WTO Support Commitments and U.S. Farm Policies

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
State of WTO Agricultural Negotiations Meeting on the Integrated Assessment of Trade Liberalization in the Agriculture Sector February 2003 Note:
Advertisements

The Multilateral Trading System: Opportunities and Challenges for the East African Community (EAC) Countries Anne Kamau Ministry of Trade Department of.
1 Inter-Agency "Data Day"18-19 May 2009 at WTO Geneva, 18 th May 2009 United Nations Conference on Trade and Development Ralf Peters DITC UNCTAD, Geneva.
Twenty-Five Ways to Improve the Derbez Draft International Food and Agriculture Trade Policy Council
Economic Implications of the AUS-FTA for U.S. Dairy Markets and Policy Presentation by Joseph Balagtas at the Silverado Symposium on Agricultural Policy.
Origins of WTO General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) –Established in 1947 as a forum to reduce trade barriers WTO replaced GATT in 1995 as legal.
WTO AGRICULTURAL NEGOTIATIONS Portfolio Committee Agriculture and Land Affairs April 2003 Günter Müller Directorate: International Trade National Department.
U.S. Agricultural Policy Joseph W. Glauber U.S. Department of Agriculture Silverado Symposium on Agricultural Policy Reform / Napa, California /January.
Building on the July Framework Agreement: Advice and Cautions International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council International Agricultural.
Joe Glauber Chief Economist, USDA 5 April 2012 ISSUES SURROUNDING THE 2012 FARM BILL DEBATE.
US Farm Policy and the WTO Joe Glauber Chief Economist, USDA 27 April 2012.
EU-LDC NETWORK CONFERENCE Trade and Poverty Reduction ISSUES FACING DEVELOPING COUNTRIES IN THE ONGOING WTO NEGOTIATIONS IN AGRICULTURE ’ ‘A POVERTY REDUCTION.
1 [Giovanni Anania, IAAE Congress, Durban, August 2003] The Fischler reform of the CAP and the WTO negotiations Giovanni Anania Department of Economics.
The Doha Endgame SS Economics of Food Markets Alan Matthews.
U.S. Agricultural Trade Prospects Butler/Cunningham Conference Montgomery, AL November 8, 2004 Carol Goodloe, USDA.
Implementation of the Uruguay Round Agreement Lecture 20. Economics of Food Markets Alan Matthews.
The EU’s CAP and the likely impact of a Doha Agreement Lecture 24. Economics of Food Markets Alan Matthews.
Doha Negotiations – obstacles and alternatives to a successful Doha Round outcome Lecture 26 Economics of Food Markets Alan Matthews.
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL ENVIRONMENT and EXPORT CREDITS UPDATE
The U.S. and World Sugar Industries under the EU and DOHA Trade Liberalization Won W. Koo   Chamber of Commerce Distinguished Professor and Director  
Doha Progress & Farm Bill Implications: A Fresh Assessment Robert L. Thompson Gardner Professor of Agricultural Policy University of Illinois 27 July 2006.
Domestic Support and the WTO: Comparison of Support Among OECD Countries C. Edwin Young Mary Burfisher Frederick Nelson Lorraine Mitchell Economic Research.
Legislative Outlook—Budget, WTO, & U.S. Farm Policy Presented by Chip Conley Democratic Economist House Agriculture Committee.
Negotiations on Agriculture State of Play by Surabhi Mittal WTO &The Doha Round : The Way Forward 6-7 April, 2006.
IPC Seminar Multilateral Trade Negotiations: Update on The Doha Development Round MARCELO REGUNAGA Hanoi – October 2005.
U.S. Cotton and Rice Policy Compatibility with WTO Commitments And Other Trade Liberalization Efforts Mechel S. Paggi Center for Agricultural Business,
Domestic Support in GTAP and AMS reduction Mark Gehlhar Mary Burfisher EU Modeling Workshop New challenges in Modeling EU Agriculture November 15-16, Economic.
The Impact of the World Trade Organization on Food Aid Policies USDA and USAID EXPORT FOOD AID CONFERENCE Kansas, City, Missouri April 25, 2006 Floyd Gaibler,
The 2007 US Farm Bill: Analysis of the USDA proposals Agricultural Trade Policy Analysis DG for Agriculture and Rural Development European Commission.
2 IPC New challenges: Markets food markets: from demand constrained to supply constrained rapid expansion of bioenergy dramatic price volatility growing.
The Doha Development Agenda: Progress Or Process? Parr Rosson Professor & Director Center for North American Studies Department of Agricultural Economics.
WTO Compatibility of Agricultural Policy Changes in North America Tim Josling Stanford University.
Agriculture Negotiations: Moving Forward Ashok Gulati IFPRI Director in Asia WTO and The Doha Round: The Way forward ICRIER-SRTT Conference 6-7 April,
Global Policies and Risk Management Bruce A. Babcock Center for Agricultural and Rural Development
“July Package” & South Asian Agriculture Prof. J. George Faculty of Economics & Development Planning (FEDP), Haryana Institute of Public Administration,
1 DOHA WORK PROGRAMME CURRENT SITUATION AND ISSUES FOR PAKISTAN Presentation at the EC-Pakistan TRTA Seminar at Islamabad By Dr. Manzoor Ahmad Ambassador.
1 Implications of a Doha Agreement for Agricultural Markets in Sudan Imad Eldin Elfadil Abdel Karim University of Khartoum - Sudan David Abler Penn State.
Impact on EU agriculture of Falconer’s draft modalities DG for Agriculture and Rural Development European Commission.
The Potential Impacts of Changes in Export Competition Policies.
Brazil’s Challenge to the U.S. Cotton Subsidies
Ag Policy, Lecture 6 Knutson, Penn, & Flinchbaugh, Chapter 5 World Trade Organization Review.
Legislative Issues, WTO, & U.S. Farm Policy Presented by Chip Conley Democratic Economist House Agriculture Committee.
The WTO Cotton Case and Doha Round: Implications for U.S. Cotton.
Budgetary, Political, and WTO Forces on the Next Farm Bill July 7, 2005 Agricultural Policy Summit “New Directions in Federal Farm Policy: Issues for the.
Getting out of the box: transitioning out of direct payments David Abler David Blandford Department of Agricultural Economics & Rural Sociology.
The Doha Round of WTO Negotiations: The U.S. Perspective Robert L. Thompson Chairman International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council and Gardner.
“The Domestic Politics of Trade: A U.S. Farmers View” Ron Heck, President American Soybean Association “Agricultural Trade Negotiations: Politics and Prospects”
Corn and Soybean Issues for 2006 Bruce A. Babcock Center for Agricultural and Rural Development Iowa State University Presented at.
WTO Status of Negotiation, July 2004 Framework... and Beyond Debra Henke USDA/ Foreign Agricultural Service.
Weaving the Next Agricultural Safety Net Bruce A. Babcock Center for Agricultural and Rural Development Iowa State University Presented.
Twenty-Five Ways to Improve the Derbez Draft International Food and Agriculture Trade Policy Council
A New Approach to Providing an Agricultural Safety Net Bruce A. Babcock Center for Agricultural and Rural Development, Iowa State University Presented.
Eric Wailes and Alvaro Durand-Morat University of Arkansas, Division of Agriculture Impacts of WTO Policy on U.S. Rice Policy.
The 2007 U.S. Farm Bill: Issues and Challenges Won W. Koo Chamber of Commerce Distinguished Professor and Director Center for Agricultural Policy and Trade.
ORGANIZED SYMPOSIUM The Impacts of U.S. Trade Policies on Southern Agriculture The Impacts of the World Trade Organization on U.S. Agricultural Policy.
National Association of Wheat Growers 415 Second St. NE, Suite 300 / Washington DC
Multilateral Trade Negotiations: Update on The Doha Development Round A European Perspective Dr Rolf Moehler.
The U.S. Farm Bill & the WTO
The EU’s CAP and the likely impact of a Doha Agreement
The Potential Impact of the Doha Round on Grains
The 2007 Farm Bill: More of the Same or a New Path?
The Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002
Bashir A. Qasmi Evert Van der Sluis
The WTO-Ministerial Decisions at Nairobi (MC 10)
European agriculture, the future of the CAP and the WTO negotiations
David Laborde, Valeria Piñeiro, Joe Glauber
Brazil’s Challenge of the US Cotton Program
The EU-US Agricultural Framework Agreement
Agriculture in the July Framework
Presentation transcript:

WTO Support Commitments and U.S. Farm Policies David Blandford and Tim Josling Conference on Domestic and Trade Impacts of U.S. Farm Policy Washington, DC November 15-16, 2007

Introduction U.S. WTO commitment on the most trade-distorting (Amber Box) support – $19.1 billion We examine the implications of: A new Farm Bill Challenges by other countries to U.S. classification of support under its farm policies A new Doha agreement on agriculture

Introduction We use official notifications to the WTO as a basis – latest year is 2005 We derive projections for 2006-2013 based primarily on USDA Baseline data Farm Bill assumptions (commodity programs) based on House version (HR 2419) of July 2007

Domestic support in the WTO Amber box limit expressed through the total Aggregate Measure of Support (AMS) AMS components subject to a de minimis exclusion Product-specific support < 5 percent of commodity’s value of production Non-product-specific support < 5 percent of total value of agricultural production

Amber, Blue and Green Box

Amber Box support

WTO Challenges Brazilian cotton panel ruling of 2005 Direct payments not consistent with Green Box due to production linkage Canadian and Brazilian challenges of 2007 U.S. total AMS not notified correctly Direct payments and CCPs should be included as product-specific support and counted against total AMS limit

WTO Challenges

WTO Challenges

WTO Challenges

WTO Challenges

WTO Challenges: Bottom Line U.S. needs to “Green-Box Proof” its direct payments in order to ensure that it does not violate existing WTO commitments on domestic support Shifting other forms of support into the product-specific AMS would make it difficult for the U.S. to meet its commitments

Doha Round Outcome The Falconer Proposals New concepts: Overall Trade Distorting Support (OTDS) = total AMS + de minimis + Blue Box Blue Box definition expanded to cover price-linked direct payments (CCPs) Continued limits on: Total AMS PS and NPS de minimis New limits on: Overall Trade Distorting Support (OTDS) Total Blue Box payments PS AMS and PS Blue Box

The Falconer Proposals Domestic Support Provisions Phased reductions in: OTDS Total AMS PS and NPS de minimis Higher AMS reduction and lower Blue Box cap for cotton Base period for commitments 1995-2000

The Falconer Proposals Domestic Support Provisions U.S. Reduction Percentage OTDS Between 66 and 73 Total AMS 60 de minimis Between 50 and 60 “Lite” scenario “Ambitious” scenario

Analyzing the Falconer Proposals We assume implementation of the proposals beginning in 2009, completed by 2013 We compare projected notifications to 2013 to WTO commitments under most ambitious Falconer proposals We assume that U.S. can continue to declare direct payments as Green and that price-linked payments become Blue

U.S. Projected Notifications Falconer A OTDS & AMS BECOME BINDING

U.S. OTDS Commitments Falconer A and L

Falconer Proposals: Bottom Line Tighter disciplines on domestic support could largely be satisfied by the U.S. without major policy changes But U.S. cotton programs will need to be changed to meet product-specific constraints and additional cotton provisions in Falconer draft Also need to act to keep direct payments in Green Box and move CCPs or similar payments to Blue or Green Box (could be problematic for revenue insurance schemes as currently envisaged)

Falconer Proposals: Bottom Line Commitments begin to “bite” at the end of the implementation period as “water” is eliminated Less optimistic price outlook would be problematic for the U.S., and may require policy shifts to stay within new limits U.S. commodity policies would be effectively constrained as the agreement is implemented (if the U.S. follows the rules!) and there would be pressure to continue to reduce trade-distorting support

WTO Support Commitments and U.S. Farm Policies David Blandford and Tim Josling Conference on Domestic and Trade Impacts of U.S. Farm Policy Washington, DC November 15-16, 2007