Title: NAFTA and Domestic Policy Reform: Observations from Canada
1NAFTA and Domestic Policy Reform Observations
from Canada
- Rick Barichello
- University of British Columbia
- Presented at University of California Silverado
Symposium on Agricultural Policy, Napa CA,
January 19-20, 2004
2Introduction
- Canada signed 3 major trade agreements since
1988, CUSTA, NAFTA and URA - Although trade very important to Canadian economy
(40 of GDP), trade policy still secondary to
domestic policy - Some see these trade agreements as facilitating
unwanted policy changes, others see them as
facilitating needed policy reforms - Our focus what effect has these trade
agreements, particularly NAFTA, had on domestic
policy reform? Has NAFTA really caused much
change in domestic policy?
3Outline
- What are the ag policy reforms Canada has
actually undertaken since 1988 - What are apparent causes of this reform?
- Insights from Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement
(CUSTA) and NAFTA negotiations - Reviewing the reforms
- Details of sample of trade disputes between
Canada and U.S. since 1988 - Long term disputes
- Anti-dumping and Countervail disputes
- Dairy Policy Reform Prospects?
- Conclusions
4Ag Policy Reforms since 1988
- Significant shift in ag policies during 1990s
- Movement to substantially less subsidized
position - Somewhat more open trade environment
- Canadas PSE as percent of total farm receipts
- Fell from 34 to 18 over 13 years from 1986-88
to 1999-2000 - Major component of border protection due to
highly restrictive TRQs which did not change
significantly - Therefore, most of PSE decline due to cuts in
government subsidy support - Result dichotomous policy environment today
- 80 of ag sector has little government budget
support and little or no border protection - Remaining 20 (dairy, poultry production) heavily
protected via commodity marketing boards using
domestic and import quotas
5Actual Policy Changes 1
- Major budget cuts in 1995/96
- Crow Rate freight rate subsidy eliminated
800 M/yr - Direct dairy subsidy phased out, 1996-2002 300
M/yr - Now, no commodity policy, no direct payments and
no government commodity purchases - Stabilization Policy evolution
- Process of change from traditional price supports
began in 1970s pace continued in 1990s - Now stabilization policy is cross-commodity,
insurance style schemes, focus on aggregate farm
gross margins (revenue less purchased inputs) and
crop insurance, with moderate degree of subsidy
(approaching C1B)
6Actual Policy Changes 2
- Centerpiece of new agricultural policy regime
Agricultural Policy Framework (APF) - Key features illustrated by its 5 pillars
- Food quality and safety
- The environment
- Science and innovation
- Sectoral renewal
- Business risk management
- Focus on niche markets, branding unique Canadian
product, controlling attributes throughout food
chain - Environmental programs reducing run-off,
providing wetlands and biodiversity - Research spending maintained in real terms
extension support under provincial funding has
fallen substantially
7Balance of Agricultural Policy
- Supply Management
- Largely maintained unchanged since mid-1970s
- Farm-level marketing quotas set Prodn Impts
Cons - TRQs _at_ 5-8 of domestic consumption
- Over-TRQ tariffs 100-250 much water in
tariffs - Economic rents high Dairy quotas average
1M/farm poultry farm quotas similar (eggs,
2-2.5M/farm) - Lobby strength legendary sector extremely
resistant to policy change - Canadian Wheat Board -very large STE
- No supply control, no significant ongoing subsidy
- Monopoly export rights domestic international
debate
8Evidence from CUSTA Negotiations
- What precipitated this major reduction in
subsidy? - Due to commitments in trade agreements? NAFTA or
URA? Other pressures? - CUSTA negotiations (1985-87)
- No major policy reform options embraced in those
negotiations - both Canada and the U.S. made it crystal clear
that they were proceeding on the premise that
while their mutual objective was to eliminate all
agricultural tariffs, the most sensitive existing
quantitative import restrictions would remain.
This is in fact what finally occurred. (Mike
Gifford, 2001) - Could argue CUSTA led Canada to regulate further
its dairy industryit imposed import quotas on
ice cream and yogurt where before there were
tariffs
9Evidence from NAFTA Negotiations
- Canadas negotiating stance with Mexico similar
- Willing to negotiate tariff reductions but not
NTBs on dairy, poultry and eggs (potential gains
in other areas not worth the risk) - URA negotiations were in mid-stream and Canada
wanted no risk to its position in those
negotiations concerning GATT Art.11 which
permitted Canada to impose import quotas for
supply managed commods - Canada clearly chose to put its major policy
areas (supply management, CWB) on the negotiating
table only in the GATT negotiations (as least re
market access) - Same position in FTAA TRQ levels, over-TRQ
tariffs, and STEs are matters only for the Doha
Round
10Contrast with U.S. Position
- Bilateral between U.S. and Mexico in NAFTA was
very different - US and Mexico agreed to tariffy all import quotas
as well as phase out all ordinary tariffs and
tariff equivalents - Result border protection for even sensitive
commodities was to be removed - Why? Gifford argues, the value of market access
gained, plus the greater ease politically of
selling a no-exceptions approach, was worth the
risks of damage from the greater competition that
would be felt in sugar and dairy - Conclusion it was simply a calculation of
political costs and benefits, not more general
view of bilateral vs multi-lateral negotiations,
and these would vary case by case
11Apparent Causes of 1990s Reforms
- Main elements of reforms
- removal of export grain freight subsidy and dairy
direct subsidy, - changing of commodity-based stabilization
programs, and - reduction of variety of smaller subsidies
- Federal govt budget cutting pressures clearly
primary reason for the policy changes,
particularly large expensive policies - Reform of Crow freight subsidy also influenced by
URA - Export subsidy commitments including cutting back
Crow, but this required only 36 over 5 years,
not 100 in 2 years - Dairy subsidy some cut would meet domestic
support commitments but actual cut well beyond
minimum reqd - So strong impression that these two cuts were
primarily budget pressure-induced
12Causes of Earlier Reforms
- Changes in stabilization programs earlier in
decade have closer connection to trade policy - Change not for a NAFTA or URA commitment
- Rather due to trade remedy law, countervail
provisions - Canada vulnerable to countervails due to previous
design of stabilization programs - Shift to whole farm, cross-commodity,,
insurance-style program was substantially a
response to U.S. countervail procedures in effort
to avoid US CV duties - These concerns were discussed widely since
mid-1980s when hogs and pork were subject to a
series of CVD examinations
13Other Causes of Policy Changes
- The changing role of farm lobbies could also be
argued to be an important factor in at least some
policy changes in the 1990s - More sub-groups of producers began to exert
independence from the monolithic positions of the
key farm lobbies - Farm lobby groups became more fragmented by
commodity, region, between different farm
sectors, and between farmers and processors - With producers holding more mixed positions, the
lobby position for certain policies weakened, and
the government was left with more latitude to cut
programs without clear and consistent opposition,
including cuts that would not have been feasible
a decade or two earlier
14Negotiations and Reforms Summary
- Role of trade policy appears to be secondary in
reforms undertaken by Canada since mid-1980s - In those cases where trade policy was important,
it appears that NAFTA was much less important
than URA - Same observation holds for Canadas CUSTA, NAFTA,
UR and FTAA negotiations key policy areas where
reforms might be major have kept off the table in
the CUSTA, NAFTA and FTAA negotiations - U.S. negotiation strategy quite different in
NAFTA (Mex) - Exception in earlier stabilization program
reforms where key objective clearly to reduce the
vulnerability of new programs from countervailing
duty claims. Here trade policy considerations
were critical in program reform.
15Selected Dispute Studies Dairy 1
- Series of border disputes in dairy since CUSTA
- all brought by US,
- on issues of unilateral imposition of import
quotas, the validity of tariffication as done to
implement URAA, and export subsidies - 1988 ice cream and yogurt case brought by US
after Canada imposed ice cream and yogurt import
quotas unilaterally after CUSTA negotiated - US won this case Canada responded via Uruguay
Round implementation in 1995 - 1996 Did Canadas tariffication for URA violate
NAFTA rules? Which agreement dominates? - Ruling supported Canada URA provisions had
priority over NAFTA
16Dairy 2
- Late 1997, early 1998 US (and New Zealand)
brought complaint to WTO against Canada for
subsidizing milk exports - Canadas milk product exports to US grew
substantially in period after 1995 implementation
of URA - 5 years of appeals and challenges, requests for
compliance panel, need for new data only
resolved in Dec 2002 - US/NZ win case with major repercussions for
Canadas supply management sector all exports
above 1995 levels are deemed to be subsidized and
must be stopped
17Dairy 3 Lessons
- Reasons for disputes?
- Canadas very high over-TRQ tariffs upon URA
implementation invited challenges - Milk revenue pooling was partly opportunistic at
outset, invited challenge also - US has strong belief it is more competitive than
Canada in milk production and can successfully
dominate Canadian market - US has strong suspicions about Canadas supply
management regime fears EU might adopt similar
measures to result in much larger export
subsidies - Neither side seems interested in compromises
- In these trade policy disputes, NAFTA played a
small role, but mostly the issues were
WTO-related - In the one case where tariff reduction rules
differed between the two, WTO rules were judged
to dominate
18Selected Dispute Studies Horticulture
- Red Delicious apples
- Long history of free trade, but 1989 bumper crop
in Pacific NW so Canada claimed Washington State
was dumping Red Delicious apples into Canada - Classic agricultural case exporting at below
cost was easy to prove as was injury in Canada
Result AD duties were imposed - Second case in 1994, same result. Removed 2000.
- Lessons
- not area of longstanding dispute no cases since
1994 - Opportunistic application of AD regulations
- Solution reform of AD rules, at least as
applied to agriculture
19Greenhouse/Fresh Tomatoes 1
- Two cases, 2001-2002, both AD, one by Canada, one
US - US case concerned greenhouse tomatoes
- Rapid growth in exports from Canada to US over
1990s - Critical element of case was definition of like
product are greenhouse tomatoes different from
fresh field tomatoes? - Dumping was found, preliminary and final
- Injury was not found in final examination due to
like product issue greenhouse tomatoes were
small part of fresh tomato market and no price
effects were due to greenhouse tomato imports.
No AD duties, case closed
20Greenhouse/Fresh Tomatoes 2
- Canadian case involved fresh field tomatoes
- Complaint filed several months after US case
launched - Dumping was found to have occurred
- Injury claim rejected
- Strange result Canadian complainants withdrew
complaint near conclusion, two months after US
cases decided against imposition of AD duties - Apparent case of tit-for-tat
- Lessons
- Not area with potential for major policy reform
rather trade friction - Only NAFTA cases filed, and only for questions of
whether national procedures followed were
appropriate
21Examining Ag Trade Dispute Data
- 53 specific complaints over 1988-2003 period
- From 30 different case types
- 22 disputes brought before NAFTA
- These covered 14 of the 30 cases
- But almost all (20/22) involved AD or CVD, as
illustrated in the Horticulture cases detailed
above - 9 were brought by the U.S.
- 13 were brought by Canada
- In areas of major bilateral dispute where
significant policy reforms could occur, most have
been taken to WTO panels, not to NAFTA
22Dairy Policy Reform Prospects
- Reform in a mechanical sense would involve either
- reducing over-TRQ tariffs from 100-250 range to
25-35 range (much water in these tariffs) - Increasing TRQ levels
- The first would ultimately lower domestic milk
prices, the second would involve a loss of quota
sales in the short run and prices if TRQs rose
significantly - Both steps would be resisted very strongly
- Indications of strength of opposition
- Value of milk quotas nationally 16-22 Billion,
1 million/farm - Compensation almost certainly required lobbies
have stated this publicly - Level of compensation could not approach the full
value of quotas - Crow Rate compensation cost was 1.6 B
23Conclusions I
- Effect of NAFTA on domestic ag policy reform
appears to be minimal from every angle - True in negotiations and in 1990s period of
reforms - WTO/GATT agreement (URA) associated with some
major actual or potential policy reforms - Post-URA implementation did require some kinds of
policy reform, however modest for the most part - No absence of policy reforms in Canada recently
- These reforms due primarily to budget pressures
by both federal and provincial governments - Some reform pressures from URA implementation
- Increased lobby fragmentation may have
contributed to some reforms
24Conclusions II
- US experience quite different in comparing role
of NAFTA with WTO/URA agreements all commodities
with no exceptions on table with Mexico-US NAFTA
bilateral negotiations - This seems due to due to weighing political costs
and benefits, not for philosophical reasons of
merits of either type of trade agreement - Reviewing major bilateral ag trade disputes since
1988 again supports contention that NAFTA has
played secondary role in terms of dispute types
it has been used for (AD, CVD) - Significant policy dispute or reform areas have
gone to WTO panels - Dairy sector potential for major reform
- Politically very difficult quota values
aggregate to 16-22 Billion - Compensation critical experience from Australia,
Crow relevant