India Urges WTO Members To Begin Text-Based Discussions To Resolve Public Food Stockholding
Under text-based negotiations in WTO, an agreement is finalised around draft texts floated by the chair of a particular committee dealing with the subject.
India has urged WTO members to start text-based negotiations from this month on finding a permanent solution to the issue of public stockholding for food security purposes, an official has said.
The official added that the European Union (EU) is ready for talks with India on the stockholding issue.
The issue came up for discussion at an agriculture negotiations meeting on October 2 in Geneva. It was chaired by Ambassador Alparslan Acarsoy of Turkiye.
At that meeting, the EU offered a positive response to the chair's textual suggestions related to the safeguards mechanism aimed at preventing illegitimate exports stemming from excessive food stocks, the official said.
The Geneva-based trade official also said that the EU explicitly recognized that the safeguards and anti-circumvention are indeed the key provisions which deal with the possible impact of public stockholding policies.
“India urged members to commence text-based negotiations as soon as possible, preferably at the senior official level meeting scheduled for late October,” the official said.
Under text-based negotiations in WTO, an agreement is finalised around draft texts floated by the chair of a particular committee dealing with the subject. The draft is based on discussions amongst the member countries and is fine-tuned till all the nations are in agreement with it.
India reiterated the importance of discussing external reference prices to accurately assess farm support in relation to public stockholding.
The issue of finding a permanent solution to the public stockholding programmes for food security purposes is important for developing countries like India as it provides support measures and procures rice from farmers at MSP (minimum support price) and sells at cheaper rates to poor populations for food security.
Developed countries term these support measures as trade distorting subsidies and they are against these programmes of public stockholding of food.
According to them, this procurement violates the prescribed limit of providing subsidies and WTO's agreement on agriculture. They also demand notification to WTO (World Trade Organization) by emerging economies about their programmes.
Developing economies like India are of the view that there is a need to change the way this subsidy limit is calculated.
They also demand a significant cut of subsidies being given to farmers of developed countries.
India has pitched for the need to recalculate the external reference prices to reflect the impact of inflation and other economic factors on food stock prices.
In 2013, it was agreed by the WTO members to find a permanent solution to these issues and till then there is a “peace clause” under which no country would file any legal complaint against another member even if the 10 per cent level is breached.
As part of a permanent solution, India has asked for things like amendments in the formula to calculate the food subsidy cap and inclusion of programmes implemented after 2013 under the ambit of 'Peace Clause'.
At the agriculture negotiations meeting on October 2, the chair asked members to consider several proposed safeguards and anti-circumvention provisions as potential breakthroughs for the highly debated permanent solution for public stockholding.
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“This topic of public stockholding is crucial for achieving an outcome on agriculture at the next ministerial conference in February 2024. India has been a leading advocate for this initiative and has been, arguably, the largest beneficiary of the Bali interim solution, with the US disputing that the interim arrangement has contributed to India becoming the top exporter of rice,” the official said.
In previous meetings, the US has specifically called out India for exceeding limits on rice stocks under the Bali interim decision.
Under global trade norms, a WTO member country's food subsidy bill should not breach the limit of 10 per cent of the value of production based on the reference price of 1986-88.
Subsidies over and above the prescribed ceiling are seen as trade distorting. The limit is fixed at 10 per cent of the value of food production for developing countries like India.
India has earlier informed WTO that it has used the peace clause to provide excess support measures to rice farmers for marketing year 2020-21, in order to meet the domestic food security needs of its poor population.
In the meeting, India expressed gratitude to the EU for changing its stance and showing a willingness to negotiate on the public stockholding issue.
Several African and Asian countries have echoed India's view, emphasizing the urgency of negotiating a permanent solution on public stockholding in times of crisis.
The issue is expected to figure prominently in the 13th WTO Ministerial Conference (MC13) that will take place in February 2024 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. MC is the highest decision making body of the 164-member multi-lateral body.
(This report has been published as part of the auto-generated syndicate wire feed. Apart from the headline, no editing has been done in the copy by ABP Live.)