| May 5, 2004 WTO Cotton Ruling: Time to Reevaluate Bankrupt U.S.                     Agriculture and Trade Policy  By R. Dennis Olson  The U.S. government lost the first round of a dispute at                     the World Trade Organization last week when a panel ruled                     that our cotton program violatedinternational trade rules. There is much hand wringing from                     farm state
 legislators and Bush Administration officials about what to                     do. But instead of trying to untangle the WTO's trade rules,                     it's time to confront the fact that our current U.S. agriculture                     and trade policy has not only devastated farmers around the                     world, but has failed U.S. farmers as well. The Brazilian                     victory provides an opportunity to reevaluate the failures                     of the bankrupt agricultural trading system, and begin an                     open and honest debate that would examine viable alternatives.
  According to the promises made by the agribusiness cartels                     and other supporters of the existing system, passage of both                     NAFTA and the 1996 Farm Bill were supposed to have gotten                     the government out of agriculture, and let farmers export                     their way to prosperity. The record is now in, and the promises                     have not materialized on either count. According to a recent                     study by the University of Tennessee's Agricultural Policy                     Analysis Center, since NAFTA and the 1997 farm bill have been                     implemented, "U.S. crop exports have remained flat or                     declined, farm income derived from the marketplace has fallen                     dramatically, government payments to farmers have skyrocketed,                     and consolidation and corporate control in the marketplace                     have reached record levels."  Brazil challenged the U.S. cotton program at the WTO because                     widespread dumping at below cost of production prices was                     driving global prices down,and hurting Brazilian cotton farmers. Earlier this year, my                     organization issued an analysis that found U.S. cotton was                     being exported at over 60 percent below the cost of production                     in 2002 - continuing a pattern that has steadily worsened                     over the last five years.
  In essence, farm programs for the major commodities grown                     in the U.S.--including cotton--stimulate over-production,                     which in turn causes lower prices. When you strip away the                     technical jargon, the U.S. cotton program--like the programs                     for corn, soybeans, and wheat--are constructed to benefit                     multinational agribusiness cartels, which are reaping huge                     profits from the rock bottom prices this system provides.  Brazil and many developing countries are hoping that if                     the WTO ruling compels Congress to slash U.S. farm subsidies,                     farmers will stop producing, production will fall, and supply                     will balance demand. But historically, farmers produce as                     much as they can whether prices are high or low. If subsidies                     are taken away, they'll simply try to produce more to make                     up for lost income. The independent farmers who can't survive                     low prices without subsidies will be bought out by even larger                     corporate farms. The loss of cotton subsidies will likely                     just cause a shift to other crops like corn or soybeans-creating                     similar problems for those crops. The result will be fewer,                     larger farms, both in the U.S. and Brazil; and overall production                     of the major U.S crops will stay about the same or even increase                     on world markets. We've already seen this play out in Mexico,                     Canada and Australia-all countries that have cut farm subsidies                     over the last decade and have seen overall production stay                     flat, while the number of farmers forced from the land have                     increased.  A fair, market-oriented farm policy should include programs                     that limit production through tools like acreage set asides,                     and that manage inventory in the same way companies do in                     other sectors. These are not new concepts for U.S. agriculture.                     The government used to act as an honest broker to ensure a                     fair marketplace. Acreage set-asides, farmer owned reserves,                     and government price supports all helped to make the market                     work for farmers prior to their complete dismantlement under                     the 1996 Farm Bill. These tools buffered farmers and rural                     communities from low prices in times of over-supply, and protected                     consumers from unscrupulous price gouging in times of shortages                     when harvests failed.  A new farm and trade policy for agriculture would have to                     be updated for the changing times. The U.S. is no longer the                     only dominant force for setting world prices for major commodities.                     And there are new developments to consider, like the emergence                     of bio-energy producing crops is one of the biggest drivers                     for domestic demand. The APAC studyprojected that a new farm program based on acreage set asides                     and combined with crop reserves, with an emphasis on bio-energy                     crops, could lift commodity prices for farmers both in the                     U.S. and around the world, while cutting U.S. farm subsidies                     by $10 billion per year.
 The WTO ruling provides a unique opportunity to debate whether                     we want an agriculture policy that supports independent family                     farmers, or one that subsidizes multinational agribusiness                     cartels. At the forefront of such adebate should be the goal of ensuring that market prices paid                     to farmers
 at the point of sale cover the cost of production. Such policies                     would
 not only make most government subsidies unnecessary for our                     farmers by
 providing them with a fair price from the marketplace, but                     would also eliminate agricultural dumping and thereby help                     farmers and rural communities in Brazil and around the world.
  R. Dennis Olson is the Director, Trade & Agriculture                     ProjectInstitute for Agriculture & Trade Policy
 <dolson@iatp.org>
 
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