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Agro-food exports, standards and trade agreements

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Title: Agro-food exports, standards and trade agreements


1
Agro-food exports, standards and trade agreements
  • Stefano Ponte
  • Institute for International Studies
  • Copenhagen
  • spo_at_cdr.dk

2
Introduction
  • Trade is an important revenue base for developing
    countries
  • Especially as aid flows slow down
  • Still, low income countries account for only 3
    of income generated by exports
  • Lowering traditional trade barriers Will this
    be enough?

3
Global Value Chain (GVC) analysis and trade
  • Trade not only between countries but also among
    (and within) firms
  • Trade rules do not arise only from domestic
    regulation and international agreements
  • Lead firms in GVCs set private rules that
    shape trade flows and market access

4
GVC analysis and standards
  • Standards are one of the mechanisms shaping trade
    rules and flows
  • GVC analysis contributes new knowledge on
    private and voluntary standards set and
    enforced by lead firms or industry
    associations, NGOs etc.
  • These may be even more demanding than mandatory
    standards
  • Standards affect upgrading opportunities for
    developing countries

5
Standards as a trade passport?
  • Standards define whether a good is fit for
    trade
  • Key issues for developing countries
  • Who defines standards?
  • Who decides the content?
  • Who sets the measurement methods?
  • Who pays for the costs of compliance, monitoring
    and verification?
  • Who captures the benefits?

6
Trends in agro-food standards (1)
  • Increased food safety awareness
  • Focus on health and diet
  • Social and environmental concerns
  • Authenticity of origin

7
Trends in agro-food standards (2)
  • Product differentiation
  • Quality control
  • Traceability (field-to-fork)
  • Third-party certifications or auditing
  • Larger number of standards
  • More complex standards
  • More stringent food safety standards

8
Agro-food standards A simplified typology
  • Mandatory
  • Import regulation (i.e. food safety, geographic
    indications, labelling)
  • Voluntary
  • International standards (ISO, Codex, SA8000)
  • Labels (organic, fair trade, eco-labels)
  • Model codes of conduct (EUREP-GAP, ETI)
  • Private
  • Defined and owned by a company (supermarket chain
    quality standards)
  • Considerable overlaps

9
Lessons from case studies (1) Coffee
  • Why is coffee interesting for analysing value
    chains, trade and standards?
  • No protectionist element in standards
  • Produced mainly in the South
  • Low tariff barriers
  • Yet, tariff escalation (roasted, instant)
  • Proliferation of private standards specialty
    and sustainable coffees

10
Specialty and sustainable coffee standards
  • Issues of participation in the setting of
    standards
  • Who benefits? Who pays?
  • Different stories
  • Specialty
  • Fair trade
  • Organic
  • Shade-grown
  • Mainstream initiatives on sustainability

11
Lessons from case studies (2) Supermarket
standards for FFVs
  • Extremely demanding
  • Higher than import regulation on food safety
  • Quality, maximum pesticide residues, ethical
    standards
  • More functions demanded from exporters
  • Some cases of upgrading
  • From smallholders to commercial farms increasing
    concentration at production and export levels

12
Challenges (1) Mandatory standards
  • Better use of the dispute settlement system in
    the SPS Agreement
  • Lenghty and demanding process
  • Penalties based on punitive tariffs
  • Not a practical way for developing cos
  • SPS Committee as a forum of discussion

13
Challenges (2) International standard setting
  • SPS Agreement harmonisation
  • Through Codex, IPPC, OIE
  • Poor participation in international standard
    setting and revision
  • Technical and financial assistance (not binding
    in SPS Agreement)
  • Modest size of the Advisory Centre on WTO law

14
Challeges (3)Voluntary and private standards
  • Voluntary (sectoral) and private standards are
    often more stringent than public regulation
  • Issues of participation, transparency
  • Public pro-active strategies to help industry
    organisations
  • Technical and facilitation support for firms and
    industries

15
Key questions
  • Are standards eroding the comparative advantage
    of developing countries?
  • Are they marginalising smallholders and small and
    medium enterprises?
  • Can standards be a tool for stimulating learning
    and a launch-pad for upgrading in developing
    countries?

16
The role of research
  • GVC analysis, trade and standards
  • Access and participation
  • Specificities of value chains
  • Catalyst for industry-level debate
  • Entry barrier AND opportunity for upgrading
  • Costs and benefits of compliance
  • Distributive impact
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