(This "Abstract" is submitted to the International Conference on “WTO,
TRADE AND AGRICULTURE: ISSUES AND CHALLENGES FOR DEVELOPING AND LEAST DEVELOPED
COUNTRIES: 20-21 October 2016, New Delhi”).
-*Dr. S. Vijay Kumar
-*Dr. S. Vijay Kumar
Trade
is an engine of economic development. The establishment of W.T.O is an
important landmark in the history of international trade; it is much wider in
scope and coverage. India is one of the
founding members of WTO which came into existence on January 01, 1995 replacing
GATT (General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade) and promising the herald of new
era in the rule based system of governing and promoting international trade
concomitant with the needs of the on-going processor globalization. WTO
provisions related to international trade are now similarly applicable to
agriculture which was brought within the fold of GATT in the Uruguay Round
(1986-93) of Multilateral Trade Negotiations (MTNs). Application of WTO
provisions on agriculture involves many contentions issues and is an area of
serious concern for developing countries which are primarily agrarian
economies. Moreover, the world, despite growing interdependence and
integration, is highly heterogeneous with regard to levels of development. This
heterogeneity is very much noticeable when we compare the agricultural sector
of developed and developing countries. Indian
agriculture is labour intensive, nearly 60% of its population is dependent
on farming, most farms are rain fed and millions
of farmers derive their livelihood from agricultural, it is still a way of life
and not an occupation they have chosen for themselves. Indian farmers are
mostly involved in subsistence farming with very little or no marketable
surplus. On the other hand, the developed countries like the USA, Japan and EU
countries heavily subsidize their agriculture with high quality standards and
aggressive marketing practices. These countries hold 72% share of world trade
in agricultural products are keep the developing countries virtually at the
periphery of world market. In USA, farmers have been given subsidies worth
millions of dollars to keep their farmland uncultivated. In India 70% of the
holding are not of the economy size, making application of modern technology
difficult and unaffordable for the farmers.
Objectives
of the Study:
1). Brief review of literature
2). To study the impact of WTO on Indian
Agriculture
3). To study the Issues and Challenges of Indian
Agriculture in the context of WTO
4). To give suggestions
Methodology: The present study is based on secondary data. The
data will be collected from books, journals, reports and websites.
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*Head (Retd.), Department of Economics, Kakatiya Govt. (UG&PG) College (NAAC “A” Grade), Hanamkonda (Kakatiya University), Warangal, Telangana State. The author ex - member, Board of Studies, Kakatiya University, Warangal.
*Head (Retd.), Department of Economics, Kakatiya Govt. (UG&PG) College (NAAC “A” Grade), Hanamkonda (Kakatiya University), Warangal, Telangana State. The author ex - member, Board of Studies, Kakatiya University, Warangal.
Brief
Review of Literature:
Agreement
of Agriculture (AoA): AoA of WTO
recognizes free and market-oriented trading system in agriculture. It has the
following main features:
Tariffication: It means conversion of all non-tariff barriers on
trade such as import quota into tariffs. Tariffs bindings are to be reduced
under this agreement. Developed countries were to reduce their tariff bindings
over a period of six years (1995-2000). Developing countries are to reduce
their bindings over a period of ten years (1995-2004). Least developed
countries are exempted from tariff reduction. There are many issues under the AoA which are considered against the
interests of developing countries like India. Firstly, the minimum access
for import of primary goods flouts the basic rule of promoting free trade under
WTO agreement. Secondly, distortions
emerge from inequity in domestic subsidy discipline due to different base
positions. The developed countries are heavily subsidized countries and are
allowed to retain up to 80 per cent of their subsidies but developing countries
can subsidize their farmers not more than 10 per cent of the total value of
agricultural production. Thirdly,
India argues that for low income countries, market access and domestic support
discipline should be such that their food requirements are met from domestic
sources. The volatile international market can get transmitted to the domestic
economy and can affect the prices of food grains and food entitlement of the
poor. Fourthly, developing countries
face highest tariff rates which include the major agricultural staple foods,
cereals, meat, sugar, milk, butter, cheese as well as tobacco products and
cotton. The Indian proposals have been by and large well received and endorsed
by most of the developing countries as well as some of the developed countries.
i)
Green Box Support: It is given on
items which have minimal impact on trade, e.g., pest and disease Control,
market intelligence, it is an exempted support.
ii) Blue box support: It is product-limiting subsidy and pertains
mainly to the developed countries. It is exempted from reduction commitment
under WTO. iii) Special and differential treatment box support: It
includes investment subsidy to agricultural sector for farm development work
like land leveling, shallow wells etc.
WTO member countries are obliged to reduction commitments of their
direct export subsidies. Developed countries are to reduce the volume of
subsidized agricultural exports by 21 per cent and the value of subsidies by 36
percent of the average base period 1986-88 within six years. Developing countries
are to reduce the same by 14 per cent and 24 per cent respectively within ten
years. The developed countries have used provisions
of AoA to further the interest of their farmers. For example, they have
remodeled AMBER BOX subsidies in such a way that these qualities to be put into
BLUE or GREEN BOX subsidies. These
countries are constantly pressuring the developing countries for greater market
access for agricultural product but are not willing to bring down the level
support that they provide to their own farmers. Developing countries like
India are being discriminated in matter like tariff on food imports into
developed countries. For example, in the name of mutual access, the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development (OECD)
countries impose very low tariff on imports from fellow members while similar
imports from developing countries are subjected to higher tariffs.
The
Threat WTO poses to Indian Agriculture: India’s two major concerns are food security and farm subsidies. Narendra
Modi told in India-Africa Forum Summit in New Delhi:
“We should achieve a permanent solution on public stock holding for food
security and a special safeguard mechanism in agriculture for developing
countries.” But the WTO director general Roberto Azevedo has been openly
batting for the US/EU position of capping the Minimum Support Price (MSP) for
Indian farmers as well as the need to limit input subsidies being given for
fertilizer, seed, pesticides and irrigation to the present level, he is also literally
threatening a “doomsday” scenario if the developing countries fail to accept
the demand of the rich industrialized countries.
In this backdrop
this paper attempts to study the impact
of WTO on Indian agriculture, issues and challenges and some suggestions will
be made at the end of this paper.
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