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Aileen
Kwa,
Geneva, June 2007
Developed
countries' pretense that the Doha Round will deliver on
‘development'
has fallen by the wayside. The Round was never launched to deliver on
development in the first place. As an Asian delegate to the WTO
quipped recently, "'Development' was in 50-60 places in the
Doha text. Do you see it now in the negotiating texts?" (He was
referring to New Zealand Ambassador and Chair of the Agriculture
negotiations, Crawford Falconer's "Challenge" papers).
Both
the recent process of negotiations at the WTO, as well as the
substance of the negotiations have failed developing countries. In
fact, the "multilateral" process conducted
in Geneva in the recent weeks has been described in WTO corridors, by
developing negotiators themselves as "farcical". The real
negotiations had been taking place between the G4 (US, EU, Brazil and
India). Director General, Pascal Lamy had even told the Chairs of
agriculture and non-agricultural market access (NAMA) to withhold
issuing draft modalities texts until after the planned week-long
Potsdam G4 Ministerial meeting which got underway on 19 June, and
which broke down on the third day. The plan had been to wait for the
G4 to come up with their package, weave that into the draft texts of
the Chairs so that the G4 package is made more palatable to the other
Members, hold a series of quick Green Room discussions between 20-35
delegations in Geneva, bring a selected number of Ministers (by
invitation only) to Geneva at the end of July, and viola,
stitch the Round together.
In
response to being marginalized, the
"G90 plus", comprising of the African Group, ACP (African,
Caribbean and Pacific) countries, LDCs, and Bolivia and Venezuela,
came together yesterday to publicly denounce such a process. In their
press conference, the G90 plus declared that "development concerns
have been left behind in the rush to agree to a deal in the Doha
Round".
Remarked
Jamaica's Ambassador, Gail Mathurin, Chair of the ACP countries,
"If the Round is to be completed, the concerns of developing
countries must be dealt with. But (our) critical issues have been
marginalized or left behind as the negotiations proceeded."
Quoting
from the G90 plus declaration, Mathurin went on to state that "The
recent WTO negotiating process has been "less than transparent and
participatory"... The majority of Members have little or no
knowledge of the progress and content of the G4 process. Although two
of the G4 members are developing countries, they cannot be expected
to carry the responsibility of representing the views of all
developing countries".
"The
groups (ACP, LDCs, African Group plus) are concerned they may be
faced with texts they are asked to consider at very short notice...
The multilateral system cannot be used to rubber stamp and legitimize
decisions made by a few".
US
and EU Hypocrisy and Unreasonable Demands in the Talks
At
the heart of the breakdown
in talks is the fact that the developed countries, particularly the
US and EU continue to act as if they are still the colonial masters
of the day. A Middle Eastern delegate privately commented, "The
developed countries want the whole cake. You give me, I don't give
you".
The
US and EU have been
exacting on developing countries. In agriculture, they have been deaf
to developing countries' concerns of food security and rural
livelihoods. What is worse, the Chairman of the agriculture
negotiations, New Zealand's Ambassador Crawford Falconer, has
promoted positions that give advantage to US / EU positions, whilst
downplaying developing countries' proposals. One G33 (a coalition
of 46 developing countries at the WTO) negotiator characterised
Falconer's recent Challenge paper (30 April 2007) as follows: "The
SP (Special products) and SSM (Special Safeguard Mechanism) issues
have been given step-mother treatment".
US
and EU are also asking developing countries to do more in NAMA, than
they would liberalise themselves. They
have asked for developed countries to have a swiss coefficient of 10,
and developing countries a coefficient of 15. As the NAMA 11
coalition of developing countries recently pointed out, a coefficient
of 10 for developed countries would bring down developed countries'
average bound tariffs from 6.8 percent, to 4%, a 40.4% reduction.
However, a 15 coefficient for developing countries would bring the
NAMA 11 developing countries' average tariff down from 34.4% to
10.4%, a 69.9% tariff reduction. The NAMA 11 coalition has asked for
a fairer deal, proposing a coefficient of 35. This would bring down
their tariff from 34.4% to 17.3%, a percentage cut of 49.5%. This is
still higher than the 40.4% cut that would be undertaken by developed
countries. For the NAMA 11, this is the only way Members will come
close to abiding by their commitment of "less than full
reciprocity", a principle agreed in the Doha declaration i.e.
developed countries have to undertake tariff larger cuts than
developing countries. US and EU in the Potsdam G4 Ministerial meeting
rejected this proposal, and blamed Brazil and India for changing the
goal posts in the end stretch of the game.
Even
as these demands are made of developing countries, both US and EU
have joined hands to maintain the status quo on agricultural trade
distorting domestic supports. The fight is not merely a theoretical
one. Lives at put at risk as developing countries are told to lower
their trade barriers and allow the entry of subsidized imports.
According to data from the Institute for Agriculture and Trade
Policy, in 2003, soybeans from the US were exported at 10 percent
below their cost of production; corn at 10 percent below cost, cotton
at 47 percent; and rice at 26 percent below production costs. US
subsidies to rice producers amounted to 1.3 bn for rice that cost 1.4
bn to grow. In Indonesia, the import of subsidized soy sent
shockwaves through the domestic sector. Between 1996 and 2001, half
of the 5 million soy producers were wiped out. In Ghana, rice imports
doubled between 1998 and 2003, increasing poverty amongst food crop
farmers. 66 percent of producers recorded either negative returns or
job losses.i
US subsidized rice has also hit rice producers in the Gambia and
Tanzania.
Both
US and EU's subsidized poultry
exports have wiped out the domestic poultry production in many
countries. According to the FAO, developing countries experienced 669
cases of poultry import surges from 1983 to 2003. The situation is
particularly acute in Africa. Even though the continent accounts for
only 5% of global poultry trade, 50% of these import surges have
occurred there.ii
70% of the Senegal poultry industry has been lost in recent years and
90% Ghana's local poultry production has been wiped due to poultry
imports from US, EU and Brazil.iii
In Cote d'Ivoire, FAO reports 15 000 job losses in the sector
between 1997 and 2004 as a result of poultry imports. iv
According
to Canadian sources, US' so-called "overall
trade distorting" domestic supports (OTDS) amounted to 10.8 billion
in 2006. Oxfam America projects that by 2007, due to high world
prices as a result of the biodiesel gold rush, these supports could
be down to 6.5 billion. Yet the US continues to argue for the leeway
to provide up to as high as 17 billion in OTDS - nearly three times
the amount they would actually use this year!
Note
that these figures are seriously minimized.
Analyst Jacques Berthelot contends that there is a lot of cheating
going on in terms of what is housed under the OTDS -for instance,
irrigation and feed subsidies have been excluded. What has also
recently surfaced is that up to 6 billion in tax supports for ethanol
processors is not recognised by the US as agricultural subsidies.v
Over
and above
the OTDS, the US provides supports to the tune of 50 billion via the
WTO undisciplined, uncapped and unlimited "Green Box".
The
EU is playing the same Green
Box game. As export subsidies and other forms of trade distorting
supports are being reduced, the EU is shifting up to 30 billion Euros
into the Green Box. This is provided to EU producers through their
supposedly ‘decoupled' Single Payment Scheme. In time, according
to Peter Mandelson, 90% of their supports will be housed in the Green
Box, which the WTO's own litigation has declared as trade
distorting.vi
Indeed,
the
EU's 2002 CAP reform phased out export subsidies. Internal prices
are now much lower, especially on grains, but the decoupled payments
to producers help compensate for their high production costs i.e.
when
these grains are exported, decoupled payments are effectively the new
generation of export subsidies.
What is the impact of decoupled payments on production? In some
sectors eg. beef, some reduction in quantity is anticipated. However,
in other sectors, such as grains and dairy, production is likely to
even increase! What will this mean for exports? According to Tobias
Reichert's study on the Common Agricultural Policy, "For wheat
and coarse grains, increased EU exports are predicted. Whole milk
powder exports are expected to remain the same." Reichert also
concludes that through the Single Farm Payment, most farmers will
receive the same levels of support as before the reform.vii
What
is alarming is that both the EU and US have insisted on leaving the
Green Box untouched and undisciplined in the current
Round - and from his Challenge paper of 25 May, the Agriculture
Chair Crawford Falconer seems to support such a position! A chorus of
protests is rising on this issue - now not only from the G20 but also
the G90 plus countries. In their 21 June declaration, the G90 plus
countries state, "There must be new disciplines for the use of the
Green Box subsidies by developed countries to ensure they are really
non trade-distorting...". viii
Big
Bang Liberalisation Has Not Worked for Development
Let's
cut to the chase. The WTO's liberalization formula will not work
for development, and much less, the greed of the US and EU in
demanding ever more aggressive market access. What
is often shoved under the carpet is that the WTO's own preamble
states that trade "should be conducted with a view to raising
standards of living, ensuring full employment and a large and
steadily growing volume of real income and effective demand...".
Trade
liberalization - according to cookie cutter formulas and time lines
instead of being based on countries' own economic strategies, needs
and pace - simply cannot deliver on ‘raising standards of living'
and ‘full employment'. The structural adjustment experience of
developing countries in the last 25 years is indicative. Most
developing countries (excluding
some of the Asian countries that had a headstart and which
implemented heavy government regulation) saw their industries
contract, even the countries which increased their exports either
stagnated or deindustrialised eg. Mexico and Chile. In Mexico,
between the late 1980s and through the 1990s, manufactured exports
grew quickly - nearly 30 percent - in part due to the passage of
the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). However, according
to former UNCTAD economist S.M. Shafaeddin, manufactured value added
(MVA) "did not accelerate, and upgrading of the industrial base did
not take place". Chile is usually portrayed as the success story in
Latin America. However, even after 25 years of reform, there has been
little upgrading of its industries beyond the expansion of natural
resource based industries such as wood and chemical products. Even
more alarming, Jamaica, Ghana, Colombia, Uruguay and Paraguay have
all experience high or moderate levels of growth rates in exports,
but have had negative growth rates in manufactured value added (MVA).
"Notwithstanding two decades of reform, Ghana's growth in MVA
added was significantly negative, registering -3.5% during the 1990s,
implying severe deindustrialization".ix
The
failures of liberalization has perhaps been most stark in Sub-Saharan
Africa. According to the World Bank, "Sub-Saharan Africa failed to
take off despite significant policy reform improvements in the
political and external environments, and continued foreign aid. The
successes were few - with Uganda, Tanzania and Mozambique the most
commonly cited instances - and remained fragile more than a decade
later". x
According
to UNCTAD's most recent Least Developed Country (LDC) report,
"In
recent years, many LDCs have achieved higher rates of economic growth
than in the past and even higher growth of exports. But there is a
widespread sense - which is apparent in the concern to ensure
"pro-poor" growth - that this is not translating effectively
into poverty reduction and improved human well-being". The report
goes on to state that the incidence of poverty did not decline in the
1990s in LDCs as a group, and has remained at 50% of the total
population. If this trend continues, the number of people living in
poverty in LDCs will increase from 334 million in 2000 to 471 million
by 2010.xi
UNCTAD
cites Comoros, Malawi, Mali, Tanzania and Zambia as countries where
GDP per capita growth has not translated into higher consumption per
capita - i.e. there has been no poverty reduction.xii
No
Tears Over Doha's Demise
If
the G4 collapse
spells the end of the Doha Round, no tears should be shed. It was
never intended by the developed countries to deliver on development.
Even the one issue many developing countries are angling to obtain -
a cut in trade distorting domestic supports, and a phase out of
export subsidies- will not happen. The EU itself projects increases
in production in grains and dairy. The same amount of money is being
provided to the same producers, but now simply labeled as decoupled
and ‘Green'. Export dumping continues without so much as a
hiccup. US "trade distorting supports" this year may be about 6.5
bn, but they want to cap their supports at 17 bn. Are we losing
anything? The bulk of the payments will be washed green. Small wonder
that the US and EU want to keep the Green Box sacred and intact,
unlimited and undisciplined.
What
about the
multilateral trading system? Will it also collapse and should we be
worried? The WTO has proven itself to have a splendid ability over
the past 11 years to marginalize developing countries, and especially
during its most critical negotiations! In substance, its
liberalization agenda simply cannot and will not deliver on
development. The past 25 years of structural adjustment should have
taught the international community that lesson.
Developing
countries would do well with a new multilateral trade system. One
that regulates trade and ensures it is fair, rather than acts as an
enforcer of liberalization,
especially of developing countries. What does this mean? We need a
system that can be the whistle blower, disciplining countries that
dump on others and warning affected countries when dumping occurs.
The system should also regulate corporate size, behavior and
transparency. Multilateral trade regulation should outlaw the
corporate abuse of transfer pricing and predatory market practices.
As there are in domestic competition laws, there should be certain
disciplines and limits put on the size of corporations when they
venture abroad. Thirdly, instead of attempting (and only
half-heartedly) to liberalise agricultural trade, which will benefit
only the most competitive, and penalize millions of poor farmers
across the developing world, we need a multilateral system that
supports commodity agreements so that prices and supplies can be
regulated and matched with demand. This is not only for tropical
commodities - coffee, tea, cocoa - but also for major staple
products such as grains and dairy, which currently suffer from
over-supply from the major agricultural producing countries,
resulting, as in the case of the US and EU, in dumping.
This
is a radical overhaul of the system, but one that at least has a
fighting chance of offering real development to a large number of
countries which, under duress to liberalise, are today simply
floundering in their attempts at economic development.
i
ActionAid 2006 ‘Agro-Import Surge Study: The Case of Rice in
Ghana', August, ActionAid International Ghana.
ii
FAO 2007 "Commodities No. 1 Import Surges in Developing Countries:
the case of poultry", FAO Briefs on Import Surges.
iii
In the US, corn and soy have been the two most heavily subsidized
crops in US commodity programmes. Around 55-65% of corn and 45-50%
of soy production go to the domestic livestock industry as feed and
feed costs account for 60-64% of poultry and egg costs. Feed prices
for poultry are estimated to be 21% below production costs. This has
landed the US broiler chicken industry cumulative savings of 11.25
bn between 1997 and 2005. (Fatka J 2007 "Broiler, Hog Industries
Save Billions from Corn", Feedstuffs, March 25 Issue 13 Vol. 79.)
Jacques Berthelot has estimated that EU subsidization of poultry is
at an annual average of 329 million Euros for the 1.043 billion
Euros in EU poultry exports i.e. a dumping rate of 24% (Berthelot J
2007 "The Agricultural Negotiations at the WTO: Mechanisms and
Tricks", April).
iv
FAO 2007g ‘FAO Briefs on Import Surges. Countries No. 12. Insights
on Rice, Poultry and Sugar Imports into Cote d' Ivoire'.
v
Personal communication with a WTO member of the G20.
vi
In the cotton case, the Panel ruled that US green box payments did
not belong there because they were tied to production
conditionalities (producers were not allowed to plant fruit,
vegetables and wild rice), leading to production distortions. Posing
an even greater challenge to the fundamental character of the Green
Box, the Appellate Body in the Dairy Products of Canada case, in its
3 December 2001 report stated that
"We
consider that the distinction between the domestic support and
export subsidies disciplines in the Agreement on Agriculture would
also be eroded if a WTO Members were entitled to use domestic
support, without limit, to provide support for exports of
agricultural products. Broadly stated, domestic support provisions
of that Agreement, coupled with high levels of tariff protection,
allow extensive support to producers, as compared with the
limitations imposed through the export subsidies disciplines.
Consequently, if domestic support could be used, without limit, to
provide support for exports, it would undermine the benefits
intended to accrue through a WTO Member's export subsidy
commitments (para 91)... The potential for WTO Members to export
their agricultural production is preserved, provided that any
export-destined sales by a producer at below the total cost of
production are not financed by virtue of governmental action (para
92)".
vii
Reichert T 2006 "A Closer Look at EU Agricultural Subsidies",
Germanwatch. http://www.germanwatch.org/tw/eu-agr05e.htm
viii
Their declaration continues, ‘Green Box subsidies especially those
provided as decoupled income support, insurance against income loss
and investment aid, should be subjected to eligibility criteria such
as low levels of income, status as a producer or landowner,
landholding and production level, in a fixed and unchanging base
period'. ACP Group, Africa Group, LDCs, Bolivia and Venezuela, 21
June 2007, "Declaration on Development Concerns and Issues in the
Current WTO Negotiations".
ix
Shefaeddin S.M. 2005 "Trade Liberalisation and Economic Reform in
Developing Countries" Structural Change of De-Industrialisation?",
UNCTAD Discussion Papers No. 179, April.
x
World Bank 2005 "Learning from Reform", cited in Rodrik D 2006
"Goodbye Washington Consensus, Hello Washington Confusion?",
Harvard University, January.
xi
UNCTAD
2006 LDC Report p. 31.
xii
UNCTAD
ibid.
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