By CHRISTABEL LIGAMI, TEA Special Correspondent
In Summary
- Export subsidies — including finance (credit, guarantees and insurance), food aid and state trading agencies — were seen as one of the difficult-to-negotiate areas at the December 15-18 meeting and members at the informal session in Geneva last week confirmed the sharp differences.
- In the new proposals, the EU is willing to be flexible on issues like export credits and food aid disciplines in order to reach an export competition deal in Nairobi, but for Africa and other developing countries to benefit, the US now needs to make concessions on those issues as well.
- Vangalis Vitalis, WTO chairperson of the agriculture negotiations, said in a statement that if member states are keen on a breakthrough on agriculture in the Nairobi meeting, a high level of engagement from everyone is needed.
The quest by African countries to get subsidies on
agricultural exports by developed countries removed is unlikely to be
realised at the World Trade Organisation Ministerial Conference in
Nairobi, after an informal session of delegates failed to close ranks on
the matter.
Export subsidies — including finance (credit, guarantees and
insurance), food aid and state trading agencies — were seen as one of
the difficult-to-negotiate areas at the December 15-18 meeting and
members at the informal session in Geneva last week confirmed the sharp
differences.
“Three new proposals were submitted. Two were on export
competition, pushed by several developed nations, and one on special
safeguard measures for poor farmers made by the G-33 group, which
includes India. But there was no convergence of views on these new
proposals,” a WTO official in Geneva said.
The European Union, Brazil and other countries tabled new
proposals on export competition that included new flexibilities aimed at
appeasing the United States.
In the new proposals, the EU is willing to be flexible on issues
like export credits and food aid disciplines in order to reach an
export competition deal in Nairobi, but for Africa and other developing
countries to benefit, the US now needs to make concessions on those
issues as well.
“Two aspects of the proposal that the US is unwilling to accept
are its requirements that the maximum loan repayment for export
financing for agricultural products be limited to nine months, and
restrictions on the so-called monetisation of food aid,” said the WTO
official.
Monetisation is when in-kind food aid is sold within the country receiving the aid.
With respect to monetisation, the US proposal demands that
members “monetise international food aid only where there is a
demonstrable need for monetisation for the purpose of transport and
delivery of the food assistance, or the monetisation of food aid is used
to redress short and/or long-term food deficit requirements or
insufficient agricultural production situations that give rise to
chronic hunger and malnutrition in least-developed and net
food-importing developing countries.”
It adds that members “... ensure that the monetisation of
international food aid results in minimal interruption of established
commercial markets.”
“The other countries are of the opinion that if they adhere to
the US’s proposal, it would limit the amount of monetisation, but would
not place a hard cap on how much monetisation can occur,” noted the
official.
By contrast, the proposal by the EU, Brazil and others would cap
the amount of monetisation that can occur at an unspecified percentage
of a country’s total in-kind food donations.
Vangalis Vitalis, WTO chairperson of the agriculture
negotiations, said in a statement that if member states are keen on a
breakthrough on agriculture in the Nairobi meeting, a high level of
engagement from everyone is needed.
“There is still much to do and very little time to conclude it,” said Mr Vitalis.
According to the WTO Framework on Agriculture, all direct export subsidies will be eliminated.
“While greater gains are expected to accrue from reform of
domestic subsidies and improvements in market access, export subsidies
have long been condemned as greatly distorting world markets and
detrimental to competitive exporters and import competing producers,”
said Joshua Mugodo, director of economic affairs at Kenya’s Ministry of
Foreign Affairs and International Trade.
“As export subsidies complement policies such as high internal
prices, their elimination will prevent the re-emergence of some
distorting forms of producer support. WTO members would benefit from
being flexible about the details of the transition period if necessary
to ensure achievement of this long-term goal.”
He said that food aid can act as an implicit export subsidy in
some situations. However, disciplines on the subsidy component of food
aid must preserve it humanitarian and developmental roles.
The G-33, a group of developing countries pressing for
flexibilities for developing countries to undertake limited market
opening in agriculture, introduced a revised proposal on special
safeguards that would allow developing countries to raise import tariffs
on agricultural products in cases of import gluts or price declines.
Countries in support of agricultural trade liberalisation voiced
their concerns about the proposal, noting that a special safeguard
mechanism without tariff reductions would allow countries to raise
tariffs above existing bound levels and that this would be a step in the
wrong direction.
A few members reiterated their position that all three pillars
of the negotiations are interlinked, and asked members not to cherry
pick at one pillar.
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