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WTO Its not over yet

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Title: WTO Its not over yet


1
WTO Its not over yet?
  • Mike Gifford
  • Member, International Food and Agricultural Trade
    Policy Council

2
The Doha Round dead or alive?
  • WTO mini-ministerial meeting collapsed in July
  • Goals had been
  • (1)framework agreements on agriculture and
    non-agricultural market access by summer break
  • (2) complete negotiations by end of 2008, start
    implementing results early 2010
  • July breakdown blamed on impasse (mainly between
    India and US) over special agricultural safeguard
    mechanism (SSM) for developing countries
  • July breakdown latest in series of crises which
    have marked Doha Round from outset

3
However, negotiators continuing to work
  • Chairs of negotiating groups trying to narrow
    remaining differences
  • new goal to reach framework agreements by end of
    year
  • Framework agreement would help to enshrine
    progress to-date, limit unravelling during any
    hiatus
  • Pessimists doubt framework agreement possible in
    2008, believe negotiations will not conclude
    until 2011 or later
  • Elections in US and India, changes in EU
    Commission members (EU Trade Commissioner just
    left), all cited as reasons for Doha negotiations
    going into hibernation for most of 2009

4
Agriculture the cornerstone of the negotiations
  • No real progress in agricultural trade
    liberalization until Uruguay Round
  • Agriculture very important to most developing
    countries, import sensitivities in most developed
    and developing countries
  • Net food exporters (developed developing)
    recognize that most of future import growth in
    developing markets
  • However, developing countries with large numbers
    of subsistence farmers ultra import sensitive,
    e.g. India, China, hence emphasis on easily
    triggered import safeguards

5
So close and yet so far
  • Major progress made in lead-up to July
    ministerial
  • In agriculture emerging deal would
  • - eliminate export subsidies, new
    disciplines on food aid, export credit and export
    state trading enterprises
  • - reduce all trade distorting domestic
    support in developed countries by 60-80 or more,
    placed caps on commodity specific support
  • - reduce developed country tariffs by an
    average of nearly 60 (highest tariffs reduced by
    70)
  • - reduce tariffs of more advanced developing
    countries by up to an average of up to 36

6
However, special treatment for sensitive products
  • Market access component most difficult for
    developed and developing countries
  • Sensitive products protected by very high
    tariffs, often well in excess of 100
  • Instead of 70 reductions, developed country
    sensitive product tariffs reduced by only 23-24,
    tariff quotas expanded by up to 5 of consumption
  • However, only 4-6 of tariff lines allowed to be
    designated sensitive

7
Substantial agricultural result relative to
Uruguay Round
  • Uruguay Round first negotiation to bring
    agriculture under effective international
    discipline (domestic support as well as import
    and export measures)
  • However, limited progress made in reducing
    tariffs (average of 36 for developed, minimum
    cut of 15) and trade distorting domestic support
    (20 reduction from record levels)

8
Doha would reinforce and deepen impacts of
Uruguay Round
  • Remember Uruguay Round first time since GATT
    formed in 1948 agriculture was not pushed to one
    side as too politically sensitive
  • Bottom line prospective Doha results for
    agriculture substantial but significant tariff
    peaks would remain for sensitive products
  • Domestic agricultural support would be under
    pressure to become more trade friendly (more
    non-trade distorting green box income support,
    less price support)

9
Will and if so when will Doha conclude?
  • Not clear, not dead but barely alive
  • Many believe Doha hanging by fingernails and
    unlikely to conclude before 2011
  • Others believe (hope) possible to agree on
    framework by end of 2008 and conclude in 2009
  • Remaining differences relatively small, problem
    is lack of political will

10
Why lack of political will?
  • Limited interest by private sector groups,
    particularly non-agricultural
  • US agriculture more interested in energy policy
    than trade policy, US Congress would rather let
    domestic policy conform to Doha disciplines than
    initiate own reforms
  • US and EU agreement necessary but no longer
    sufficient to conclude negotiations
  • Growing influence of more advanced developing
    countries, i.e. India, Brazil, China
  • Agriculture politically sensitive in all
    countries

11
Does Doha Matter for Agriculture?
  • Growing proliferation of preferential trade
    agreements (PTAs) no substitute for multilateral
    agreement on agriculture
  • PTAs can go deeper in cutting tariffs but
    rarely cover export subsidies and domestic
    support
  • Most PTAs treat agriculture as special and
    rarely result in comprehensive free trade

12
Why does Doha matter for Canadian agriculture?
  • As medium sized agricultural trader (80 of farm
    income dependent on international prices) Canada
    would benefit from substantial reform of
    multilateral trading system
  • Supply management could continue, slightly
    modified, major concern - impact on production
    quota values
  • Only way to get effective disciplines on US and
    EU agricultural policies

13
Shape of deal unlikely to change significantly
  • No matter when Doha concludes (no multilateral
    negotiation has ever failed) emerging package on
    agriculture unlikely to change significantly
  • Outside chance that current international
    financial crisis might precipitate renewed
    attempt to firm-up modalities by end of year (as
    part of multilateral effort to re-build economic
    confidence)
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