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Azevedo's new efforts on agri-subsidies to end Doha talks
Third World Network
Published in SUNS #8041 dated 15 June 2015
 
 Geneva, 12 Jun (D. Ravi Kanth and Chakravarthi Raghavan*) -- The World             Trade Organization (WTO) Director-General, Mr. Roberto Azevedo, in             his current drive to conclude the Doha Development Round at the forthcoming             Nairobi Ministerial meet, appears to have floated Thursday a concept             on domestic agriculture support, upending all the collective efforts             hitherto on further reforms in Agriculture, mandated by the Agreement             on Agriculture of the Marrakesh Treaty of 1994.
  
 Azevedo discussed with the trade envoys of the seven major developed             and developing countries on 11 June, a new concept entailing common             reduction commitments on domestic support, as opposed to the tiered             formula cuts of the 2008 revised draft modalities, sources familiar             with the meeting told the SUNS.
  
 On Wednesday, Azevedo had asserted at the Geneva Press Club that he             was "working with [a] scenario where we are going to come to             a conclusion on what needs to be done to finalize the Doha [Development             Agenda trade negotiations]".
  
 At his meeting with the seven trade envoys on Thursday, Azevedo reportedly             unveiled the scenario he had in mind on the domestic support pillar             of the Agriculture negotiations.
  
 The seven envoys who took part in the discussion on the domestic support             include Ambassador Michael Punke of the United States, Ambassador             Angelos Pangratis of the European Union, Ambassador Yu Jianhua of             China, Ambassador Anjali Prasad of India, Ambassador Hamish McCormick             of Australia, and Ambassador Yoichi Otabe of Japan.
  
 In addition, present at the meeting were the chair for the WTO General             Council Ambassador Fernando de Mateo of Mexico, the chair for Doha             agriculture negotiations Ambassador John Adank of New Zealand, and             the chair for Doha market access negotiations in industrial goods             Ambassador Remigi Winzap.
  
 The DG's approach towards a "common" framework in which             all the seven countries would undertake almost the same commitments             regardless of their current and historical subsidy outlays and commitments,             particularly the trade-distorting domestic support payments, would             be tantamount to unravelling all the agreed Doha mandates such as             the Doha Ministerial Declaration (DMD) of 2001, the July 2004 framework             agreement, and the July 2005 Hong Kong Ministerial Declaration (HKMD).
  
 These three mandates i. e. 2001 DMD, the 2004 framework agreement,             and the 2005 HKMD were adequately reflected in the unsettled 2008             revised draft modalities which clearly showed the landing zones.
  
 Azevedo, when he was the trade envoy of Brazil until end-2012, had             said: "The December 2008 draft modalities are the basis for negotiations             and represent the end-game in terms of the landing zones of ambition.             Any marginal adjustments in the level of ambition of those texts may             be assessed only in the context of the overall balance of trade-offs,             bearing in mind that agriculture is the engine of the Round...
  
 "The draft modalities embody a delicate balance achieved after             10 years of negotiations. This equilibrium cannot be ignored or upset,             or we will need readjustments of the entire package with horizontal             repercussions. Such adjustments cannot entail additional unilateral             concessions from developing countries."
  
 At the Geneva Press Club on 10 June, Azevedo said that "I don't             feel the sense that we are coming to an agreement, even conceptually."
  
 Clearly, this statement from the DG is factually misleading. The architecture             for domestic support reduction commitments had evolved after the collapse             of the third WTO ministerial conference in Cancun in 2003.
  
 On the eve of that meeting, when the US and EU sought to reach a modus             vivendi among themselves that they wanted to force on the others,             a developing country farm coalition came into being: the G-20 developing             country farm coalition led by Brazil, India, China, and South Africa             among others, and this group stood together at Cancun in opposition             to the US-EU front on agriculture.
  
 The 2004 July framework, evolved at the General Council after the             spectacular collapse of the Cancun ministerial conference, provided             the foundational architecture for the domestic support reduction commitments.
  
 The framework says, "The Doha Ministerial Declaration calls for              ‘substantial reductions in trade-distorting domestic support.' With             a view to achieving these substantial reductions, the negotiations             in this pillar will ensure the following:
  
 "Special and differential treatment remains an integral component             of domestic support. Modalities to be developed will include longer             implementation periods and lower reduction coefficients for all types             of trade- distorting domestic support and continued access to the             provisions under Article 6.2 (of the Agreement on Agriculture).
  
 "There will be a strong element of harmonisation in the reductions             made by developed Members. Specifically, higher levels of permitted             trade-distorting domestic support will be subject to deeper cuts.
  
 "Each such Member will make a substantial reduction in the overall             level of its trade-distorting support from bound levels.
  
 "As well as this overall commitment, Final Bound Total AMS and             permitted de minimis levels will be subject to substantial reductions             and, in the case of the Blue Box, will be capped as specified in paragraph             15 in order to ensure results that are coherent with the long-term             reform objective. Any clarification or development of rules and conditions             to govern trade distorting support will take this into account.
  
 Overall Reduction: A Tiered Formula
  
 "7. The overall base level of all trade-distorting domestic support,             as measured by the Final Bound Total AMS plus permitted de minimis             level and the level agreed in paragraph 8 below for Blue Box payments,             will be reduced according to a tiered formula. Under this formula,             Members having higher levels of trade-distorting domestic support             will make greater overall reductions in order to achieve a harmonizing             result. As the first instalment of the overall cut, in the first year             and throughout the implementation period, the sum of all trade- distorting             support will not exceed 80 per cent of the sum of Final Bound Total             AMS plus permitted de minimis plus the Blue Box at the level determined             in paragraph 15.
  
 "8. The following parameters will guide the further negotiation             of this tiered formula:
  
 "This commitment will apply as a minimum overall commitment.             It will not be applied as a ceiling on reductions of overall trade-distorting             domestic support, should the separate and complementary formulae to             be developed for Total AMS, de minimis and Blue Box payments imply,             when taken together, a deeper cut in overall trade- distorting domestic             support for an individual Member.
  
 "The base for measuring the Blue Box component will be the higher             of existing Blue Box payments during a recent representative period             to be agreed and the cap established in paragraph 15 below."
  
 The 2005 Hong Kong Ministerial Declaration went a step further by             declaring that: "On domestic support, there will be three bands             for reductions in Final Bound Total AMS and in the overall cut in             trade-distorting domestic support, with higher linear cuts in higher             bands. In both cases, the Member with the highest level of permitted             support will be in the top band, the two Members with the second and             third highest levels of support will be in the middle band and all             other Members, including all developing country Members, will be in             the bottom band. In addition, developed country Members in the lower             bands with high relative levels of Final Bound Total AMS will make             an additional effort in AMS reduction. We also note that there has             been some convergence concerning the reductions in Final Bound Total             AMS, the overall cut in trade-distorting domestic support and in both             product-specific and non product-specific de minimis limits. Disciplines             will be developed to achieve effective cuts in trade-distorting domestic             support consistent with the Framework. The overall reduction in trade-distorting             domestic support will still need to be made even if the sum of the             reductions in Final Bound Total AMS, de minimis and Blue Box payments             would otherwise be less than that overall reduction. Developing country             Members with no AMS commitments will be exempt from reductions in             de minimis and the overall cut in trade-distorting domestic support.             Green Box criteria will be reviewed in line with paragraph 16 of the             Framework, inter alia, to ensure that programmes of developing country             Members that cause not more than minimal trade-distortion are effectively             covered."
  
 The unsettled 2008 revised draft modalities gave shape to these two             foundational structures of the Doha trade negotiations in the agriculture             domestic support reduction commitments. The author of the 2008 revised             draft modalities, Ambassador Crawford Falconer of New Zealand, had             provided figures for reduction commitments even though "certain             things are manifestly not yet agreed."
  
 But it is known to Azevedo, who took part in each and every small             and big meeting in the run-up to the 2008 revised draft modalities,             that reduction commitments are clearly laid out in those revised modalities,             and many of them including the commitments in the de minimis were             well stabilized.
  
 But in his zeal to satisfy the demands of one major developed country             (the US) which today has specific problems with reduction commitments             in domestic support because of its farm legislation, the DG is turning             all the previous mandates upside down to propose a common reduction             commitment even though the developing countries are not required to             undertake such a commitment. Effectively, such a prescriptive approach             goes diametrically opposite to the last 14 years of negotiations which             he wants to conclude by hook or crook.
  
 The developing countries, at the consultations, rejected the latest             Azevedo concept as it changed the entire architecture of the Doha             mandates, including the unsettled Rev. 4 modalities with specific             reduction commitments and flexibilities.
  
 "This is an outrageous proposal which will never fly," said             a former trade envoy of an industrialized country who is familiar             with the negotiations that resulted in preparing the 2008 revised             draft modalities. "It is amateurish on the part of the DG to             suggest such a proposal," the envoy argued.
  
 The developing countries, the envoy said, "will not accept such             an approach because it not only changes the balance but ties them             to an unacceptable framework."
  
 China and India understandably refused at Thursday's consultations             to accept the DG's approach which made the special and differential             flexibilities and the less than full reciprocity principles stand             on their head.
  
 Significantly, Brazil, which is the founder of the G-20 developing             country farm coalition, seemed to be ready to work with any approach             that brings progress in the negotiations regardless of what was decided             in the past.
  
 During a meeting of G-20 heads of delegation early this week, Brazil             merely raised questions on what members are expecting in the domestic             support, market access, and export competition pillars. Several countries             of the G-20, particularly Venezuela, expressed sharp concern that             instead of preparing position papers on the domestic support, there             is a silence on this issue, said a trade envoy who was present at             the meeting.
  
 China maintained at the G-20 meeting that under no circumstances it             would agree to any commitment for reducing its de minimis from 8.5%             as set out in the accession commitments. Peru asked probing questions             at that meeting on what is being done in the name of re-calibration.
  
 In a nutshell, the coming few days and weeks are going to test the             resolve of the developing countries, particularly China and India,             in the face of Azevedo's blatant attempts to create an "iniquitous"             structure of agriculture commitments just to satisfy the interests             of major developed countries, particularly the United States.
  
 (* Chakravarthi Raghavan is the Editor Emeritus of the SUNS.) +

