Title: UNITED STATES SUBSIDIES ON UPLAND COTTON WTDS 267
1UNITED STATES SUBSIDIES ON UPLAND COTTON
(WT/DS 267)
2INTRODUCTION TO U.S- BRAZIL COTTON CASE
- GATT
- WTO
- Provisions
- Process
3COUNTRIES INVOLVED
- Complainant Brazil
- Defendant United States
- Third Parties Argentina Australia Benin
Canada Chad China Chinese Taipei European
Communities India New Zealand Pakistan
Paraguay Venezuela Japan Thailand
4THE MAIN ISSUES
- 1 ISSUE US Domestic and Export subsidies for
Upland Cotton Producers specifically the - Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002
- Did US Farm Bills in 1999 and the subsequent farm
bills that targeted funds to support US prices
for domestic cotton production and exports break
WTO agreements on Subsidies or did Article 13 of
the GATT 1994 preclude rules on subsidies? - 2 ISSUE Compliance
- Once WTO ruled US cotton subsidies broke WTO
rules Brazil requested another panel to ensure
that US had complied with the ruling.
5SPECIFIC US BILLS CONTESTED BY BRAZIL IN WT/DS267
- Step 2 payments - subsidies designed to enhance
competitiveness of US cotton exports, by
providing payments to buyers of US-grown cotton
when its price exceeds a European benchmark
price. - Export credit guarantees - government guarantees
for short-term export financing for cotton and
other agricultural commodities. - Marketing loan payments -a loan program that
allows farmers to use cotton crops as collateral
for a non-recourse government loan and to repay
the loan at a lower rate when the world price for
cotton falls below a certain threshold. - Counter-cyclical payments - payments proportional
to a farmer's cotton production on "base acres"
during a past period, triggered when the market
price for cotton falls below a target price.
6CONTEXT OF THE CASEBRAZIL POSITION
- Brazil claims the United States Farm Bill of
1999-2000 and 2002 contravene WTO rules on
Subsidies and Countervailing Measures and the
Agreement on Agriculture - Brazil argued that the US was responsible for
driving down world cotton prices, consequently
causing harm to Brazilian farmers while
increasing the US share of the global cotton
market.
7CONTEXT BRAZIL POSITION
- Brazil requests consultations with the
Government of the United States regarding
prohibited and actionable subsidies provided to
US producers, users and/or exporters of upland
cotton. - From Brazils letter of consultation
March 10, 2002 - Articles cited in letter
- AGR 08 AGR 09.01 AGR 10.01 AGR 19 DSU 04
DSU 04.04 GATT 1994 III.04 GATT 1994 XXII
SCM 1994 03.01.a SCM 1994 03.01.b SCM 1994
03.02 SCM 1994 04.01 SCM 1994 05 SCM 1994
06.03 SCM 1994 06.03.c SCM 1994 07.01 SCM
1994 30
8CONTEXT OF THE CASE US POSITION
- US argues that Brazil claims are warrantless
because US subsidies are within their rights
pursuant to Article 13 of the Agreement on
Agriculture that exempts certain subsidies for
nine years after GATT 1994. These exemptions in
Article 13 insure against complaints and are
known as peace provisions, also know as Green
Box exemptions. - Article 13 Agreement on Agriculture
- Peace provisions within the agreement include
an understanding that certain actions available
under the Subsidies Agreement will not be applied
with respect to green box policies and domestic
support and export subsidies maintained in
conformity with commitments an understanding
that due restraint will be used in the
application of countervailing duty rights under
the General Agreement and setting out limits in
terms of the applicability of nullification or
impairment actions. These peace provisions will
apply for a period of 9 years.
9 CONTEXT CONTDUS POSITION
- Initial Brief of the US on questions posed by the
panel. June 5, 2003 - Article 13 (the peace clause) precludes the
Panel from considering Brazils claims under
Article XVI of the GATT 1994 and the (ASCM) since
the US support measures at issue conform with the
Peace Clause.
10 CONTEXT CONTDUS POSITION
- Comments of the US on comments by Brazil on
questions posed by the Panel. June 13, 2003 - the interpretation of Article 13 advanced by
Brazil is deeply flawedBrazil fails to read the
Peace Clause according to the customary rules of
interpretation of public international law.Its
interpretation would lead to an absurd result
11LEGAL BASIS FOR BRAZIL CASE
- Brazil complained that United States Violated the
following WTO Agreements - 1.Articles 4.1, 7.1 and 30, of ASCM
- 2.Article 19 of the AA
- 3.Article 22 of GATT 1994
- 4.Article 4 of DSU
- In short this is violation of subsidies agreements
12WTO ARTICLES INVOLVING THE CASE
- AA 3.3- No subsidies above the scheduled level
of specified goods (scheduled goods) in article
9 of AA - Export Subsidy Commitments 1.
- The following export subsidies are subject
to reduction commitments under this Agreement - the sale or disposal for export by governments
or their agencies of non-commercial stocks of
agricultural products at a price lower than the
comparable price charged for the like product to
buyers in the domestic market(AA9(b)) - AA 8- No export subsidies for unscheduled
products - AA 9.1-supposed to reduce the level of direct
subsidies payment. - AA 10-Prevention of Circumvention of Export
Subsidy Commitments
13 Articles Contd
- ASCM Art. 3 - no subsidies based on export
performance- In case of U.S export credit
guarantees - ASCM Arts 5(C)-Serious prejudice to the
interests of another Member - ASCM Arts 6.3 (C)- Subsidy which cause the market
price to be suppressed causing serious prejudice
to Brazils interest within meaning of article 5
(C)
14TIME LINE OF THE CASE
- Consultations Request September 27, 2002
- Consultations held December 3, 2002 January
17, 2003- Failed. - Brazil requested Panel February 6, 2003
- March 18, 2003 Established of a panel
- Panel Report September 8, 2004 Circulation of
the Panel Report- both countries appealed ruling - AB report March 3, 2005- Upheld panel ruling.
15Time Line Compliance
- August 21, 2006 Brazil requested WTO compliance
panel - December 18, 2007- Panel- U.S did not comply
- February 2008- U.S appealed compliance panel
ruling - June 2008- AB upheld the panel ruling
16PANELS AND AB FINDINGS IN FAVOR OF BRAZIL
- Two U.S programs were found to operate as
prohibited - The two step payment and export credit guarantees
- Further more the Panel found that the
export-subsidies aspect does not just apply to
cotton but also other commodities that benefit. - Panel recommended the United states remove all
subsidies.
17PANEL AND AP FINDINGS IN FAVOR OF UNITED STATES
- Brazil has not made a prima facie case that the
effect of marketing loan and counter-cyclical
payments provided to US upland cotton producers
pursuant.
18U.S RESPONSE TO PANEL AND AB RULLING
- After losing, U.S announced it intended to fully
comply with recommendation - In July 2005 U.S instituted a risk based export
credit guarantee
19BRAZILS RESPONSE TO U.S COMPLIANCE
- Brazil charged the United States had neither
take nor announced any specific initiative for
price-contingent programs deemed to cause
prejudicial impact to brazil trade interest - Brazil requested to impose 1 billion
retaliation against the united states - The United states requested WTO arbitration of
the level of proposed sanction
20BRAZIL REQUEST FOR COMPLIANCE PANEL
- On August 21, 2006 Brazil requested the
establishment of WTO compliance panel to review
weather the United States had not fully complied
with panel and AB report - December 18, 2007 the compliance panel released
the final report ruling the united states had not
fully complied
21UNITED STATES RESPONSE TO COMPLIANCE PANEL RULLING
- In February 2008 the United states appealed the
compliance panel ruling - In June 2008 the TWO Appellate Body upheld the
compliance panel ruling.
22SUMMARY
- Process worked
- Constructive manner
- Conformity
- Rules, not Power
23SOURCES
- 1. http//www.ustr.gov/
- 2. http//www.wto.org/
- 3. http//www.gao.gov/
- 4. http//www.ustr.gov/assets/Trade_Agreements/Mon
itoring_Enforcement/Dispute_Settlement/asset_uploa
d_file243_5697.pdf - 5.