and principles that already give small economies a critical measure of protection. The alternative to a rules-based order is a power-based system where small states would have even less voice, less leverage, and far fewer safeguards to ensure that trade delivers shared benefits for their people. For small states, an imperfect rules-based system is still far better than no rules-based system at all.
Alicia Nicholls, B.Sc., M.Sc., LL.B., is Junior Research Fellow at The Shridath Ramphal Centre for International Trade Law, Policy and Services at The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill.
