By Robert B. Zoellick
United States Trade Representative
The Financial Times, July 26, 2002
Copyright 2002 The
Fiancial Times Limited
The US unveiled a far-reaching and comprehensive package of reforms
for global agriculture yesterday. On Monday, we will present this initiative
to other countries at the World Trade Organisation in Geneva.
Last November in Doha, the US pushed hard with the Cairns Group
of
agricultural exporting nations and many developing countries to establish
a strong mandate for freeing trade in agriculture. The new US proposal
will provide fresh momentum and add specificity to what we achieved eight
months ago. Given that progress on agriculture is the key to a successful
Doha agenda, we believe that this energy can spur the new global trade
negotiations.
The US agriculture proposal points to the next stage of reducing barriers
to agricultural trade and, ultimately, to their elimination. Agriculture,
which began to be subjected to comprehensive free trade disciplines only at
the beginning of 1995, has lagged far behind the liberalisation achieved in
other sectors. The compromise that at last incorporated agricultural trade
into the new World Trade Organisation through the Uruguay round accepted many
of the status quo barriers and subsidies. Restrictions to trade were turned
into tariffs then capped, along with subsidies, at or near existing levels -
with the US locked in with lower barriers than its principal trading
partners.
The package of reforms that we are now introducing levels the playing
field on the way to eliminating barriers altogether. By negotiating big cuts
in tariffs and trade-distorting subsidies, it lays the foundation for growth
in agriculture, lower prices for consumers and higher incomes for all.
First, we propose scrapping all export subsidies over five years. This is
a
reform long demanded by developing countries, which rightly resent having
to compete not only with internal agriculture supports but also with the
lavish subsidies some developed countries use to pay others to buy their
food. Second, we call for a drastic reduction in agricultural tariffs,
cutting the average allowed global farm tariff from 62 to 15 per cent. Last,
we propose reducing allowable trade-distorting subsidies by more than Dollars
100bn (Pounds 64bn) by setting a cap for each country of no more than 5 per
cent of agricultural production.
The US is willing to tackle its own trade-distorting policies provided
that
others agree to do the same. Our plan will require significant cuts in
tariffs and trade-distorting subsidies for the US and even larger cuts for
countries with higher tariffs and more subsidies. It is reasonable and fair
to expect those that maintain the highest barriers to move furthest
towards liberalisation. Even with these bold cuts, European Union subsidy and
tariff levels would remain higher than America's - but we would have closed
the gap substantially, and will continue to press to eliminate it.
Developing countries, which cannot afford high subsidies and are hampered
by tariffs on their exports, will be particularly well served by our
proposal. The US initiative would improve developing countries' access to
developed countries' markets by slashing trade-distorting subsidies and
tariffs. Developing countries need to cut their tariffs, too. We do these
countries no favour by allowing them to be less-than-full partners in the WTO
and maintaining high barriers to trade with one another.
Some may ask how the US agriculture proposal could be consistent with
our recent farm bill. In fact, the farm bill is a key foundation of the
aggressive stance we are taking at the WTO. As the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development has noted, the US farm bill "does not increase
the level of support overall in any significant way compared to what it was
in most recent years . . .and remains significantly below the levels of farm
support granted by
the European Union".
The US will protect its national interests fully within established WTO
rules - even as we work in concert with other nations to negotiate new rules
to open markets much more.
We believe the timing of our proposal is particularly propitious because
the European Commission has just recommended a proposal to reform the EU's
Common Agricultural Policy. Even though the Commission's proposal does not
cut spending and does not address market access or export subsidies, it does
seek to move Europe away from trade-distorting subsidies.
The EU will of course calculate its agricultural polices to match its
best
interest. Yet the Commission's reform seems to recognise that it is in
the EU's interest to reform its agricultural policies if it is to admit new
member states. Europe should also embrace substantial reform for its own
sake: to lower prices for consumers, preserve the environment and build
prosperity. And it is in our mutual interest to help developing countries by
freeing trade in agriculture. Make no mistake: the US is committed to lead
global agricultural reform. We challenge our trading partners to join us.