http://scroll.in/article/777647/dont-buy-the-spin-the-wto-talks-in-nairobi-ended-badly-and-india-will-pay-a-price

INTERNATIONAL TRADE
Don't buy the spin: The WTO talks in Nairobi ended badly and India
will pay a price

India's Commerce Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, invited into a select
group to negotiate the final text of the Nairobi agreement, let the
rich countries have their way.
Biraj Patnaik and Timothy A Wise  · Today · 09:15 am

It didn’t take long for the spin masters to begin working their magic
on the latest dismal World Trade Organisation summit in Nairobi. WTO
Director General Roberto Azevedo waxed eloquent about the “historic”
agreement, stating in a post-meeting press conference that the
agreement “will improve the lives of those who most need to benefit
from trade, especially those in Africa”.

But what really happened in Nairobi and what does it mean for future
trade negotiations?

We've had the Financial Times declaring the Doha Development Agenda
dead, if not buried. For those unfamiliar with the Doha Round, it has
been the only negotiating platform to discuss the concerns of
developing countries, particularly with reference to agriculture and
farm subsidies, in the 15 years at the WTO.

While the claims of Doha death are, as Mark Twain might have said,
premature, there is no doubt the development agenda has been
undermined. Developing countries got very little in Nairobi, official
press releases aside, and they are likely to get even less in a future
characterised by Southern incoherence and Northern dominance.

Taking stock of the real development outcomes

Beyond the future of Doha, Azevedo and  claimed major advances were
made in Nairobi. They touted the “breakthrough” on export competition
between countries, cited advances on the controversial issues of
special import protection for the agriculture produce of developing
countries, and the public stockholding of food. A permanent solution
on the public stockholding issue would allow countries like India to
buy food grains from farmers at the minimum support price and provide
it to the poor under the provisions of the National Food Security Act.

While India has a “peace clause” that allows it to continue with the
programme, till such time that a permanent solution is reached,
developed countries like the United States, European Union and Japan
continue to stall the permanent solution and have rejected every
constructive proposal put forth by the developing countries.

In Nairobi, WTO leaders also pointed to the technology agreement and
hailed market access agreements for the world’s Least Developed
Countries, which are home to some of the planet's poorest and most
marginalised communities. And they claimed long-overdue action on
cotton.

Sounds good, doesn’t it? Don’t believe the spin.

The technology agreement? It does not affect all countries, just the
ones that opt in. China opted in. Kenya didn't. A win for developing
countries? Nope: it’s great for technology exporters. Not too many of
those in Africa right now.

What about the LDC package? Surely, enhancing access to rich country
markets for goods produced in LDCs is good for development? The
agreements reached in Nairobi extend so-called “duty-free, quota-free”
exports from LDCs, but not all exports are covered. Industrialised
nations exclude “sensitive” tariff lines on products such as textiles
to such an extent that more than 90% of LDC exports may be excluded.

Agriculture subsidies

The most misleading spin, however, concerns measures in agriculture,
so oversold that one Kenyan paper headlined the end of rich country
agricultural subsidies. Not by a long shot, in fact, they weren’t even
on the table.
What was agreed was an elimination of export subsidies and limits on
other forms of rich country export promotion, such as food aid and
subsidized export financing, practiced extensively by the United
States. This is indeed a positive step – export subsidies are the most
trade-distorting of all as they undercut markets in importing
countries by defraying some export costs, which in turn makes products
from the European Union and the US cheaper in foreign markets. Those
products, and the companies that make them, get an unfair competitive
advantage, and the WTO long ago agreed in principle to eliminate them.


But the Nairobi agreement really did little more than put a firm cap
on existing practices. The EU had already stopped subsidizing its
exports, and US resisted putting binding restrictions on most of its
export promotion, so the Nairobi deal is unlikely to reduce export
promotion much from current levels.

And other Northern agricultural subsidies? They remain untouched,
removed from the agenda by the United States and other rich countries.
These are indeed the most trade-distorting agricultural policies in
rich countries today, as they are very large and encourage
overproduction of crops, which then get exported cheaply to developing
countries.

The 2014 US farm legislation, in fact, has been shown to likely result
in subsidies in excess of the country’s current WTO commitments and
well beyond the commitments negotiated in the Doha Round before the US
walked away from the negotiations in 2008. And that’s one of the
reasons the US walked away.

Spinning cotton

Kenya’s Amina Mohamed put a particularly heavy spin on the cotton
agreement reached in Nairobi, saying it “will contribute even more to
economic growth in all countries, particularly the Cotton 4 (the four
major cotton producing countries in West Africa – Benin, Burkina Faso,
Chad and Mali, popularly known as the Cotton 4 or C4) which have been
waiting for this outcome for many years”.

But the much-touted cotton deal only gives preferred market access for
some cotton products and expedites the elimination of export
subsidies. It does not touch domestic subsidies in the United States,
by far the greatest source of trade distortion.

So the C-4 can expect to see continued US cotton subsidies estimated
at $1.5 billion per year, which will increase US exports 29% and
suppress cotton prices 7%. This will cost the C-4 an estimated $80
million per year in lost cotton revenues. That is more than 300 times
the gains last year from market access under US Africa Growth and
Opportunity Act, which totaled just $264,000.

Jump-starting further negotiations?

Officials most hailed the Nairobi agreement for reinvigorating the
WTO’s negotiating function, and there is no doubt that reaching an
agreement prevented the complete abandonment of the institution by
rich countries.

But the agreement itself, by failing to reaffirm clearly the
commitment to the Doha Round, eliminated any incentive for rich
countries to negotiate. They can now condition further negotiations
over “outstanding Doha issues” on the inclusion of “new issues”, a
huge setback for developing countries.
Developing countries won only vague commitments in Nairobi to resolve
the public stockholding issue and to enable a safeguard mechanism to
slow import surges that undermine domestic producers, a right rich
countries have enjoyed for years. Expect no further progress unless
developing countries are prepared to pay a price, such as putting
public procurement that favours domestic industries on the chopping
block.


After Nairobi, it is hard to imagine US negotiators even discussing
reductions in its domestic farm subsidies. If they do, what will India
need to give in return? Perhaps a WTO version of the kind of
investment agreement that India has firmly rejected in bilateral talks
with the US.


India caved in


At Nairobi, despite a valiant fight put up by Indian negotiators, in
the final moments of the drafting of the ministerial declaration, the
political leadership caved in and refused to seek amendments to it, or
block it, as they could have done. Commerce Minister Nirmala
Sitharamans’ predecessors Murasoli Maran and Kamal Nath had done
precisely this in past ministerial summits, protecting India’s
interests at the WTO.

But with little support from the political leadership at the highest
level, Sitharaman, invited into the select group of five countries
(with the US, EU, Brazil and China) to negotiate the final text of the
Nairobi agreement, let the rich countries have their way. In the end,
she merely expressed her “disappointment” at India’s red lines being
breached with no reaffirmation of the Doha Development Agenda in the
final ministerial, no permanent solution on the public stockholding
issue and just a promise to negotiate an unspecified safeguard
mechanism for developing countries.

The price that India will pay for this in the years to come will be
far higher than what the government is willing to concede now, as
future generation of negotiators will discover.

Biraj Patnaik is the Principal Adviser to the Commissioners of the
Supreme Court in the Right to Food case. Timothy A. Wise is a
researcher at Tufts University in the United States.
enhancing access to rich country markets for goods produced in LDCs is
good for development. The agreements reached in Nairobi extend
so-called “duty-free, quota-free” exports from LDCs, but not all
exports are covered. Industrialized nations exclude “sensitive” tariff
lines on products such as textiles to such an extent that more than
90% of LDC exports may be excluded.




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Peace Is Doable

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