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WTO COTTON RULING IMPLICATION

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Direct payments and PFC payments do not qualify as green box support. ... Bad even if other major players join the bandwagon and open up their markets ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: WTO COTTON RULING IMPLICATION


1
WTO COTTON RULING IMPLICATION FOR U.S. COTTON
PROGRAMS

HTTP//WWW.CERI.TTU.EDU
2
WTO Cotton Ruling
  • Direct payments and PFC payments do not qualify
    as green box support.
  • Export credit guarantees illegal subsidies
  • Cotton Step-2 payment illegal subsidies
  • The U.S. subsidies (MLP, CCP and Step-2) had
    serious price suppressing effect during the
    period 1999-2002.

3
U.S. Response so far
  • Termination of Step-2 program (effective August
    1, 2006)
  • Change in the fee structure of the
    GSM-102/GSM-103 credit programs to account for
    market risk
  • U.S. WTO proposal for extensive farm program
    reforms.

4
U.S. Proposal
  • Reforms in all three pillars of the agriculture
    negotiations
  • Domestic Supports
  • Market Access
  • Export Competition
  • Contingent on meaningful Commitments by all
    members except the least developed countries

5
U.S. Proposal on Domestic Support
  • Bound AMS Level (b 25 and higher)
  • 83 reduction in the final bound total AMS for
    the European Union and Japan
  • 67 billion euros (b 80) to 11.4 billion euros
    (b 13.5)
  • 3,973 billion yen (b 33.7) to 675 billion yen
    (b 5.7)
  • Bound AMS Level (b 12-b 25)
  • 60 reduction in the final bound total Aggregate
    Measurement of Support (AMS) for the United
    States
  • 19 billion dollars to 7.6 billion dollars
  • Largely includes marketing loan payments and
    counter cyclical payments
  • Bound AMS Level (b 0 b 12 )
  • 37 reduction in the final bound total AMS for
    the developing and other developed countries

6
WTO Ministerial Declaration on Domestic Support
  • Three bands for reductions in Final Bound Total
    AMS, with higher linear cuts in higher bands
  • Member with the highest level of permitted
    support will be in the top band
  • Two members with the second and third highest
    levels of support will be in the middle band
  • All other members including developing countries
    will be in the lowest band

7
Market Access
  • U.S. Proposal
  • Substantial reductions in tariffs with deeper
    cuts on higher tariffs as established in the July
    2004 framework.
  • Hong Kong Declaration
  • Tariff reduction using Swiss formula
  • R t0 / (a t0)

8
Tariff Reduction using Swiss Formula
9
Export Competition
  • U.S. Proposal
  • Rapid elimination of all export subsidies, no
    later than 2010.
  • Elimination of State Trading Export Enterprises.
  • Bring export credit program in line with
    commercial terms to prevent export subsidies.
  • Hong Kong Declaration
  • Elimination of all form of export subsidies by
    2013.
  • All form export subsidies for cotton will be
    eliminated by 2006.
  • All export credit programs should be
    self-financing.

10
Why Analyze U.S. Proposal but not WTO Declaration?
  • WTO declaration long on principle, short on
    number (quote from Stephanie Mercier, Senate
    Staff Economist)
  • WTO declaration similar to the U.S. proposal with
    greater cuts with higher levels of domestic
    support and market access

11
Our Analysis
  • Scenario 1
  • What it takes to achieve 60 reduction in the
    total U.S. AMS bound level in five years if U.S.
    acts unilaterally?
  • Major impacts on price, farm income, production,
    consumption and trade
  • Scenario 2
  • What it takes to achieve 60 reduction in the
    total U.S. AMS bound level in five years if rest
    of the world liberalizes along with the United
    States?
  • Major impacts on price, farm income, production,
    consumption and trade

12
What it takes to get 60 AMS Reduction?
12
8
13
Extent of Reductions in Major Program Payments
Counter Cyclical Payments
Marketing Loan Payments
14
Impact on Cotton Net Farm Income
15
Cotton Import Tariff Rates and Domestic Subsidies
for the Major Importers and Exporters of Raw
Cotton
16
What it takes to get 60 AMS Reduction?
Unilateral vs. Multilateral Reforms
9
12
4
8
17
Unilateral vs. Multilateral Reforms Impacts on
U.S. Cotton Net Farm Income
19
26
18
Impacts on U.S. Farm Price Unilateral vs.
Multilateral Reforms
19
Concluding Remarks
  • Big No-No to unilateral U.S. cuts to achieve 60
    percent AMS reduction
  • Cotton net farm income drops by more than 26
  • Bad even if other major players join the
    bandwagon and open up their markets
  • 18 reduction in cotton net farm income

20
Concluding Remarks
  • WTO Ruling implication exclusively for cotton
  • Step 2 program elimination
  • Implications for all program crops
  • Change in the fee structure of GSM 102/103 credit
    programs
  • U.S. WTO Proposal
  • Not so good for cotton farmers Decline in cotton
    net farm income by 18-26
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