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WEST
AFRICANS, EU MAKE PROPOSALS FOR HONG KONG DEAL ON COTTON
At the 18 November
meeting of the WTO Sub-Committee on Cotton, the EU and a group of
four West African countries described plans for cutting subsidies
and tariffs on cotton more quickly and deeply than other farm products,
urging Members to adopt them at the Hong Kong Ministerial Conference
in December. Notably, the EU offered to unilaterally implement its
own proposal from 2006. A number of Members have been pushing for
an agreement on cotton trade at the WTO's Hong Kong summit, since
they have largely given up hopes of striking a comprehensive deal
on most aspects of the negotiations there.
Benin, Burkina
Faso, Chad, and Mali, the prime advocates of the WTO's special work
programme on cotton, called for the elimination of cotton export
subsidies by the end of 2005. They also called for trade-distorting
domestic support to be eliminated by 1 January 2009 -- 80 percent
by the end of 2006, with the remaining cuts to be evenly divided
between 2007 and 2008 -- accompanied by rules prohibiting the reclassification
of unauthorised subsidies as permitted ones. The four countries
urged Members to agree to improved market access, with duty- and
quota-free access to developed country markets for least-developed
country (LDC) exports. They also called for the creation of an emergency
fund to help governments cope with deficits resulting from the decline
in the price of cotton, and other technical and financial assistance
to develop the cotton sector in Africa. Notably, a 16 November declaration
in N'Djamena, Chad signed by senior representatives from the four
governments emphasised that they would be unable to sign on to a
Hong Kong consensus that did not address these concerns.
The EU proposes
that the Doha Round outcomes on cotton "will be more ambitious
and farther reaching than those that will be achieved for the agriculture
sector as a whole." Referring to the 2004 July Package (WT/L/579)
mandate to address cotton "ambitiously, expeditiously, and
specifically, within the agriculture negotiations," the EU's
informal paper indicated that it was prepared to eliminate all tariffs
and quotas on cotton imports from all WTO Members as well as all
cotton export subsidies, "from day one of the implementation
period of the results of the round." With regard to domestic
subsidies, the EU proclaimed its willingness to eliminate 'Amber
Box' trade-distorting support and apply all new rules on 'Blue Box'
support. Furthermore, it announced that it was ready to implement
these commitments "on an autonomous basis" from 2006.
The EU urged Members to agree at the Ministerial Conference to substantial
reductions in tariffs and domestic support, as well as the elimination
of export subsidies in a manner that is "fast-tracked and front-loaded
in comparison with the implementation schedule applicable for other
sectors covered by the agriculture negotiations."
During the meeting,
the G-20 developing countries, Cuba, and the group of African WTO
Members expressed support for the four West African countries' proposal.
The US agreed
that disciplines on cotton should go further than the overall results
of the farm trade negotiations, but said that an ambitious agreement
on agriculture was necessary for any package on cotton to have a
significant effect. The US doles out far more in cotton subsidies
to its farmers than the EU; Washington would thus likely to encounter
far more political difficulty in eliminating them than Brussels.
The EU, on the other hand, has been pushing for far smaller tariff
cuts in the overall agriculture talks than the US.
Agriculture
Chair Ambassador Crawford Falconer of New Zealand, who also heads
up the Cotton Sub-Committee, mentioned cotton in the "least-developed
countries" section of his report on the talks for the Trade
Negotiations Committee. The report says that Members "remain
at this point short of concrete and specific achievement" on
cotton, with no agreement on the timeline or extent of other liberalisation
commitments, as well as their relationship to the overall agriculture
negotiations. During an informal agriculture meeting on 22 November,
hours after the report was circulated to Members, the four West
African countries said that the report should create a special section
for cotton. Paraguay and Pakistan echoed this, pointing out that
some non-LDCs also had an interest in the matter. Falconer, who
will make some modifications to his text, said that he had taken
their views into consideration.
ICTSD reporting.
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