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WTO and the fate of peasant farmers

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    WTO and the fate of peasant farmers

    WTO and the fate of peasant farmers - By Dr. Daryll E. Ray

    As the Hong Kong Ministerial meeting of the World Trade Organization (WTO) gets closer, the rhetoric ratchets up. Some argue that if the US and EU (European Union) do not make concessions on agricultural subsidies they will have to pay the penalty of an increased number of trade issues being submitted to the disputes body like Brazil’s recent cotton case against the US.

    Considerable pressure is being put on the European Union to make further concessions on agricultural support while others argue that the US has not offered enough and that the real impact on US subsidies are much less than is being suggested. The bottom line of most of those supporting a successful round of negotiations at Hong Kong is the argument that if the rich farmers of the global North are not willing to give up their subsidies, the rural poor in the global South will suffer.

    While that argument is the conventional wisdom in trade circles, it runs counter to a recent study we have done in our office. Using Ethiopia as a case study we found that the “pro-poor” policies of the current round of trade negotiations (the Doha Development Agenda) has the potential to increase the number of impoverished people in Ethiopia, particularly among the Oromo, the people traditionally occupying most of the agricultural lands of Ethiopia.

    Ethiopia produces 19.5 million tonnes (metric tons) of agricultural products on 10.8 million hectares. Over 97 percent of this production is consumed in Ethiopia and the country imports an additional 400 thousand tonnes of agricultural products over what it exports. In 2002, the daily per capita calorie consumption was 1,857 calories and 50 percent of the population experienced undernutrition.

    For Ethiopia to be able to benefit from increased agricultural trade, some small peasant landholdings would have to be consolidated into larger plots capable of producing crops for export. This could result in the displacement of 2.5 million farmers. In the absence of significant humanitarian intervention this process could result in the displacement of a significant number of people and a decrease in per capita calorie consumption due to exportable crops being grown on land that at present is being used to produce food for domestic consumption. The very people who are supposed to be the beneficiaries of trade liberalization may end up being worse off than before.

    The concern raised by this research is supported by other studies that have noted that the gains promised by studies like the World Bank’s Global Economic Prospects 2004 (GEP2004) that showed over $350 billion in trade liberalization gains for the poor of the world will not be evenly distributed and some countries may be worse off after trade liberalization. In recent months the World Bank has responded to criticisms, like those our office made, of their GEP2004 model and admitted that its projections in that study were off the mark.

    On December 3 and 4, at a conference in Kathmandu Nepal, small-scale producers - not trade negotiators or governmental officials - from India, Bangladesh, Philippines, European countries, Indonesia, and Nepal issued a declaration demanding that agriculture be removed from trade negotiations. They argue that the current round of trade negotiations “will have a devastating effect on millions of peasants, small-scale farmers, workers and indigenous people around the world,” a conclusion consistent with our study of Ethiopia.

    Filipino garlic and onion farmers saw their earnings fall by 60 percent and 80 percent respectively when WTO membership resulted in skyrocketing imports in those products. As of 2004, some 1.8 million Filipino rural agriculturalists have lost their livelihood since the Philippines joined the WTO.

    As these events continue to unfold we repeat an argument we have been made before: The implication is that, at a minimum, a different tactic may be needed for agricultural negotiations within the WTO framework because negotiations is because food is not like any other consumer product.

    First, it is a necessity for life. We can live without DVD players and sports shoes, but we cannot live without food. Many countries treat food in the same way that we treat national defense.

    Second, crop markets do not respond in a timely way to price changes so the mechanisms that work to balance production and trade in consumer goods do not work in agriculture – people do not eat five meals a day in response to lower prices.

    Third, agricultural production resources, unlike factory buildings, have few alternate uses and once converted cannot be brought back into production when prices rise.

    We should not dismiss the possibility that peasant farmers around the world have it right.

    Daryll E. Ray holds the Blasingame Chair of Excellence in Agricultural Policy, Institute of Agriculture, University of Tennessee, and is the Director of UT’s Agricultural Policy Analysis Center (APAC). (865) 974-7407; Fax: (865) 974-7298; dray@utk.edu; http://www.agpolicy.org. Daryll Ray’s column is written with the research and assistance of Harwood D. Schaffer, Research Associate with APAC.

    #2
    Very good article. Should give us all pause to think about the impact of modern agriculture on the world. At the rate farmers are quitting in Western Canada, we will soon run out of people willing ,with skills or finances to enter agriculture. We have become very efficient to survive , but at what cost? Depopulation and economic stagnation of rural areas increased service costs for infrastructure are destroying the rural lifestyle. Is this good or bad and do we want to change what's happening?

    Comment


      #3
      I see the following on CBC.

      WTO reaches agreement on farm subsidies

      Article behind this is at:

      http://www.cbc.ca/story/world/national/2005/12/18/wto051218.html

      Will be interesting to see what everybody's sources/contacts are telling them about what this means.

      Comment


        #4
        Charlie this is the larger CP article:


        WTO trade deal sets 2013 for rich countries to end farm export subsidies (WTO-Meeting)
        The Canadian Press Dec 18 11:08 EST


        --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

        HONG KONG (AP) _ Trade negotiators approved an agreement Sunday requiring wealthy countries to end farm export subsidies by 2013, a support system that poor nations say puts them at a competitive disadvantage.

        The agreement, which also calls for modest reductions in other trade barriers, brings a binding treaty to further open up global trade one step closer.

        All 149 WTO member countries and territories, from tiny Sierra Leone to the 25-country European Union, endorsed the agreement after six days of hard talks that were accompanied by daily protests and occasional clashes between riot police and demonstrators outside.

        But the deal fell far short of the ambitious deal that WTO negotiators had originally hoped to reach in Hong Kong: Agreeing on formulas for cutting farm and industrial tariffs and subsidies.

        Toward that end, the accord set April 30 as a new deadline for working out the other cuts, which are required if the WTO is to formulate a new global trade treaty by the end of next year. No decision was made on a location and date for the next ministerial meeting.

        Hong Kong clears the way for ``the down and dirty of negotiations'' that ministers face next year, said Susan Schwab, a deputy U.S. trade representative.

        ``We've got a lot of work ahead of us,'' she said. ``The progress made today really lays the groundwork for negotiations going forward.''

        The agreement was ``not enough to make it (the meeting) a success, but enough to save it from failure,'' said the European Union's trade chief, Peter Mandelson, whose delegation came under heavy pressure during the gathering to open up Europe's farming market.

        Since the WTO works by consensus, objections from even one member can hold up any deal.

        The issue of how much rich countries should open their farming markets to imports caused the previous WTO gathering in Cancun, Mexico, in 2003, to collapse _ putting the current round of negotiations that began in 2001 two years behind schedule.

        ``You put the round back on track,'' WTO chief Pascal Lamy told delegates at the closing ceremony. ``You gave it a new sense of urgency.''

        The way was opened to an agreement when delegates managed a last-minute breakthrough on farm subsidies, with wealthy countries agreeing to eliminate their payments to promote exports like cotton and sugar by 2013. Developing countries say the subsidies make it hard for poor farmers to compete.

        Poor countries had pushed for the farm subsidies to end by 2010, while the EU held out for 2013. But the accord includes a provision that a substantial part of the subsidies should end by ``the first half of the implementation period'' to set at a later date.

        Although the agreement didn't include cuts in import tariffs on industrial goods, it seeks to move those negotiations forward by meeting a demand from poor countries that the issue be dealt with in tandem with efforts to give developing countries flexibility in setting market-opening policies. It also links talks on agricultural trade with those in industrial goods.

        In a victory for West African cotton-producing nations, rich countries agreed to eliminate all export subsidies on cotton in 2006.

        That was a concession by the United States, a major cotton exporter. But U.S. Trade Representative Rob Portman said the proposal would be hard to sell to U.S. legislators.

        Cotton growers in Burkina Faso, Benin, Chad and Mali say U.S. farm aid drives down prices, making it impossible for small family farms to compete in international markets.

        The agreement also calls on wealthy countries to allow, by 2008, duty-free and quota-free trade privileges for at least 97 per cent of products exported by the least developed countries, those with per capita incomes of less than $860 Cdn a year.

        That was considered critical to the overall success of the current round of WTO talks, which began four years ago in Doha, Qatar, with the aim of bringing more liberalization to global trade while addressing the concerns of developing countries.

        The new agreement says market opening measures for services will not be mandatory and will be aimed at promoting economic development in developing countries. Least developed countries are not asked to make any new commitments.

        Many specific commitments were not finalized, however. The text endorsed Sunday repeatedly noted disagreements and areas of ``divergence'' between countries with conflicting interests.

        Outside the convention centre, at least 5,000 demonstrators marched in an anti-WTO parade through downtown Hong Kong, a day after hundreds of protesters were arrested in one of the city's worst spasms of street violence in decades.

        The protesters claim that the WTO's attempts to open up markets benefit big companies and the rich at the expense of ordinary workers and the poor.

        The part that sticks out to me is: "That was a concession by the United States, a major cotton exporter. But U.S. Trade Representative Rob Portman said the proposal would be hard to sell to U.S. legislators." I would say not hard, impossible. I see this as an exercise in saving face, nothing more.

        Comment


          #5
          I think I can tell you what the Liberals and NDP are so scared of. A conservative minority government that lives with the blessing of the bloc.

          They have more (maybe) in common than is widly known or understood.

          Harper I believe would like for the federal government to devulge itself of powers that were origonaly provincial ares of jurisdiction...Quebec would approve!

          Harper ...with quebec and 6 other provinces could float a constitutional ammendment to "reconfederate" (triple E, etc) the country and the Liberals and Ontario could scream to high heavens but would be powerless in the process...THIS is what the Liebrano's fear...the turning back of Trudouopia!

          Its going to get dirty!

          Comment


            #6
            For anyone who wants the read the actual text of the meeting, it is at:

            http://www.wto.org/english/thewto_e/minist_e/min05_e/min05_e.htm

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