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WTO
negotiations
Rich nations agree to end farm
subsidies
Foreign Desk Report
HONG KONG—World Trade Organization negotiators approved an agreement
Sunday requiring wealthy nations to end farm export subsidies by 2013, a
support system that poor nations say puts them at a competitive
disadvantage.
The agreement, which also calls for modest reductions in other trade
barriers, brings a binding treaty to further open up global trade one
step closer. All 149 WTO member nations and territories, from tiny
Sierra Leone to the 25-nation European Union, endorsed the agreement
after six days of hard talks that were accompanied by daily protests and
occasional clashes between riot police and demonstrators outside.
But the deal fell far short of the ambitious deal that WTO negotiators
had originally hoped to reach in Hong Kong: Agreeing on formulas for
cutting farm and industrial tariffs and subsidies. Toward that end, the
accord set April 30 as a new deadline for working out the other cuts,
which are required if the WTO is to formulate a new global trade treaty
by the end of next year. No decision was made on a location and date for
the next ministerial meeting.
Hong Kong clears the way for “the down and dirty of negotiations” that
ministers face next year, said Susan Schwab, a deputy US trade
representative. “We’ve got a lot of work ahead of us,” she said. “The
progress made today really lays the groundwork for negotiations going
forward”.
The agreement was “not enough to make it (the meeting) a success, but
enough to save it from failure,” said the European Union’s trade chief,
Peter Mandelson, whose delegation came under heavy pressure during the
gathering to open up Europe’s farming market. Since the WTO works by
consensus, objections from even one member can hold up any deal.
The issue of how much rich nations should open their farming markets to
imports caused the previous WTO gathering in Cancun, Mexico, in 2003, to
collapse — putting the current round of negotiations that began in 2001
two years behind schedule.“You put the round back on track,” WTO chief
Pascal Lamy told delegates at the closing ceremony. “You gave it a new
sense of urgency.” The way was opened to an agreement when delegates
managed a last-minute breakthrough on farm subsidies, with wealthy
nations agreeing to eliminate their payments to promote exports like
cotton and sugar by 2013. Developing nations say the subsidies make it
hard for poor farmers to compete.
Poor nations had pushed for the farm subsidies to end by 2010, while the
EU held out for 2013. But the accord includes a provision that a
substantial part of the subsidies should end by “the first half of the
implementation period” to set at a later date. Although the agreement
didn’t include cuts in import tariffs on industrial goods, it seeks to
move those negotiations forward by meeting a demand from poor nations
that the issue be dealt with in tandem with efforts to give developing
countries flexibility in setting market-opening policies. It also links
talks on agricultural trade with those in industrial goods.
In a victory for West African cotton-producing nations, rich countries
agreed to eliminate all export subsidies on cotton in 2006. That was a
concession by the United States, a major cotton exporter. But US Trade
Representative Rob Portman said the proposal would be hard to sell to US
lawmakers.
Cotton growers in Burkina Faso, Benin, Chad and Mali say US farm aid
drives down prices, making it impossible for small family farms to
compete in international markets.
The agreement also calls on wealthy nations to allow, by 2008, duty-free
and quota-free trade privileges for at least 97 percent of products
exported by the least developed countries, those with per capita incomes
of less than $750 a year. |