WTO: India resolute on food security
At Ministerial Conference next month, will push back on ‘severe’ curbs on right to give price subsidies
At
the upcoming meeting of the World Trade Organisation’s (WTO) highest
decision-making body, India will not agree to severe restrictions on its
right to give price subsidies to farmers through the Minimum Support
Price (MSP) to procure grains from them for food security purposes,
according to highly-placed official sources.
The WTO’s Ministerial Conference is slated to take place at Buenos Aires in Argentina next month.
“Food
security and protection of low-income and resource-poor farmers are top
priority items for India [at the WTO meet], and we will hold our ground
to protect our interests to the maximum extent possible,” an official
privy to the developments said. Currently, an interim mechanism called
the ‘Peace Clause’ is in place, per which WTO members had agreed not to
challenge developing nations at the WTO Dispute Settlement Mechanism if
they breached the cap of the product-specific domestic support (which is
10% of the value of production).
Peace clause
The
‘Peace Clause’ is available to developing nations, including India,
till a permanent solution is found to public stockholding for food
security purposes. Official sources said India would fight to ensure
that at least the ‘Peace Clause’ is made the permanent solution, and
will not accept any ‘terribly stringent or onerous’ conditions. However,
the ‘Peace Clause’ is learnt to be difficult to invoke even in its
current form because prior to using it, the country concerned will have
to first admit that it ‘is breaching’ or ‘is about to breach’ the
ceiling entitlement to give product-specific domestic support.
Difficult to invoke
Also,
the ‘Peace Clause’ can be used only for public stockholding programmes
that have been in existence on the date at which it was agreed upon at
the Bali Ministerial Conference in December 2013, and not for new
programmes on public stockholding for food security purposes.
According
to Abhijit Das, head and professor, Centre for WTO Studies, Indian
Institute of Foreign Trade, the prospects of an agreement on a permanent
solution are not that bright due to three roadblocks. “First, the U.S.
has not been engaging actively on the matter till recently, and if the
U.S. does not give its nod, it will be difficult to arrive at a
decision.
“Second,
the European Union has tried to link the permanent solution with
outcomes including stringent disciplines on domestic support given by
developing nations,” he said.
Lastly,
most WTO members are of the opinion that there should be a commitment
on prohibition of exports from public stockholding saying such exports
would be trade-distorting.
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