http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/us-resolve-impasse-over-food-security-issues-at-wto/article6594065.ece?homepage=true
India-U.S. deal paves the way for global trade pact
Puja Mehra
Union
Minister of State for Commerce and Industry Nirmala Sitharaman
Food security deadlock resolved
ahead of WTO meet
Decks have been cleared for a possible global trade deal after India and the U.S agreed on the way forward to break the logjam in global trade negotiations. With the agreement in place, India is all set to move its proposal on food security before the WTO’s General Council at its next meeting scheduled for early December.
This proposal will seek to
make open-ended the interim protection of a ‘peace clause’ that was agreed to
at the Bali Ministerial last December.
The clause safeguards support
prices for farmers against the WTO’s limits on agricultural subsidies. India
was in danger of breaching these subsidy caps.
India wants to make sure that
this protection would be available in perpetuity, should a permanent solution
to the problem of the WTO agriculture subsidy caps not be found. Whether the
Bali Declaration provides that the ‘peace clause’ could be available beyond
2017 was open to interpretation.
India’s right
Announcing that an agreement had been reached with the U.S,
Minister of State for Commerce and Industry Nirmala Sitharaman said on Thursday
that the U.S had agreed that India’s right to protect its right to food
security cannot be denied by the WTO, paving the way for removing the
imperfections in the Bali Ministerial package.
U.S Trade Representative Michael
Froman also released a statement which said the agreement with India reflected
shared understandings regarding the WTO’s work on food security.
Sources on the Indian side indicated
that the resolution was possible after an understanding was reached with the
U.S that India’s subsidies are not trade-distorting and aimed at achieving food
security. India, on the other hand, was able to reassure the U.S that it was
not opposed to trade facilitation and in fact was on course to implement
it.
Clears way for TFAs
“The agreement announced today between the United States and
India paves the way for full implementation of the WTO’s Trade Facilitation
Agreement (TFA), the first multilateral trade agreement to be concluded in the
history of the WTO,” the U.S statement on the India-U.S. agreement on food
subsidies said on Thursday.
At the WTO’s Ministerial Conference
held in Bali last December, all its members, including the U.S and India, had
agreed to a package of measures including a TFA and a commitment to find a
permanent solution to the problematic agricultural subsidy caps. India’s
position is that the WTO’s farm subsidies need to be updated as they are
benchmarked to food prices of the 1980s.
Efforts to put the TFA in place were
dealt a setback in July, when India refused to ratify, it raising concerns over
the unsatisfactory progress on the WTO’s work on food security issues. The U.S
statement said that delay has now been overcome with the agreement with India
in place for moving forward with the full implementation of the Bali
package.
“We supported the Bali Package but
when subsequent developments belied that hope, India had no option but to seek
a course correction,” the India statement said. It also said that the impasse
at the WTO was now likely to end, opening the way for implementation of the
TFA.
“We are extremely happy that India
and the U.S have successfully resolved their differences relating to the issue
of public stockholding for food security purposes in the WTO in a manner that
addresses our concerns,” the India statement said. The agreement will
facilitate Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s bilateral meetings at the ongoing
G-20 summit in Brisbane.
(Courtesy: The Hindu dated 14th
November 2014)
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