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Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council www.agritrade.org International Agricultural Trade Research Consortium www.iatrcweb.org

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Page 1: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Building on the July Framework Agreement:

Advice and Cautions

International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council

www.agritrade.org

International Agricultural Trade Research Consortium www.iatrcweb.org

Page 2: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

About the Project

• Funders: – William and Flora Hewlett Foundation– German Marshall Fund

• Collaborators: – International Agricultural Trade Research Consortium

• David Blandford, University of Pennsylvania (Domestic Support)• Linda Young, University of Montana (Export Competition)• Tim Josling, Stanford University (Market Access)• Mario Jales and Andre Nassar, ICONE (Market Access) • Ann Tutwiler, IPC (Market Access, Export Competition)

Page 3: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Domestic Support: July Framework

• Positive – Discipline overall trade distorting support– Cap commodity specific and moderately trade distorting

support (Amber and Blue)– Refine non-trade distorting criteria (Green)– Harmonize level of support

• Negative – Relax criteria for moderately trade distorting support (Blue)

Page 4: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Domestic Support: IPC Caution

• July Framework increases permitted support by 15% to 25% plus bound trade distorting support – New US base, 250% of current spending; – New EU base, 170% of current spending

• Reduction in permitted overall trade-distorting support must exceed 60% to be effective

• Reduction of components should equal or exceed overall reduction – To reduce “box shifting” from Amber to Blue or de minimis– Blue Box, de minimis will become important for many countries

Page 5: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Green Box: Advice

• Revise criteria to prevent “updating” base acres/animals– Comply with cotton case

• Retain criteria to allow planting of all crops – Comply with cotton case

• Clarify role of environmental/social payments– Some may “increase” production

• Enhance monitoring with formal Ag Committee review • Do not cap Green Box payments

Page 6: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Composition of Overall Trade-Distorting Support

Overall Trade Distorting Support

Amber Box Blue Box De Minimis

Page 7: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Permitted Spending Under July Agreement Much Higher Than Current Spending Under

URAA

0

20000

40000

60000

80000

100000

120000

EuropeanUnion

Norway UnitedStates

Actual OTDS (URAA)

Permitted OTDS(DDR-Initial)

Page 8: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

URAA Actual versus DDA Permitted(60% reduction Amber; 50% reduction de minimis)

01000020000300004000050000

United States EuropeanUnion

Norway

Actual Amber Permitted Amber

Actual de minimis Permitted de minimis

Page 9: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Blue Box: URAA Actual versus DDA Permitted

(5% Cap)

05000

10000

15000

20000

25000

United States EuropeanUnion

Norway

Actual Blue (URAA) Permitted Blue (DDR)

Page 10: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

July Framework Agreement Does “Harmonize” Support Levels

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

Percent OTDS/Production

Canada E.U. Japan Korea Norway U.S.

Actual OTDS/production Across the Board Tiered

Page 11: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

A “Cut” is not Necessarily a Cut

0

10000

20000

30000

40000

50000

60000

70000

Canada EuropeanUnion

Japan Korea Norway United States

Current OTDS Across the Board Tiered

Page 12: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Big Cuts in Overall Support Needed to Require Policy Changes

Figure 9. Binding Percentage Reduction in OTDS

84%

76% 75%

51%

42%

13%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

Japan Korea Canada US EU Norway

Page 13: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Export Competition: July Framework

• Economic gains “modest” but political gains large• Gains for some countries, commodities large• Positive innovations

– Disciplines cover all forms of export competition– Eliminates subsidized export competition

Page 14: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Export Competition: IPC Advice

• Export Subsidies– Implement down payment (20% to 50%) – Allow, but don’t require rapid phase-down for some commodities

• Food Aid: Do Not Convert to Cash Only – Count market development spending against export subsidy limits

• PL480, Title 1– Phase-out loans for food aid

• PL480, Title 1 – Prohibit monetization and phase out programme food aid

• PL480, Section 416B, Food for Progress– Channel food aid donations from stocks thru WFP

• 416 B

Page 15: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Programme Food Aid Dwarfs Project, Emergency Food Aid

Emergency

Project

Programme

Page 16: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Programme Food Aid Variable, Large Share Monetized

0

5

10

15

20

1990 1993 1997 1999 2002

Global Food Aid

Global ProgrammeMonetized Aid

Page 17: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

State Trading Entities

• Elimination of government financing, export subsidies, underwriting losses should remove distortions

• If monopoly power distorts markets, mandate co-existence– Allow private sector share of market to expand over time

Page 18: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Export Credits

US

EU

Canada

• Reduce value of transactions covered over implementation period

• Create international credit program to address liquidity constraints – (LDCs, NFIDCs, financial

crises, emergencies)

Page 19: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Market Access: July Framework

• Most important, least defined pillar– Approximately 92% of economic gains from lower tariffs in

industrialized and developing countries

• Positive Innovations– Tiered (harmonizing) reductions– Possible cap on tariff peaks– Addresses tariff escalation

• Negative Innovations– Special, sensitive products– Expansion of TRQs not mandated

Page 20: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Market Access: IPC Caution

• Large cuts in bound tariffs needed to affect trade• Formula should be simple, linear reduction

– not URAA formula of average/minimum cuts

• Three to four bands sufficient for tariff cuts• Tariff cap needs to be 100%

– Or impose harmonizing (Swiss) cut on peak tariffs

• Sensitive should be limited to a (small) share of consumption or production

Page 21: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Tariff Overhang in Developing Countries

Product Market Applied Rate Bound RateTariff

OverhangEquivalent

Cut

India 100% 150% 50% 33%Nigeria 10% 150% 140% 93%Brazil 16% 35% 19% 54%India 100% 150% 50% 33%Nigeria 10% 150% 140% 93%Brazil 16% 35% 19% 54%India 30% 100% 70% 70%Australia 5% 20% 15% 75%Brazil 20% 35% 15% 43%India 30% 100% 70% 70%Brazil 10% 35% 25% 71%Chile 6% 25% 19% 76%Mexico 20% 45% 25% 56%Philippines 10% 35% 25% 71%Brazil 12% 55% 43% 78%South Africa 5% 82% 77% 94%Indonesia 6% 25% 19% 76%Egypt 32% 60% 28% 47%Brazil 10% 35% 25% 71%South Africa 15% 37% 22% 59%Mexico 20% 45% 25% 56%Romania 20% 115% 95% 83%Brazil 10% 55% 45% 82%Mexico 20% 45% 25% 56%Nigeria 10% 150% 140% 93%India 70% 100% 30% 30%Brazil 12% 55% 43% 78%Egypt 12% 20% 8% 40%Brazil 27% 55% 28% 51%

Raw Sugar

White Sugar

Ethanol

Soybean Meal

Bovine Meat(chilled boneless

cuts)

Powder Milk

Poultry Meat(frozen boneless cuts)

Swine Meat(frozen boneless cuts)

Rice (milled)

Elaboration: ICONE

Page 22: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Bound Tariff Structures: Developed Countries

3 bands and 100% cap

0153045607590

105120135150165180195210225240255270285300315330345360375390405420435450

0

10

0

20

0

30

0

40

0

50

0

60

0

70

0

80

0

90

0

10

00

11

00

12

00

13

00

14

00

15

00

16

00

17

00

18

00

19

00

20

00

21

00

# of tariff lines

Tar

iff

Rat

es

Japan

USA

EU

Switzerland

Norway

Canada

40%

50%

60%100% cap

Elaboration: ICONE

Page 23: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Bound Tariff Structures: Developing Countries 3 bands and 150% cap

0

30

60

90

120

150

180

210

240

270

300

330

360

390

0 40 80 120

160

200

240

280

320

360

400

440

480

520

560

600

640

680

720

760

800

840

880

920

960

1000

1040

# of tariff lines

Tar

iff

Rat

es

India

Brazil

Mexico

Kenya

Cameroon

Indonesia

China

46%

26%

33%

150% cap

Elaboration: ICONE

Page 24: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Tariff Peaks

CountryTotal # of tariff lines

# of tariff lines >=50%

# of tariff lines >=100%

# of tariff lines >=150%

European Union 2,200 259 69 16

Japan 1,806 395 307 272

Switzerland 2,111 752 450 285

United States 1,769 84 27 14

Brazil 959 148 - -

Cameroon 831 831 - -

India 690 633 584 243

Kenya 665 665 665 -

Mexico 1,080 84 67 48

Developing Countries

Developed Countries

Elaboration: ICONE

Page 25: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Selection of Sensitive Products

Elaboration: ICONE

# of Over-Quota Tariff Lines

Sensitive Products as a % of Total # of Tariff Lines

European Union 271 12%

United States 196 11%

Japan 111 8%

Switzerland 432 20%

Norway 381 30%

Mexico 90 8%

Applied Rate >= Bound Rate

Sensitive Products as a % of Total # of Tariff Lines

India 35 5%

Mexico 119 10%

Indonesia 26 2%

Brazil 5 1%

Page 26: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Tariff Rate Quotas

• TRQs prevalent, less than ideal measure– Used by 43 of 144 WTO members

– In OECD, 43% of trade covered by TRQs

– In some developing countries, 99% of trade covered by TRQs

– Average fill rate, 60% (improve TRQ administration)

• Expand or Establish TRQs – If large reductions in tariffs not possible

– On Sensitive, Special Products

• Reduce in-quota tariffs alongside other tariff cuts

Page 27: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Developing Country Issues

• Impose same tariff cuts over longer timeframe – or shallower cuts over same timeframe

• Base Special Products on concrete criteria– Impose half of required tariff cut – Limit to small share of consumption, production

• Special Safeguard Measure– Base volume trigger on moving average of import levels– Allow on products with bound tariffs below specified percent

• Industrial and high income developing countries should provide duty and quota free access to LDCs

Page 28: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Other Issues

• Geographic indications: discussion should be launched under TRIPS regarding whether, how to protect intellectual property (patents, GIs) in foods

• Sectoral initiatives: higher than average cuts in tariffs, domestic support, export competition should be encouraged

• Differential Export Taxes: Discipline alongside export subsidies– Distort export markets,

– Distort domestic markets

– Penalize producers

Page 29: Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council  International Agricultural

Conclusions

• Framework incorporates more than adequate flexibility • Challenge will be to make real progress in opening

markets and reducing trade distorting subsidies• Progress needs to be made on each pillar to ensure

real reforms• Negotiators have 6 months to deliver 2 years work—

– Momentum of last July must be regained – Deadline for Schedules: Hong Kong plus 4 months