An
agreement by the WTO’s 160 members, including India, during the ninth
ministerial conference in Bali last December saw the members committing to
streamline the flow of goods across international borders. Key to the deal was
a consensus on pushing through a “trade facilitation agreement” or TFA, which
seeks to streamline border procedures, making it easier for merchandise goods
to cross international borders. The new NDA government’s threat to veto the
implementation of the TFA, in an effort to seek a negotiating space for public
stockholding in food grain and food subsidies, has shaken up the WTO set-up.
What is the recent
controversy all about?
The
ongoing controversy has its roots in the Indian government threatening to veto
the implementation of the deal struck in Bali, in an effort to seek a
negotiating space for public stockholding in food grain and food subsidies. The
current WTO norms limit the value of food subsidies at 10 per cent of the value
of foodgrain production. However, the support is calculated at the prices that
are over two decades old and not at the current prices.
If
India blocks the global attempt to push through a “trade facilitation
agreement”, it will be the only country in the entire WTO membership to stop
the deal from getting implemented. The WTO’s agriculture committee, which is
dealing with the food security issue, is due to meet later on Wednesday in what
will only be its third meeting since the Bali ministerial last December. The
agriculture committee meeting will be followed by a crucial meeting of the
general council on Thursday.
Why is the TFA ratification
so important?
The
TFA faces its first implementation deadline on July 31 when WTO members, who
make decisions by consensus, must approve a one-paragraph “accession protocol”.
The deadline of July 31 is by when all the 160 WTO member countries have to
sign the agreement into a protocol, marking implementation of the first phase
of the deal. It was to come into force fully from 2015.
When
the deal was struck in Bali in December, it was decided that as an interim
measure, in respect of public stockholding for food security, developing
countries would be protected from WTO disputes for non-compliance with the
relevant provisions of the Agreement on Agriculture. This protection would be
available till a permanent solution, the deadline for which was 2017.
What is the Indian position?
India
wants the talks on public stockholding for food security to happen immediately,
an issue that has domestic compulsions in India. For the government, the issue
of livelihood of its marginal farmers is a deeply political one, especially in
light of the stockpiling needs on account of requirements of the Right To Food
Act.
Commerce
minister Nirmala Sitharaman has indicated earlier this month that India would
not back the TFA protocol because it was unhappy with the progress of talks on
food security that ministers also committed to in Bali. Those, she was quoted
as saying, had been cast aside.
Soon
after, commerce secretary Rajeev Kher issued a statement saying until India got
an assurance that WTO members were ready to discuss a permanent solution on
public stockholding, it would be difficult for it to sign the protocol on TFA.
Central
to the Indian position is the government’s move to procure grains, largely by
way of offering a minimum support price to farmers, and distributing them to
BPL consumers through the public distribution system (PDS) at a subsidised
price.
To
treat such schemes under WTO rules remains an area of contention that ministers
in Bali agreed to tackle by 2017. The government is demanding a reworking of
the rules to ensure that developing countries do not breach the prescribed
subsidy cap.
Is there support for India?
South
Africa is said to be backing India, and other African members of the WTO have
raised concerns over whether the financial aid they were promised to help
revamp customs procedures will materialise. But broadly, India could be
isolated. Domestic analysts say that India is perhaps not doing the right thing
by going against the broader global coalition.
Critics
have even hinted that India is doing this because it is not prepared to take on
the requirements of TFA, with a relatively weak trade infrastructure.
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