Developing countries welcome WTO proposal on farm trade
Developing countries last week hailed the WTO proposal to cut taxes on agricultural exports by a minimum of 54%, while voicing their reservations on the draft on industrial products. Launched in 2001, the Doha negotiations on multilateral trade aim at forging a North-South consensus on trade in farm and manufactured goods.
Geneva: Developing countries on Saturday welcomed WTO proposals to reduce barriers to farm trade but voiced reservations on those calling for a further opening of their own markets for industrial goods.
The draft agreement on agriculture presented by the World Trade
Organisation a week ago “is a good basis for further work,” said
Brazilian ambassador Clodoaldo Hugueney, speaking for the Group of 20
emerging market nations.
“These positions offer the best prospects for a balanced and reasonable outcome for the Doha Development Agenda.”
The Doha round of multilateral trade liberalisation talks was
launched in the Qatari capital Doha in November 2001 but has foundered
ever since in disputes between developing and industrialised nations.
Developing countries have been pressing for greater access to
agricultural markets in the industrialised world. Developed nations are
in return seeking a better deal for their manufactured products on
developing country markets.
Hugueney hailed the WTO’s inclusion in its proposal of an average
minimum reduction of 54 percent in customs duties levelled on
developing country agricultral exports by industrialised nations.
The G20, which besides Brazil includes such emerging powerhouses as China and India, had put forward the same proposal.
But emerging market countries were less enthusiastic about the WTO
draft on manufactured goods, which “largely ignored their proposals,”
Hugueney told AFP.
“It sparked a negative reaction.”
This WTO text calls on about 30 emerging countries to set a 23
percent maximum level on their customs duties on industrial products.
But the document also drops any reference to the number of products a
country would be entitled to protect from too sharp a delcine in
customs duties.
“That gave the impression of being a step backward,” Hugueney said.
The WTO plans to convene a ministerial meeting in April aimed at
forging a North-South consensus on trade in farm and manufactured goods
with the hope of wrapping up the Doha talks by the end of the year.
EU response
The European Commission meanwhile gave a cool reception to the new
Doha Round negotiating texts from the WTO, urging a better balance.
“All parts of this negotiation must move forward in concert, goods,
agriculture and services,” a statement from the commission’s trade
office said.
“It is absolutely crucial that the texts now move forward rapidly
and in a way that reflects the mainstream views of the WTO membership,”
it added.
“The EU believes that the necessary balance between the (industry
and service) and agri texts has not been found,” the commission said.
“The EU calls on WTO members to work together to deliver
(negotiating) modalities that respect both the sensitivity of
developing countries and the Doha mandate of generating real and new
market access in non-agricultural products,” the commission said.