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Agriculture

Agricultural produce is protected by high tariff barriers, production support and the use of export subsidies in many countries. Over the years there have been attempts to reduce barriers to trade in the agricultural sector, but it was not until the Uruguay Round that, for the first time, a comprehensive 'Agreement on Agriculture' was concluded, bringing this area firmly within the scope of WTO rules.

There are three major planks to the Agriculture Agreement. Firstly the improvement of import access by reducing tariffs and providing new access opportunities; secondly, a reduction in the volume and value of subsidised exports, and thirdly the reduction of domestic support measures subsidising production. While the Uruguay Round took an important first step in eliminating these barriers to free trade, there is still more work to be done. The Agreement on Agriculture contains a commitment to continue the reform process in the negotiations which started in March 2000.

At the World Trade Organisation (WTO) 5th Ministerial in Doha, which took place in November 2001, another important step was taken. Building on the work already undertaken in the negotiations on the Agreement in Agriculture, the Ministerial Declaration further committed the WTO members to firm negotiations without prejudging their outcome on substantial improvements in market access; reductions of, with a view to phasing out, all forms of export subsidies; and substantial reductions in trade distorting domestic support. At the same time, the Doha Declaration committed members to take account of non-trade concerns (e.g. environment, rural/social development, animal welfare) and to negotiate special and differential treatment for developing countries.

The Doha Development Agenda set an ambitious time table which required modalities (rules and commitments) to be agreed by 31 March 2003 and detailed schedules to be prepared in time for the fifth WTO Ministerial, held September 2003 in Cancun, Mexico. The Chair of the Agriculture negotiating group, Stuart Harbinson, proposed draft modalities in February, but disappointingly, WTO Members did not reach agreement on these by the 31 March deadline.

Since the 31 March, further technical work has been undertaken on some elements of Harbinson’s modalities, but this did not bridge gaps between WTO members’ positions on the main issues (cuts to domestic support and export subsidies and increases in market access). In order to make progress, WTO Trade Ministers attending the recent mini-Ministerial meeting in Montreal (28/29 July) therefore requested the EU and US to work together on developing a compromise proposal by mid-August.

The resultant EU/US paper proposed the main elements of a framework for a new WTO Agriculture agreement and formed the basis for the draft Ministerial text discussed at the 5th WTO Ministerial in Cancun, Mexico, September 2003. Unfortunately, the Ministerial meeting failed to reach agreement on the various issues under discussion and negotiations on agriculture (and all other issues) are now continuing at Geneva with a view to making progress by this summer.

For more information on this agreement, see the agriculture pages of the WTO website. The UK Government supports further progress in this area including further fundamental reform of the EU's Common Agricultural Policy (CAP). For more information about the EU's agriculture policy see the EU website.

Eleanor Brooks
Tel. 020 7215 4547
Fax. 020 7215 4252
Email. eleanor.brooks@dti.gsi.gov.uk

Last updated 26 April 2004

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