From: Bob Olsen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Mon, 14 May 2001 16:05:40 -0400
To: (Recipient list suppressed)
Subject: Restrictions Cost World's Poor 2.5 Billion




Date: Tue, 15 May 2001 03:12:19 +1200
From: Janice <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [MAI-NOT] Trade: Restrictions Cost World's Poor 2.5 Billion US
Dollars Each Year

TRADE: Restrictions Cost World's Poor
2.5 Billion US Dollars Each Year - Oxfam

http://www.oneworld.org/news/today/index.html

By Brian Kenety 

BRUSSELS, May 13 (IPS) - Trade restrictions imposed by rich
countries are costing the world's poorest "a staggering 2.5
billion US dollars  a year in lost foreign exchange earnings",
Oxfam says in a report released Monday.

The 27-page report, 'Rigged Trade and Not Much Aid: How
Rich Countries Help to Keep the Least Developed Countries
Poor', to be presented at the NGO Forum, in advance of the
UN Conference onLeast Developed Countries, warns that northern
governments are guilty of offering "empty promises" to
the poor when it comes to trade, aid and debt relief.

While Least Developed Countries (LDCs) face a complex array
of problems, the report finds that their efforts to combat
poverty have been "systematically undermined" by northern
governments. 

Oxfam Senior Policy Advisor Kevin Watkins, who will present
the report, says: "On trade, the industrialised countries have
operated a policy of highway robbery masquerading as market access
preferences". 

United States and Canada are identified as the "worst offenders",
with Bangladesh losing seven dollars from trade restrictions for
every one dollar it receives in U.S. aid and five times that for
every dollar it receives from Canada.

"Indeed, losses associated with U.S. trade barriers are
roughly equivalent to total U.S. aid to the LDCs," it says.

Trade restrictions in Canada cost LDCs an estimated 1.6
billion dollars, or approximately five times aid flows to
the poorest countries. Similarly, Japanese trade restrictions
cost Bangladesh more than double the amount Tokyo provides
in aid. 

At a time when aid to the developing world has fallen to
its lowest level since the early 1970s, around 11 percent of
exports from LDCs face 'tariff peaks' in excess of 15 percent,
which is three times the share of imports affected from other
countries. 

"In areas where they have a capacity to export, LDCs face
higher tariffs than other countries, including developed
market economies," it says.

Average tariffs in the European Union, the United States,
Canada and Japan - the so-called Quad countries that account
for over half the world's trade - are relatively low, at
approximately five percent.

"However, the average obscures very high tariffs in sectors
of most relevance to poor countries. Tariffs on some
agricultural products are more than 300 percent in the EU
and, in the case of groundnuts,over 100 percent in the U.S.
" 
While the European Union's 'Everything but Arms' proposal
for providing duty- and quota-free access to LDCs by 2009
represents a bold step in the right direction, intensive
lobbying resulted in key agricultural items - rice, sugar
and beef - being removed from the proposal.

In Europe, total duty-free access would increase exports
from LDCs by 185 million dollars, with sugar accounting for
 over 60 percent of the gain, according to Oxfam's research.

But the Everything but Arms initiative was watered down
into "Everything but Farms", says Watkins.

"The clear message from Brussels to the LDCs was that
powerful industrial lobbies come first, and poverty second."

While the doors to northern markets remain shut, many LDC
have been liberalising, often under International Monetary
Fund and World Bank auspices, at breakneck speed, notes the
pressure group. 

"The results have often been disastrous. In Haiti, the
liberalisation of the rice market and subsequent surge in
subsidised US imports has destroyed thousands of livelihoods
and undermined national food security," says the report.

In such labour intensive areas as textiles, footwear, and
agriculture, production for export growth has the potential
to generate more equitable patterns of economic growth,
"creating employment and livelihood opportunities for highly
vulnerable populations", the report notes.

"There are potentially powerful inter-linkages between
exports and poverty reduction in many LDCs, through a
commitment to redistribution and to environmental
sustainability would strengthen the benefits of trade," it says.

"The problem is that trade policies in industrialised
countries are carefully designed to prevent LDCs
from taking advantage of export opportunities."

The Oxfam report also examines the rich world's record
on aid and debt relief. It concludes that the rich countries'
performance on aid has been "derisory".

In 1990, the countries of the Organisation for Economic
Co- operation and Development (OECD) pledged to increase
aid and reach a target of 0.20 percent of their GNP to the
LDCs in development assistance.

Since then, they have cut around 3.5 billion dollars from
their aid flows, which are now at their lowest level in per
capita terms since the early 1970s.

At the same time, annual spending in OECD countries on
farm subsidies - 1 billion dollars per day - is
roughly equivalent to the GDP of all the LDCs combined.

While many LDCs are eligible for debt relief under the
Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) Initiative, the
report says that many will emerge in an unsustainable
debt position. 

"Preliminary analysis by Oxfam suggests that at least
13 LDCs - including Zambia, Niger and Senegal -will emerge
from the HIPC Initiative spending more than 10 percent of
government revenue on debt," it says.

The Oxfam report is calling for: immediate duty free and
quota free access for LDCs in industrialised country markets;
reform of the EU's 'Everything but Arms' proposal to include
immediate liberalisation of LDC access for sugar and rice markets;
an end to agricultural import liberalisation under IMF and
World Bank programmes; a timetable for OECD donors to reach the
0.20 percent of GNP aid target;
and deeper levels of debt relief. (END/IPS/IF/bk/da/01)

.
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   ..........................................
   Bob Olsen, Toronto   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

    Power concedes nothing without a demand.
    It never did and it never will.
                        - Frederic Douglass
   ..........................................

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