July 25
US WTO Agriculture Proposal
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The following press release was issued jointly
in Washington, D.C., by the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative
(USTR) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).
ADMINISTRATION UNVEILS COMPREHENSIVE U.S. TRADE
PROPOSAL TO EXPAND AMERCIAN FARMERS ACCESS TO OVERSEAS MARKETS
Zoellick & Veneman Launch Initiative to Reduce Global
Trade Barriers
and Slash Trade-Distorting Subsidies
WASHINGTON, July 25, 2002 - The United States today announced
an ambitious proposal for reforming the rules of global agricultural
trade that would level the playing field for all countries by
substantially reducing global trade barriers, slashing trade-distorting
subsidies and eliminating export subsidies.
"Our proposal lays out our vision for reforming and liberalizing
global trade in agricultural goods," said U.S. Trade Representative
Robert B. Zoellick. "Our initiative opens a world of opportunity
for America's farmers. We outline practical steps for ensuring
that our farmers can thrive, while opening doors for other countries
to participate in the growing global agricultural marketplace."
"U.S. farmers and ranchers support free trade because they
rely heavily on market expansion for continued growth," said
Veneman. "However, we need to level the playing field by
reducing and eliminating the unfair trade barriers that not only
hurt our farmers, but other countries around the world. The goal
of the U.S. proposal is to bring more equity to the world agricultural
trading system and strengthen the rules of trade."
The U.S. proposal, which will be presented to members of the
World Trade Organization (WTO) next week in Geneva, Switzerland,
outlines a strategy for reducing and eventually eliminating tariffs
and other forms of trade-distorting subsidies in agriculture.
Under the U.S. market access proposal, all WTO members would
reduce tariffs using a formula that would demand greater reductions
of high tariffs than low tariffs, and result in no tariff over
25 percent. This would result in global average allowed agricultural
tariffs falling from 62% to 15%. The U.S. proposal also calls
for a number of specific reforms that would substantially improve
market access opportunities.
The U.S. proposal on domestic support would simplify the current
system: subsidies would be considered either trade distorting
or non-trade distorting. Trade-distorting support would be capped
at 5 percent of the value of agricultural production. This would
result in a global reduction of over $100 billion of allowed trade
distorting support. Non-trade distorting support would not be
limited as long as certain criteria are met.
Currently, the allowable level of trade-distorting support for
WTO members is disproportionate. The EU, with roughly the same
value of agricultural production as the United States, can provide
$60 billion in support a year, while the United States is limited
to $19 billion (so called "amber box" payments). The
EU can support its farmers at a rate that is approximately 25
percent of the value of its agricultural production, Japan can
provide support equal to 40 percent of its value of production,
but the United States is limited to less than 10 percent of the
value of its production. In addition, the EU spends over $20 billion
in trade distorting "blue box" programs while the U.S.
spends zero.
"The U.S. package addresses the disparities that exist under
current WTO commitments and increases the market orientation of
world agricultural trade," said Zoellick. "The average
U.S. agricultural tariff is 12 percent, while the average worldwide
tariff is 62 percent, with many tariffs in excess of 100 percent.
Our approach to reducing these tariffs goes beyond the incremental
formula of the Uruguay Round and creates a more equitable result
at far lower levels."
"This proposal is aggressive, visionary and assures U.S.
leadership as we move forward in the WTO negotiations," said
Veneman. "Under current WTO rules, the scales are unbalanced
and this proposal would put U.S. farmers and ranchers on an equal
footing with others around the world."
Secretary Veneman will brief Agriculture Ministers from key U.S.
trading partners in Japan on Thursday, July 25, and provide public
briefings throughout her Asia trip.
# # #
A complete packet of agriculture trade facts, charts, Q's &
A's and other documents are available on line at <http://www.ustr.gov>
and <http://www.usda.gov>.