Title: The Doha Development Agenda: Agriculture
1The Doha Development AgendaAgriculture
Carlos A. Primo Braga Senior Adviser,
International Trade Department The World Bank
Ensuring Coherence Between Africas Trade
Agenda And Long-Term Development
Objectives Lausanne, Switzerland May 13-14, 2005
2Why the focus on agriculture in the DDA?
- even though it provides less than 4 of global
GDP and 9 of intl merchandise trade - OECD manufacturing tariffs have fallen by 9/10ths
over the past 60 years to lt4, while agricultural
protection has risen - Agric. applied (bound) tariffs now average nearly
5 (10) times manufactures tariffs globally - Also, the vast majority of the worlds poor rely
on farming for a living, and may be hurt by agric
protection policies of rich countries
3Usual concerns about the implications of
agriculturalliberalization
- The harm to some DgC farmers from rich-country
agricultural protection is reduced via
non-reciprocal preference schemes such as the
ACPs Lome Agreement, EBA and AGOA - And as a consequence MFN liberalization entails
the risk of preference erosion. But this risk
tends to be dominated by productivity impacts and
market access expansion in non-preferred products
(not to mention the shortcomings of preferences
e.g., strict ROO) - Need to address concerns of net food importers
- Food security impact on subsistence farmers
4Africas potential in agriculture
SSA China India
Agricultural land per worker (hectares/workers) 5.1 1.1 0.7
Crop land per worker (hectares/worker) 0.9 0.3 0.7
Cereal production per worker (metric tons/worker) 0.42 0.78 0.85
Including pastures Src FAO, WB staff Including pastures Src FAO, WB staff Including pastures Src FAO, WB staff Including pastures Src FAO, WB staff
5Trade reform in the last two decades
Av. Tariffs
Late 1980s
2004
Overall Trade Restrictiveness Index (OTRI)
6Still large scope to increase certainty of trade
policy by binding tariffs at low levels
- Average binding coverage for manufactures is 45
of tariff lines, but this masks wide
discrepancies - 15 countries have bound less than 10 of tariff
lines - Of which 7 are non-LDCs
African Tariffs Agriculture Manufacturing
Bound average 70.4 29
Applied average 17.7 12
Bound maximum 597 200
Applied maximum 100 100
7Role of African countries crucial in negotiations
outcome
- Though Africa accounts for less than 2 of world
trade - African countries represent about 25 of the 148
WTO members - A Doha Development Agenda without Africa is a
contradiction in terms
8What is in it for Africa?
- Opportunities to explore
- More open and less subsidized global agricultural
markets (e.g. sugar, cotton, ground nuts) - Reduction of barriers in NAMA (especially
South-South) - Opportunity to discipline own trade regimes
(reduce uncertainty and rent-seeking) - Aid for Trade
- Downside risks limited
- low binding coverage in Africa
- actuals much lower than bindings
- special treatment
- Implementation periods
- Lower commitments
- Special products
9Modeling Doha reform packages using World Banks
Linkage Model
- Recursive dynamic CGE model
- We start with GTAP Version 6.05 protection and
trade data for 2001 - We project on-going reforms from 2001 to end-2004
(Uruguay Round including ATC, EU25 enlargement,
WTO accession for China, etc.) - Then we assume no further reform as global
economy grows to 2015 (according to World Bank
population, income, etc. projections), to get our
global baseline scenario for 2015, against which
to compare reform scenarios
10Linkage models welfare cost of current
protection policies by 2015
- Global cost of current tariffs on all good plus
agricultural subsidies would be 278 billion p.a.
by 2015 - 2/3rds accrues to high-income countries
- But as of GDP, the cost for DgCs is twice that
for developed countries
11Full liberalization global gain (bn)
billion due to reform by Agric food Textiles clothing Other manuf TOTAL
High-income Countries 124 16 9 150 (55)
Developing countries 40 24 58 124 (45)
All countries policies 173 (61) 39 (15) 67 (24) 278 (100)
12Full libn gains to developing countries
bn due to reform by Agric food Textiles clothing Other manuf. TOTAL
High-income countries 26 15 4 44 (50)
Developing countries 26 9 6 45 (50)
All countries policies 55 (63) 22 (25) 10 (12) 87 (100)
13Full Liberalization(percentage change from
baseline income in 2015)
14Effects of full libn on SSA factor rewards
change in Farm land Unskilled wages Skilled wages
South Africa 10.7 2.8 2.2
Other Southern Africa 5.3 6.4 1.2
Other SSA 6.4 8.4 5.7
15The WTO General Council Decisions (August 1, 2004)
- Agriculture
- Parallel elimination of all forms of export
subsidies, including all export measures with
equivalent effect which are not in accordance
with strengthened disciplines to be established
(e.g., export credits, export credit guarantees
or insurance programs, trade-distorting practices
of exporting state-trading enterprises, and food
aid) - Substantial reductions of trade-distorting
support, encompassing amber and blue boxes, as
well as de minimis subsidies. In the first year
of implementation of the agreement, countries are
expected to cut at least 20 per cent of the
overall level of trade-distorting support based
on the sum of the Final Bound Total AMS,
permitted de minimis and the Blue Box capped at 5
per cent of a Members average total value of
agricultural production during a historical
period to be agreed.
16The WTO General Council Decisions (cont.)
- Agriculture (cont.)
- Tariff reductions are expected to be made from
bound rates using a tiered (banded) formula
that will foster greater harmonization of tariff
regimes with deeper cuts in higher tariffs. In
the case of sensitive products, substantial
improvement is to be achieved through
combination of tariff quota expansion and tariff
cuts. - Cotton will be dealt with in the agricultural
negotiations. To facilitate the prioritization of
the cotton issue in the three pillars of the
negotiations, a subcommittee on cotton will
report periodically on progress achieved to the
Special Session of the Committee on Agriculture. -
- NAMA back to a qualified Derbez text.
Consensus still missing - Services new timetable for revised offers (May
2005). - Begin negotiations in trade facilitation and
agreement that other SI are outside the single
undertaking. - New timetable to agree on SDT issues (July
2005). - Extension of the DDA deadline with the next
Ministerial scheduled for Hong Kong in December
2005.
17Prospective Doha packages
- We focus on agric market access in particular
- because it is by far the biggest potential
contributor to global and DC welfare gains - So we assume no services reform, no new trade
facilitation, but - phase out of agricultural export subsidies
- tiered cut to agricultural domestic support
- And tiered cut to agric and non-agric bound
tariffs under various alternative market access
packages
18Agricultural market access
- Tiered formula for cutting bound tariffs (with
smaller cuts for DCs) - Formula sought by Harbinson yielded almost no
gains to DCs - especially if lesser cuts for 2 of products that
are sensitive and another 2 of DC products
that are special - So we increased each cut by 10 percentage points
more than Harbinson
19Agricultural domestic support
- Cut in bound AMS need not reduce applied support,
because of binding overhang (with 1986-88 ref.
prices) - and overhang can be increased by abolishing admin
prices used to calculate market price support - We apply a tiered reduction in bound AMS
- 75 if AMSgt20, otherwise 60 for developed
countries (40 for developing, zero for LDCs) - Leads to only 4 members reducing support
- US 28, Norway 18, EU 16, Australia 10
20Non-agric market access, and extent of DgC
willingness to reform
- 50 cut in bound rates for high-income countries,
33 for DgCs, 0 for LDCs - We also examine the effects of DgCs (including
LDCs) becoming full participants in Doha agric
and NAMA cuts (Doha-All scenario) - recalling from earlier Rounds that DgCs tipically
got what they gave, in terms of increased market
access
21Services and trade facilitation
- These areas offer great potential gains,
especially for developing countries - But few significant signs of commitment have been
forthcoming yet - and quantification of their effects is
problematic - Hence we assume zero changes for these items in
our modeled Doha scenarios.
22Results from Doha agric reform
- Tiered formula cut as per Harbinson gives the
world 54 billion, but little goes to DgCs - So we increased all cuts by 10 percentage points,
which gave a 73 billion global gain - Even then, only 8 billion go to DCs
- if HICs exempt just 2 sensitive products
(DCs 4), global gain shrinks to 18 billion, and
DCs gain disappears - although a 200 tariff cap reduces much of that
shrinkage - Small DgC gains because of their (a) lesser cuts
and (b) large tariff binding overhang
23Binding overhang in agric tariffs,
Bound Applied
All DgCs 48 21
South Africa 52 13
SSA LDCs 63 13
Other SSA 105 26
24Adding non-agric market access
- Adding 50/33/0 cuts to non-agric bound tariffs
boosts global gain from agric tiered formula cut
from 73 to 95 billion pa - That 95 billion gets the world 1/3rd of the way
to the potential gains from complete free trade
in merchandise - If DgCs and LDCs fully participate in market
access, global gain goes up to 119 billion
25Effects of Doha libn on SSA applied tariffs
applied tariff in Baseline 2015 Doha (with lesser cuts by DgCs) Doha-All
South Africa 6.6 6.0 5.0
Other Southern Africa 8.7 8.5 8.4
Other SSA 16.1 15.7 15.4
26Effects of full Doha libn on SSA welfare
change in Full global libn Doha (with lesser cuts by DgCs) Doha-All
South Africa 1.0 0.25 0.49
Other Southern Africa 1.7 0.19 0.26
Other SSA 1.2 -0.02 0.13
27Areas of concern
- Agriculture
- calculation of AVEs
- the criteria for selection of sensitive products
(and special products) the greater the
flexibility on this front, the smaller the
potential for substantive improvement in market
access through tariff cuts - the definition/implementation of the tiered
formula not only in terms of the type of tariff
reduction mandated by band, but also with respect
to the question whether tariff line caps will be
established that could control for strategic
behavior at the level of product classification - the profile of implementation of new disciplines
in each one of the three pillars the more
back-ended is the reform, the less substantial
will be its impact in present-value terms - the choice of the historical period for capping
the Blue Box and the size of the cuts required on
trade-distorting domestic support - Cotton expectations of quick solutions vs.
timetable of negotiations/domestic reform
calendar in countries relying on subsidies.
28South-South liberalization important for Africa
Average applied tariffs EU US Brazil China India Thailand
Coffee, Tea, Spices 3.1 0.7 11.5 13.9 62.5 36
Cocoa and cocoa preps 6.1 5.8 17.3 11.0 30 13.1
Fruit and nuts 7.1 5.5 12.1 18.7 38.2 36
29Cottons contribution to total merchandise
exports (percent, 1998-99)
30Cottons contribution to GDP (percent, 1998-99)
31Real Price Indices(19801.0)
32Cottons Share in Total Fiber Consumption and
Polyester to Cotton Price Ratio
33Prospects for Reforms
- US No major change expected until 2007 (new Farm
Bill). DS outcome may influence reform path - EU Reformed its cotton regime in 2004, effective
in 2006 - China Reforms are underway, including reduction
of stocks, creation of futures exchange, and
privatization of processing.
34Policy distortions in developing countries
- Reform programs in many developing countries have
been largely incomplete - even if cotton prices increase, it will do no
good to poor producers if such increase is
absorbed by bankrupt parastatals or debt-ridden
cooperatives - In such cases, reforms should become the
immediate focus of policy makers
35WTO negotiations (and other trade negotiations)
provide new opportunities, not guaranteed
outcomes.
- .....Translating opportunities into outcomes
depends on accelerating domestic reforms and
investments that are critical to international
competitiveness. This is especially true in
Africa.
36Concluding remarks
- For the development promise of the Doha agenda to
be realized, all countries have to take
responsibility - Rich countries have to lead in terms of
concessions in agriculture, labor intensive
manufactures, and development assistance as well
as in services (modes 1 and 4, in particular). - Middle income countries have to be willing to
provide new access in services, increase the
coverage/binding of their services policies
under GATS (mode 3 in particular) and increase
market access both in NAMA and agriculture --
benefiting themselves and their neighbors. - Low-income countries, while seeking donor
assistance and flexibility on resource-intensive
rules, have to be willing to reform their own
border protection and to gradually assume greater
commitments vis-Ã -vis the multilateral trade
system.
37Concluding remarks (cont.)
- Agriculture the main potential source of welfare
gains in the DDA - High binding overhang, sensitive and special
products greatly diminish liberalization
potential - Gains to developing countries larger with bigger
cuts in own protection.
38Concluding remarks (cont.)
- A non-ambitious Doha would give SSA only a
fraction of their potential gains from a move to
global free trade - If DgCs (including LDCs) were to fully
participate, their gain more than doubles - Removal of cotton subsidies in US and EU would
raise DgC share of global cotton exports from 56
to 85 - Some LDCs could lose slightly, as could some
households within DgCs that gain, if they reform
little.
39Concluding remarks (cont.)
- Aid for Trade Agenda
- Adjustment
- Preference erosion
- Higher food prices
- Lower fiscal revenue
- Effects on the poor
- Supply response/competitiveness
- Transport infrastructure
- Power and water
- Meeting sanitary standards
- Customs modernization
- Capacity and institutional reforms
- Investment climate
40More information
- www.worldbank.org/trade
- cbraga_at_worldbank.org
- References
- Primo Braga, C.A., 2005, The DDA A Brief
Update, mimeo. - World Bank, 2003 and 2004, Global Economic
Prospects. (Washington, DC The World Bank).
41Working paper and web address for forthcoming
book chapters
- Anderson, K., W. Martin and D. van der
Mensbrugghe, Would Multilateral Trade Reform
Benefit Sub-Saharan Africans? World Bank Policy
Research Working Paper, April 2005. - Anderson, Kym and Will Martin (eds.),
Agricultural Trade Reform and the Doha
Development Agenda, Washington DC World Bank,
forthcoming mid-2005 but chapters now available
on World Bank website at http//web.worldbank.org
/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/TOPICS/TRADE/0,,contentMDK203660
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