Some 'development round'!

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| Many commentators have blamed the US squarely for the fiasco at Geneva, since domestic support to US agriculture would have gone up, and not down, on the basis of the American offer on the table, whereas Europe has proposed a 51 per cent cut. The Americans argue that European tariffs are much higher than US levels, as are European subsidies in their absolute total, and that if a better offer was coming from the Europeans, the US would have been flexible. But the US expectation that countries like India, with subsistence-level agriculture, would have to cut tariffs by 44 per cent was clearly unrealistic and definitely unreasonable. Indeed, it should not be assumed that the Geneva talks were taken seriously, since all the six negotiators""the US, the EU, Australia, Japan, Brazil and India""stuck to their positions on subsidies and tariffs, leaving little space for a breakthrough. |
| The delay in the conclusion of the Doha Round will mean loss of potential business that trade liberalisation could have generated. But the consequences of a bad deal done in a hurry would have been worse, especially for the developing countries. The extent to which the rich countries are currently manipulating global commerce to their advantage can be gauged from the 2006 World Trade Report released by the WTO. It reckons that 21 developed countries fork out a whopping $250 billion annually for trade-distorting subsidies, while all the remaining countries put together spend only $50 billion on such support. What is worse, subsidies are being given even to sectors like mining, coal, steel, forestry, fishing, shipbuilding and automobiles. Not only that, the report has also indicated, albeit on the basis of incomplete evidence, that support measures are in place even for transport, tourism, banking, telecommunications and the audio-visual sector. It is, therefore, wholly unreasonable for the developed countries to expect poorer nations to open their doors for these subsidised goods and services, to the disadvantage of their local players. It is, therefore, imperative for the developing countries to be vigilant while negotiating subsidies and market access. |
| What needs to be noted is that a sizable chunk of the growth in global trade in recent years has been due largely to bilateral and regional trade agreements, and this process is bound to gain further momentum now. |
First Published: Jul 26 2006 | 12:00 AM IST