Nirmala Sitharaman in Lok Sabha Regarding "India's
Stand in the WTO"
Some
Highlights
1.
I am making this intervention in the House today (5 August 2014) in order to
place before the Hon'ble Members the facts relating
to the stand taken by India in the World Trade Organization (WTO) recently.
2.
The Bali Ministerial Declaration was adopted on 7 December 2013 on conclusion
of the Ninth Ministerial Conference of the WTO in Bali. Ministerial Decisions
were adopted on ten issues relating to the Doha Development Agenda which is the
agenda for the unfinished Doha Round of trade negotiations, underway in the WTO
since 2001.
3.
Amongst these Ministerial Decisions, two are of particular significance - the
Ministerial Decision for an Agreement on Trade Facilitation and the Ministerial
Decision on Public Stockholding for Food Security Purposes.
4.
The Trade Facilitation Agreement is basically aimed at greater transparency and
simplification of customs procedures, use of electronic payments and risk
management techniques and faster clearances at ports. We have autonomously
taken several similar measures such as the 'Indian Customs Single Window
Project' announced in the Budget 2014-15 to facilitate trade, under which
importers and exporters will be able to lodge documents at a single point,
reducing interface with Governmental agencies, dwell time and the cost of doing
business.
5.
The Protocol of the Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) was to be adopted by 31
July 2014 by the WTO. After this the Agreement would automatically come into
force from 31 July 2015 if ratified by two-thirds of the members of the WTO.
6.
In contrast to their efforts on Trade Facilitation in the WTO, some developed
countries have been reluctant to engage on other issues.
7.
Seeing the resistance to taking forward the other Decisions, the apprehension
of developing countries was that once the process of bringing the Trade
Facilitation Agreement into force was completed, other issues would be ignored,
including the important issue of a permanent solution on subsidies on account
of public stockholding for food security purposes.
8.
India, therefore, took the stand that till there is an assurance of commitment
to find a permanent solution on public stockholding and on all other Bali
deliverables, including those for the Least Developed Countries (LDCs), it
would be difficult to join the consensus on the Protocol of Amendment for the
Trade Facilitation Agreement.
9.
Without a permanent solution, public stockholding programmes in India and other
developing countries will be hampered by the present ceiling on domestic
support which is pegged at 10 per cent of the value of production and is
wrongly considered as trade-distorting subsidy to farmers under existing WTO
rules. The existence of such a subsidy element is determined by comparing
present day administered prices with fixed reference prices of the 1986-88 period which is unrealistic.
11.
Developed countries continue to have large entitlements to provide support to
farmers. These would have been cut in the Doha Development Round which
unfortunately remains unfinished. Had this Round, which has development at its
core, concluded as per the agreed timelines and its development agenda, the
world would have had an outcome in a single undertaking in which competing
interests could have been balanced. Today, developing countries are fighting to
keep the negotiations focused on development against the single-minded
mercantilist focus of most of the rich developed world on market access issues.
12.
Overall balance is important even in a limited package of outcomes. The Bali
outcomes were negotiated as a package and must be concluded as such.
13.
It is regrettable indeed that today the WTO is unable to agree even to fast
track negotiations on an issue of such importance to millions of subsistence
farmers across the developing world, while the rich world can continue to
subsidise their farmers unabatedly.
15.
Food security is a humanitarian concern especially in these times of
uncertainty and volatility. Issues of development and food security are
critical to a vast swathe of humanity and cannot be sacrificed to mercantilist
considerations.
16.
Developing countries such as India must have the freedom to use food reserves
to feed their poor without the threat of violating any international
obligations. This is our sovereign right. It is our duty to protect our
citizens' fundamental rights to life and livelihood.
17.
Agriculture is the mainstay of the Indian population. In a country of the size
of India with 60% of the population dependent on a relatively unremunerative agriculture sector, we cannot give up
administered prices. This is the only way we can procure food for the Public
Distribution System (PDS), the central pillar on which our efforts to ensure
food security, rest. Public stockholding is a widely used means to ensure food
security in many developing countries where agriculture is largely rainfed.
18.
We have to look after both consumer and producer interests. We have to enable
our people to live a life of dignity by ensuring access to an adequate quantity
of quality food at affordable prices.
19.
On 25 July 2014, India made a statement in the WTO General Council conveying, inter
alia, that the adoption of the TF Protocol must be postponed till a
permanent solution on public stockholding for food security is found.
20.
India offered suggestions on the procedure to be followed in order to ensure
time-bound delivery of an outcome on public stockholding for food security. We
also urged that a similar approach be adopted on all other elements of the Bali
Package notably the LDC issues.
21.
The integrity of India's stand is reflected in our unwavering efforts to offer
a way forward in the face of criticism. Even on 31 July 2014, India offered a
way to achieve not only a permanent solution on the issue of public
stockholding for food security but also to implement the Trade Facilitation Agreement
in the agreed timeframe as well as deliver favourable outcomes for LDCs.
23.
However, despite India's efforts, our concerns were not satisfactorily
addressed.
24.
The Director General of the WTO reported to an informal meeting of the Trade
Negotiations Committee on 31 July 2014 that a solution could not be found to
bridge the gap.
25.
The General Council meeting was, thereafter, formally declared closed without
adopting the TF protocol.
26.
India stood firm on its demands despite immense pressure. The Government of
India is committed to protecting the interests of our farmers against all odds.
Our farmers work in extremely adverse conditions, most of them at the mercy of
the vagaries of the monsoon, aggravated today by climate change. For farmers in
many developing countries farming is a subsistence activity, not a commercial
one. We are committed to their welfare and I am grateful for the support and
understanding extended by farmers' organizations in this cause.
27.
I must also thank Hon'ble Members of Parliament, many
civil society groups and academicians who have lent their voice in support of
the Government's efforts to ensure a fair deal.
28.
It is evident from the expressions of support that India's stand has resonated
across the world and I take this opportunity to also thank the countries that
have stood by India in the VVTO.