Title: Globalization and Agriculture
1Globalization and Agriculture
- National Cotton Council
- Fresno, California, November 4, 2004
2Outline of Presentation
- Brazil U.S. WTO Dispute
- China Trade Issues
- Doha Framework Agreement for Agriculture
Negotiations - New Trade Paradigms
3Brazil WTO Dispute
- Brazil allegations
- U.S. not adhering to its WTO commitments
- U.S. subsidies not in compliance with applicable
agreements - Applicable Agreements (1993/94)
- Uruguay Round Agricultural Agreement
- Subsidies and Countervailing Measures
4Brazil WTO Dispute
- Challenge covers all aspects of domestic cotton
program (1996 and 2002 farm bills) - Challenge covers step 2 program and export credit
guarantee program (for all commodities)
5Timeline
- Submissions began last June
- Three hearings August, October and December
- Three member Panel
- Most US submissions are available at-
- www.ustr.gov/enforcement/briefs.shtml
- 38 documents of almost 1,000 pages
- Just a fraction of the pages given to the Panel
6Status of the Dispute
- Panel decision public Sept. 8, 2004
- U.S. filed appeal Oct. 28, 2004
- Brazil filed cross-appeal Nov. 2, 2004
- U.S. Brazil file counter comments by Nov. 18,
2004 - Appellate body hears oral arguments Dec. 13-15,
2004 - Appellate body issues findings Feb-Mar 05
7Status of Discussion
- Most submissions are public -
- I will be discussing those submissions
- I will be speculating on final decision
- Based on the submissions
- Based on press reports
8Legal Structure
9Legal Structure
Set out AMS ceiling commitment
Establishes definitions categories of support
Set out export subsidy commitments schedules
10Legal Structure
Sets out Cause of Action
11Legal Structure
Peace Clause
Exempt if they conform with URAA
12Domestic Challenge
- Challenge covers all aspects of domestic cotton
program - Marketing Loan
- Direct Payments
- Counter-cyclical payments
- 1996 and 2002 farm bills
- Interim disaster bills
- Federal Crop Insurance
13Actionable Subsidies
- Is the program a subsidy?
- Is the program protected by the Peace Clause?
- Does the program cause serious prejudice to
Brazil? - Significant price suppression in the same market
- Increase in world market share
14Peace Clause
- Level of support may not exceed that provided in
1992 marketing year - What is meant by level of support?
- Is it spending or is it a policy parameter?
- Definition of green box support critical here
15Is green really green?
- As part of the peace clause debate, Brazil argued
that PFC and direct payments are not really green
box - Main argument based on restrictions on planting
fruits and vegetables - Green box definitions stated precisely in Annex
2 of URAA
16Prohibited Subsidies
- Step 2 Challenge
- Export Credit Guarantee Program
- Challenged as an export subsidy
17Export/Prohibited Subsidies
- Is the program a prohibited subsidy?
- Does the program conform with URAA?
- If not per se inconsistent
18Panels Findings
- U.S. lost on most substantive issues.
- U.S. violated the Peace Clause
- Direct payments do not qualify as green box
- Step 2 and GSM programs are prohibited subsidies
- The U.S. cotton program has caused serious
prejudice to Brazils industry
19Enforcement
- WTO has no enforcement power
- Each member expected to make appropriate changes
in policy - Once Appellate Body report is adopted, the party
concerned will notify its intentions to implement
the recommendations. - If impracticable to comply immediately, party is
given a reasonable period of time to comply - Determined either by mutual agreement or through
arbitration
20Analysis offered by Brazil
- Brazil cited studies showing price impacts from
presence of US programs - Brazil offered its own economic analysis of price
impacts the Sumner model - Brazil also offered an elaborate allocation
methodology for allocating decoupled payments to
specific commodities - Impacts on world price ranged from 2 to 26
21Analysis and Strategy of Brazil
- Used NCC testimony, press releases, and white
papers whenever possible - When NCC members said they needed cotton program
to make ends meet, Brazil had it quoted - Used NCC estimates of value of GSM
- Comparisons of cost of production
- Value of crop compared to program expenditures
22One of Brazils Arguments
23Whats Wrong with this Picture?
24Whats Wrong with this Picture?
1. 1998 2001 is a misleading comparison.
25Whats Wrong with this Picture?
2. Production is not the primary economic
decision.
26Whats Wrong with this Picture?
3. Ignores the impact of other crop prices.
27Whats Wrong with this Picture?
4. Ignores that US acreage response similar to
others.
28Whats Wrong with this Picture?
5. Fails to explain real reasons for export
increase.
Increase in world market share is one of 4
grounds for serious prejudice, not increases in
exports.
29World Cotton Production U.S. Share
30What About Price Suppression?
Cents per Pound
31What Drives cotton prices?
Prepared by EU Commission Delegation June 2004
32Increased Costs
World Price
33U.S. Arguments
- The cotton program 1992 to 1995
- fully coupled to production and planting with
higher loan rates and target prices - From 1996 to 2002
- moved to decoupled support, reduced loan rates,
lower target prices - Impact of decoupled support
- Price at planting is the economic decision
34U.S. Arguments
- Direct payments and CCP decoupled from planting
decision - Shouldnt be factored in
- Economic impact
- Dr. Sumner altered FAPRI model to show
significant impacts from decoupled programs - Brazil never fully allocated all alleged
subsidies to cotton - Step 2 available for entire crop
- Article 10 exemption for export credit
guarantees
35Keep in mind
- Members of US Agricultural Policy Advisory
Committee were directly told in Geneva in 1993
that Step 2 was not classified an export subsidy. - Congress was told in the statement of
administrative action accompanying WTO
legislation that the GSM program was exempt from
reduction commitments. - EU concept of green box programs very similar to
U.S. concept
36Possible Implications
- GSM decision covers all commodities
- But some have export subsidy schedules
- URAA not interpreted as anticipated by developed
members - Green box GSM impact of decoupled support
- U.S. was wrong about URAA provisions?
- Will U.S. have more difficult time convincing US
agriculture about new language?
37Official Responses
- "While this is a disappointing development, it
does not change the provisions of current
law."Sen. Thad Cochran - "We will be defending U.S. agricultural interests
in every forum we need to, and have no intention
of unilaterally taking steps to disarm when it
comes to this."White House Press Secretary Scott
McClellan - "The United States abides by the WTO rules and
is, and has been, in accord with its rules on
agriculture."Reps. Bob Goodlatte and Charlie
Stenholm - "You can be 100 percent sure we're going to
appeal this ruling and press this all the
way."U.S. Trade Representative Robert Zoellick
38Marathon Not a Sprint
- Appeal will be pursued aggressively
- There are no immediate changes to the cotton
program - If final ruling is unfavorable, U.S. will be
given reasonable time to comply
39Lessons Learned
- Innocuous statements by NCC and membership used
against program - Know the economics
- NCC has some of best economics around
- Comparison value of product and amount of
support
40Lessons Learned
- Rest of the world will not meekly follow US
interpretations - Work to make trade negotiators demonstrate that
language means what they think
41China Trade Issues
- Raw Cotton TRQ
- Contract Issues
- Arbitration, Quality Determination
- Textile Safeguard Petitions
42Raw Cotton TRQ
- 4 Million Bales
- 33 Allocated to STE
- Remainder to Receive National Treatment
43Contract Issues
- Arbitration body set by China
- Defaults have occurred
- Acceptance of US quality measurements
44Textile Safeguard Petitions
- Established in Chinese WTO Accession Agreement
- Applied to Address Disruption in Orderly Market
Development - Product Specific, China Specific
- Limited Duration
45Chinese Mill Use of CottonMillion Bales
46Doha Framework Agreement
47- Green Box
- Non-trade distorting
- Decoupled
- De Minimis
- Product specific
- Non-product specific
- Blue Box
- Acreage reductions
- Payments based on fixed yields
Amber Box Production - linked payments Subject to
discipline Disfavored
48EU Programs Heavily into Blue and Green Boxes
About 54 billion US in 2000
49U.S. Expenditures Toward Amber, Green and De
Minimis No Blue
50Framework Moves CCP to Blue Box
51?
Product Specific Caps
52Revised Blue Box
- Re-defined to include US CCP program
- Includes ceiling for the first time
- 5 of value of total agricultural production
- EU will have to reduce to get to ceiling
- Ceiling about 10 billion for US
53Export Subsidies
- Export subsidies to be eliminated
- Export subsidy component of export credit
guarantees to be eliminated - No longer than 180 days in the end
- Disciplines and transparency for state trading
enterprises to be negotiated
54Market Access
- Substantial improvements in market access to be
obtained for all products - Tiered formula to reduce tariffs from bound
levels - TRQ access to be increased using lower tariffs
and increased quota - Sensitive Products
- Developing get more time, less cuts
- Special product exemption
- LDCs exempt
55Market Access
- Tariff reductions
- Higher tariffs to be reduced more
- A banded or tiered approach
- Bound vs. Applied
- U.S. virtually only country where bound and
applied are equivalent - Most other countries have significant difference
in the two
56Bound vs. Applied Tariffs
57Cotton Specific WTO Issues
- African countries proposal to eliminate all
cotton subsidies pay compensation - Was put on General Council agenda in Cancun
- Framework moves cotton back to agriculture
- Specific references establish different standards
58Cotton in the Framework
- Cotton to be be addressed "ambitiously,
expeditiously, and specifically - Special Session of the Committee on Agriculture
shall ensure appropriate prioritization of the
cotton issue . A subcommittee on cotton is to
meet periodically. Work to encompass all three
pillars. - Work on cotton under all three pillars will
reflect the vital importance of this sector to
certain LDC Members and we will work to achieve
ambitious results expeditiously.
59Cotton Specific WTO Issues
- NCC working with African countries through USDA
and US AID - Exchanges technology efforts
- Bumpers amendment could hinder increased
agricultural assistance - Despite cooperation, representatives from some
countries show no significant softening of their
posision
60Legal Structure
Peace Clause
Exempt if they conform with URAA
61Legal Structure
Exempt if they conform with URAA
62Framework Agreement
63Globilization and Agriculture
- National Cotton Council
- Fresno, California, November 4, 2004