Trade war concept. FILE PHOTO | NMG
International trade has
proven to be a critical mechanism for growth and development. It helps
build stronger value chains, mitigate conflict and provides access to
higher quality and quantities of
goods and services.
goods and services.
It
has also provided consumers with access to a more diversified and
nutritious food basket. However, for trade to improve food security to
the greatest number of people across the globe, greater international
cooperation is necessary.
More than 820 million people -
equivalent to more than 10 percent of the world’s population - were
hungry and about 2 billion people experienced food insecurity in 2018.
This
challenge exists in the context of a global population that is
projected to grow from the current 7.7 billion to 8.5 billion in 2030
and rise to 9.7 billion in 2050.
Developing countries most affected.
The majority of those facing hunger and food insecurity live in
developing countries. These countries, including many least developed
countries (LDCs), depend critically on the agricultural sector for
employment, production and exports.
For instance, 57
percent of the labour force in LDCs was employed in agriculture in 2019,
compared with only three percent in high-income countries.
Within developing countries, poverty is higher in rural areas and the rural poor depend on agriculture.
Smallholders in developing countries face challenges that preclude them from benefitting fairly from global value chains.
Enhanced
international and national measures on transparency and regulation are
needed to ensure incomes arising from agriculture value chains are
fairly shared by all actors.
We also need improved
market access and risk management tools for smallholder farmers,
including for female farmers, to expand opportunities and reduce income
volatility.
LESS DISTORTION, MORE INCLUSION NEEDED
The
international agricultural trading system needs to become less
distorted, more inclusive and sustainable, as well as take the specific
needs of developing countries into account.
The high
volume of agricultural subsidies given to producers in developed
countries must be reduced. For instance, OECD countries provided $315
billion worth of support and protection for their agricultural producers
in 2017.
Instead of improving fair and transparent
market access, growing anti-globalisation sentiments and moves towards
protectionism threaten to undermine the substantial benefits of global
trade, particularly for food systems and nutrition.
At the same time, anti-globalisation and protectionist approaches do nothing to address the problems they claim to respond to.
For
example, what began as heated rhetoric over trade between the United
States and China has evolved into a potential trade war, with
negotiations foundering and both countries proposing trade barriers.
This environment is likely to make it more difficult to overcome barriers to the improvement of global trade.
MULTILATERAL ACTION CRITICAL
The
collapse of agriculture negotiations has tremendously limited the scope
for the use of trade for development and developing countries’ optimism
about the potential of agricultural trade as a vehicle out of poverty
is eroding.
Adequate multilateral trade negotiations
would have led to substantial gains for both developing and developed
countries, including increased global production of food and industrial
goods, better trade infrastructure, more efficient customs procedures,
lower tariff protection, and reduced production- and trade-distorting
domestic support policies.
Trade agreements on
agriculture also go far beyond food security – the special and
differential treatment called for by developing countries on agriculture
are a key requirement for them to continue to want to support the
global trading regime in all sectors.
We also need
stronger market information and reduced trade costs associated with
non-tariff barriers to agricultural trade, including those measures that
are more important today in light of the sustainability imperative.
The
proliferation of non-tariff measures needs to be addressed and the
costs of compliance with them brought down to ensure poorer countries
benefit from market access for their agricultural products.
A proliferation of these measures is conceivable as countries develop and in the context of the implementation of 2030 Agenda.
To
avoid potential adverse and unintended effects of this trend, policy
coherence and convergence are essential. Traceability compliance must be
sensible and support development.
These instruments,
and the multilateral approach as a whole, provide important advantages
for trade liberalisation and should continue to be supported.
The
role of trade in reducing hunger and ensuring food security must be
prioritised. To do so, we must enhance international cooperation on a
multilateral scale.
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