| more updates... DEVELOPING COUNTRIES PREPARE FOR AGRICULTURE BATTLE                     AT CANCUN MINISTERIAL
 TWN Report from Cancun, 9 Sept 2003 (By Martin Khor)
 As the WTO's Fifth Ministerial Conference begins, developing                     countries have given notice that they will fight to the end                     of the meeting to ensure that their positions on the framework                     on modalities for agriculture negotiations will prevail over                     the present draft Cancun text on agriculture and the US-EU                     position on which it is mainly based.  On 8 Sept evening, the Group of 21 (G21) developing countries                     told a media conference (chaired by the Brazilian Foreign                     Minister) that they will insist that their framework proposal                     (first submitted in Geneva on 20 and 28 August, and now re-issued                     as a Ministerial document WT/MIN(03)/W/6 dated 4 Sept) be                     at the center of the agriculture negotiations in Cancun. They                     rejected the text submitted by the General Council chairman,                     Uruguay Ambassador Carlos Perez del Castillo, as the basis                     of negotiations.  At another media conference, chaired by the Indonesian Trade                     Minister, another group of 23 developing countries announced                     they had formed an Alliance for Strategic Products and Special                     Safeguard Mechanism (SSM) to fight for the interests of "small                     vulnerable resource-poor farmers from developing countries"                     through strong SP and SSM mechanisms in the Cancun outcome                     on agriculture.  The G21 media conference, held after a Ministerial meeting                     of the group during which a Ministerial Communique was adopted,                     was addressed by the Ministers of Brazil, India, China, South                     Africa, Argentina and Costa Rica. Brazilian Foreign Minister                     Celso Amorin said the meeting was a historic event in that                     so many developing countries which represented over half the                     world population were able to come together .  He said the Ministers agreed it is key to keep their unity                     which will be tested throughout the Conference, and questions                     that may appear secondary or procedural will be important.                     Amorin said the G21 Ministers agreed that the Castillo draft                     does not respond to their countries' needs and is not the                     basis for negotiations. It is essential that the G21 paper                     is also taken as a basis and this can be easily done as it                     follows the same format as the Castillo paper. Added Amorin:                     "Ours is a good cause, we have the support of our population                     and a large proportion of world opinion, this is a chance                     for the WTO to show it cares for the poor."  India's Commerce Minister Arun Jaitley said the group's formation                     was a very important ocassion as it marked an important point                     where developing countries representing 65% of the world's                     population of farmers, are attempting to put forward their                     own case. "our document is not adequately addressed in                     the draft text and we will work together to ensure our points                     are addressed."  South African Trade Minister Alec Erwin said it was historic                     the Ministers could unify positions across such major agricultural                     economies and exporters. They were fighting for a balance                     that meets the requirements of a fair agriculture trading                     system with the main adjustment burden lying with industrial                     countries that are the main subsidizers.  The Chinese Trade Minister said the G21 proposal involves                     developing countries' interests as the 21 countries represent                     51% of world population and over 60% of the of the rural population                     of the world live in these countries. He hoped the Ministers                     would consider the G21 text even as they are considering the                     Chairman's draft. Cancun could only be a success if it fully                     takes account of developing countries' interests.  The Argentinian Minister said the G21 proposal is both balanced                     and professionally well done and when the Conference starts                     the following day this paper must be accorded the same basis                     as the Chair's text, and this was not just a procedural issue                     but part of a constructive approach.  The Costa Rica Minister said it was very hard for Third                     World farmers to compete not only with farmers from other                     countries, but also with Finance Ministries of the rich countries.                     If Cancun is to make progress on other issues, such as non-agriculture                     products, we must have progress in agriculture too.  To a question what the group would do to ensure its text                     is taken on the same level as the Chairman's text, Amorin                     said he would not comment on the groups' tactical moves. "We                     want our text as a central part of the negotiations. There                     is no difficulty to do this. You cannot ignore this text which                     comes from so many developing countries. After all this is                     supposed to be a "Development Round."  To another question whether this alliance of countries would                     extend its concerns to other issues beyond agriculture, Amorin                     said the group had only discussed agriculture but of course                     in a negotiation everything is linked. "Strategically                     we should keep united and it may go beyond the specifics of                     the agriculture text."  Erwin said the group had struck a successful balance and                     formed an alliance not on one or two specifics but on agriculture                     as a whole in WTO. Given the significance of the countries                     involved, it is unavoidable the conference will take acont                     of our proposal.  Jaitley stressed two points in the alliance -- it had numerical                     backing (representing over half of humanity) and it is based                     on fairness in addressing agriculturaql trade distortions.                     It would thus attract others too. The Chinese Minister added                     that Cancun's success depends on whether it follows the fair                     competition principle and provides S and D for developing                     countries. The G21 proposal reflects this spirit and Cancun                     will succeed only if it heeds this.  The Argentinian Minister said agriculture is at the center                     of the Development Round, and there will not be substantive                     movement in NAMA or Singapore issues unless our agriculture                     needs are taken into account. "If we are successful we'll                     see how to approach other matters."  Ending the media conference, Amorin said in the past there                     was an impression that fighting for social justice took place                     outside the hall. But now the fight for social justice is                     also inside the WTO and this is part of the historic moment.  The G21's Ministerial Communique said that being a key stakeholder                     the Group tabled a framework proposal to make the process                     more inclouve and balanced, fully respecting the Doha level                     of ambition. It criticized the Chairman's draft fo not reflecting                     Doha's ambition level for it fails to deliver substantial                     cuts on trade distorting domestic support, substantial increase                     in market access and elimination of export subsidies.  To correct these imbalances, the G21 proposes an approach                     requiring substantial contribution from developed countries.                     Since they are fundamentally accountable for thed distortions,                     major developed countries bear a special responsibility.  In domestic support the proposed cuts are complemented with                     tighter rules and disciplines to ensure the reform process                     is effective and not "degenerate into box and product                     shifting". It is also targeted to avoid abuse of domestic                     support not subjected to reduction commitments. "Our                     proposal will not permit that the total level of support to                     commodities reach outrageous proportions which have generated                     for example grave problems for cotton producers in Central                     and West Africa."  The Communique adds that export subsidies must be eliminated                     and tighter rules shall be established on export credits and                     food aid so that these forms of circumvention of export subsidies                     commitments cannot continue to distort export competition.  On Market access, the G21 proposes depper tariff cuts, elimiknation                     of the special safeguards for developed countries, TRQ expansion                     and improved rules for their administration. For developing                     countries a differentiated formula is proposed to take account                     of S and D and development needs, and concerns of recently                     acceded members shall be addressed.  Since the Group's proposal reflects the Doha mandate, "it                     is and shall remain at the center of the agriculture negotiations."  Meanwhile, another meeting was held by 23 developing countries                     that formed an Alliance for Strategic Products and Special                     Safeguard Mechanism. Members include Barbados, Dominican Republic,                     Honduras, Indonesia, Jamaica, Kenya, Mnongolia, Nicaragua,                     Nigeria, Pakistan, Panama, Peru, Philippines, Trinidad and                     Tobago, Turkey, Uganda, Venezuela, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Tanzania,                     Ecuador.  In a Ministerial Communique, the countries said the Alliance                     represents the interests of a majority of the world's small,                     vulnerable, resource-poor farmers from developing countries                     across the continents. Their countries suffer undue stress                     imposed by the inequalities of the trading environment. Even                     on their own markets, producers of developing countries face                     increasingly difficult circumstances and impoverishment.  The Ministesr reiterated the need for fundamental reform,                     including reducing and phasing out export subsidies, substantial                     reductions in trade distorting domestic support, and substantial                     improvements in market access. For any reforms to be successful,                     S and D treatment must be an integral part of all elements                     so they can take account of development needs including food                     and livelihood security and rural development.  While welcoming the Cancun draft's reflection of some developing                     country concerns, the Ministers stressed the S and D component                     falls far short. The Alliance proposal for an SP and SSM mechanism                     must thus be an integral part of S and D. The Alliance proposal                     is that:                       Developing countries shall have the flexibility to self                       designate a ( ) percent of tariff lines as special products                       (SPs) which shall not be subject to tariff reductions and                       no new commitments on tariff rate quota. A special safeguard mechanism (SSM) shall be established                       for use by developing countries as a mechanism to protect                       their domestic markets against cheap and subsidized imports. Products designated as SP shall also have access to the                       SSM.  At the conference, the Indonesian Trade Minister said the                     23 countries met to form the Alliance earlier today following                     their earlier work in Geneva, aimed at having strong SP and                     SM mechanisms in the agriculture outcome. The Philippines Minister added it weas very important that                     these mechanisms be available to protect the local agriculture                     sector from unfair competition from outside.  To a question on the relation of the Alliance to the G21                     (whose proposals on SPs is very weak), the Philippines Minister                     said many G21 countries also opted to join the Alliance as                     they felt the SP and SSM components in the G21 proposal should                     be more strongly worded. The Alliance could be an even larger                     grouping. The Indonesian Minister agreed that in the G21 draft the                     SP aspect is very weak, and thus the need to have this Alliance.                     "We hope the G21 will understand ou Alliance and that                     it will support us." She added the Alliance's aim mis                     to focus on S and D, Sps and SSM. The key issue is the need                     in their countries for policy flexibility to safeguard our                     domestic products.  The Philippines Minister added that SPs and SSM were not                     aggressively pursued by the G21, so the new Alliance was formed                     to fill in the gap.   |