Thursday, April 18, 2019

Minimum Support Price for agriculture is increasingly under WTO scanner




Farming will increasingly come under more pressure 

At a time when agriculture distress is at a peak, the pressure from World Trade Organisation (WTO) to seek reduction in the procurement prices for wheat, rice, pulses, cotton and sugarcane is posing a renewed threat to the future of agriculture. WTO pressure to reduce Minimum Support Price (MSP), and Fair and Remunerative Price (FRP) in case of sugarcane, comes at a time when Niti Aayog has accepted that the growth in real income of farmers in the past two years has been almost zero.

While Australia and Brazil have dragged India on its burgeoning sugar subsidies to the dispute settlement panel of WTO, which for all practical purposes acts as a court to settle trade disputes, five other countries – Guatemala, European Union, Russia, Costa Rica and Thailand – want to join the dispute settlement consultations, which in simple word means these countries want to be a party in the case against Indian sugar subsidies. Interestingly, while the WTO is planning to question India’s massive subsidisation of sugar, non payment of sugarcane arrears have been ballooning. In Uttar Pradesh alone, cane arrears have grown substantially in past two years, from Rs 4,497-crore in Mar 2017 to reach Rs 12,700-crore on Mar 2019.

The first round of dispute consultations on sugar subsidies with the seven countries begins in the third week of April.

Earlier, 12 countries – including European Union, Russia, China, Japan, Brazil, Canada, Egypt, Kazakhstan, Korea, Thailand, Taiwan and Sri Lanka – had become party to the US challenge of India’s export subsidies, including export incentives for SEZ and merchandise exports. Citing the Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures (ASCM) of the WTO, the US had computed the explicit and implicit export subsidies that India is giving at $ 7 billion. That India is under a sharp scanner at the international negotiations was never in doubt but the increase in the number of countries questioning India’s subsidies is certainly a cause for worry.

Let’s go back to the issue of agriculture to see how the WTO is hitting India where it will pain the most. In a separate development, Canada has joined the US in questioning the hike in MSP for pulses over the past few years. On Feb 12, the US along with Canada, filed a notification in the WTO Committee on Agriculture (COA) questioning India's market price support for five types of pulses. Accordingly, India exceeded the permissible limit as defined by WTO in case of price support for chickpea, pigeonpea, moong, black matpe and lentils. The argument US and Canada are using is that India has “under-reported” its market price support for pulses, which is a violation of the WTO Agreement on Agriculture.  

The US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue have at the time of filing the complaint, said: “When calculated according to WTO Agreement on Agriculture methodology, India's market price support for each of these pulses far exceeded its allowable levels of trade-distorting domestic support.” Giving specific details, they have blamed India for deliberately keeping the subsidies under wrap, and presenting a data which is questionable. Claiming that India’s total market price support for pulses ranged from 32 to 85 per cent and adds up to $9.5 billion, they accused India of “under-reporting” these subsidies.

India on the other hand maintains that its total subsidy support for all kinds of pulses comes to 1.8 per cent, and is far less than the permissible limit of 10 per cent. As per WTO norms, the product specific support (which is counted as subsidy) cannot exceed 10 per cent of the value of total production. To understand, in simple words what it means is that if the value of total production of chickpea is Rs 500-crores, the MSP that farmers get for chickpea cannot exceed Rs 50-crore.

While the US, EU, Canada and other countries are saying that India is using a methodology (to calculate the subsidies) which is non-compatible with the WTO methodology, India’s position is that the complainant countries are actually using a faulty methodology. The mistake these countries are doing is that they taking the MSP figures, and reduce from it the external reference price (ESP), set by WTO which is fixed on 1986-89 statistics, and then multiply with the total value of production of a particular crop. This gives a much exaggerated figure. In reality, India does not purchase the entire production at MSP but only a fraction of the total production to meet the food and nutritional security needs of the marginalised communities. The correct way therefore should be to multiply the amount of crop harvest that is purchased at MSP instead of multiplying with total production.

In case of wheat and rice also, US has been challenging India’s calculations for a number of years, saying that the 2013-14 compilation by India was far short of the actual 65 per cent of price support for wheat and 77 per cent for rice. India had claimed that its MSP for both these crops was well within the prescribed limit of 10 per cent.

The basic objective behind the aggressive stance at WTO is to seek more market access for agricultural and dairy products. The US has made this abundantly clear after the US President Donald Trump had withdrawn benefits to steel and aluminium products under the Generalised System of Preferences (GSP). But the failure on the part of India to impose retaliatory tariffs on 29 US products, including several important agricultural commodities, shows the weakness in its trade policy. India has further extended the deadline for imposing retaliatory custom duties to May 2, hoping that the US may relent.

Much of the blame for opening up the domestic markets to flood of agricultural imports actually rests on India’s failure to take the US to the WTO dispute settlement panel on the question of massive subsidy support being given to US agriculture. We are actually suffering the consequences of our own failure to be combative in trade diplomacy. But what is worrying is that the consequences of all the collective failures to stand up and protect domestic agriculture and thereby India’s food security will fall on the beleaguered farming community, already reeling under a terrible distress. #  

खेती के मोर्चे पर भारत की नई चुनौतियां. Dainik Jagran. April 19, 2019
https://www.jagran.com/editorial/apnibaat-world-trade-organization-concern-report-india-new-challenges-on-farm-focus-19145965.html?fbclid=IwAR286RG7B6dyWHy_F03oRZM5n2Iw6Y4qNkOzc-7eohhl6H51xK8ocRYKzIw

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