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Two-pronged trade attack will destroy poor farmers
Rich countries are forcing poor ones to open their markets and then dumping
excess agricultural produce on them, undermining poor farmers’ livelihoods,
according to a new report released today by international agency Oxfam.
The World Trade Organisation (WTO) is the new battleground where poor
countries are being forced to reduce tariffs on imports. The moves could
increase their vulnerability, destroy farming communities, threaten food
security and plunge millions into deeper poverty, says the report, Kicking
Down the Door.
Poor countries were promised that vital food crops would be exempt from
the WTO cuts, but rich countries are now trying to water down this promise.
The US, for example, has declared that it will accept only a "very
limited number" of exemptions. The world rice trade shows the grave
risk to poor farmers.
Each year the US spends $1.3bn in subsidies to support a rice crop that
costs $1.8bn to grow. These subsidies make possible the dumping of 4.7m
tonnes of rice on world markets at 34% below the cost of production, hurting
poor countries like Haiti, Ghana and Honduras. Developing countries should
be allowed to use policies that allow them to develop fragile farming
sectors, says the report.
"This is an example of rigged rules and double standards at their
baldest. Rich countries are demanding that poor countries pull down their
barriers to trade, and at the same time they are continuing to subsidise
massive overproduction and dumping. Their selfish motives couldn't be
clearer," said Phil Bloomer, head of Oxfam International’s
Make Trade Fair campaign.
"US rice would not be competitive without massive state subsidies.
It is scandalous that poor countries are forced to compete with the US.
Worse still, that they are denied the opportunity to defend themselves
from dumping."
If rich countries prevail at the WTO, India, China, Nicaragua and Egypt
are among 13 developing countries that could be forced to cut their rice
tariffs and become vulnerable to cheap imports. Meanwhile, the US rice
industry would gain from increased access to poor country markets.
Profits for Riceland Foods of Arkansas, USA – the world’s
biggest rice mill – rose by $123m from 2002 to 2003 thanks largely
to a 50% increase in exports, much of them to Haiti, which was forced
in 1995 to cut its rice tariff from 35% to just 3% under pressure from
the IMF. As a result, rice imports increased by 150% in nine years and
today three out of every four plates of rice eaten in Haiti come from
the US. Local farmers’ livelihoods have been devastated and rice-growing
areas now have among the highest levels of malnutrition and poverty.
Rice is not the only commodity threatened by the WTO proposals. Oxfam
estimates that developing countries also risk tariff cuts on imports of
poultry (18 countries), milk powder (14 countries), sugar (13 countries),
soybeans (13 countries), maize (7 countries) and wheat (6 countries),
with potentially devastating effects for all these sectors.
Beyond the WTO, rich countries continue to use the World Bank, the IMF
and regional trade agreements to bully developing countries to open their
markets prematurely. To make matters worse, the rich world has slashed
agricultural aid by more than two-thirds in the past 18 years.
“Trade could be a vital part of the plan to make poverty history
in 2005 but only if poor countries are allowed to decide the policies
that are right for their own development. Poor countries have been forced
to liberalise trade faster and deeper than any industrial power in history.
They are tired of this shock therapy and shouldn’t have to endure
it,” said Bloomer.
“Poor countries with fledgling rice sectors can’t compete
against subsidising superpowers, like the US, or big exporting neighbors,
or other countries that are able to export rice cheaply.. They need the
time and space to establish themselves,” he said.
“In the run up to the Hong Kong WTO ministerial it is vital that
rich countries demonstrate the willingness to negotiate trade policies
that genuinely contribute to poverty reduction rather than continuing
to pursue their own narrow agendas of self-interest and corporate profit.”
Oxfam's report includes the following recommendations:
• Any new WTO deal must allow developing countries to regulate
imports of products which threaten to undermine their farmers’ livelihoods
• Rich countries must stop negotiating bilateral trade deals to
force open developing country markets
• The IMF and the World Bank must stop forcing poor governments
to cut their tariffs across the board
• Developing country governments should ensure that their farm
policies promote poverty reduction
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For more information contact Amy Barry in Oxfam's Press Office on +44
(0)1865 312254 or +44 (0)7980 664397
Click here
to read the report.
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