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The revised first draft > back to top
TN/AG/W/1/Rev.1
18 March 2003
Committee on Agriculture
Special Session
Negotiations on Agriculture
First Draft of Modalities for the
Further Commitments
Revision
INTRODUCTION > back to top
1. Under the programme adopted by the Special Session of the
Committee on Agriculture on 26 March 2002, a revision of the
first draft of modalities for further commitments is to be
prepared and circulated in advance of the Special Session to be
held on 25-31 March 2003 (TN/AG/1 refers). In accordance with
this requirement, the Chairman submits herewith the present
draft on his own responsibility.
2. The present draft is an evolution of the first draft of
modalities based on the discussions at the Special Session held
on 24-28 February (TN/AG/W/1 refers). On that occasion,
participants engaged in intense and focused debate. A number of
participants indicated that the draft did not correspond in
various ways with their vision of the modalities to be
established. Others found the paper useful or expressed interest
in various ideas presented. Overall, while a number of useful
suggestions emerged, positions in key areas remained far apart.
In the circumstances, there was insufficient collective guidance
to enable the Chairman, at this juncture and in those areas,
significantly to modify the first draft as submitted on 17 February 2003. The present paper must therefore be considered
as an initial, limited revision of certain elements of the first
draft of modalities.
3. The discussions at the Special Session in February made it
clear that a major negotiating effort, focusing particularly on
the key divergences referred to above, is still required in
order to establish modalities for further commitments by 31 March. Readiness on all sides to engage in serious negotiations
aimed at finding solutions that can attract broad-based support
will be of the essence. In parallel, as indicated by the
Chairman in his report to the formal Special Session on
28 February 2003, further technical work, some of which has
already been initiated, will need to be pursued in a number of
areas.
4. As with the first draft submitted on 17 February 2003, the
present revision is based on the work carried out during the
series of formal and informal Special Sessions of the Committee
on Agriculture and related intersessional and technical
consultations conducted in accordance with the mandate provided
by Ministers at Doha and the programme thereunder as adopted by
the Special Session on Agriculture on 26 March 2002. Paragraphs
13 and 14 of the Doha Ministerial Declaration provide
(WT/MIN(01)/DEC/1 refers):
-
“13. We recognize the work already undertaken in the
negotiations initiated in early 2000 under Article 20 of the
Agreement on Agriculture, including the large number of
negotiating proposals submitted on behalf of a total of 121
Members. We recall the long-term objective referred to in the
Agreement to establish a fair and market-oriented trading
system through a programme of fundamental reform encompassing
strengthened rules and specific commitments on support and
protection in order to correct and prevent restrictions and
distortions in world agricultural markets. We reconfirm our
commitment to this programme. Building on the work carried
out to date and without prejudging the outcome of the
negotiations we commit ourselves to comprehensive negotiations
aimed at: substantial improvements in market access;
reductions of, with a view to phasing out, all forms of export
subsidies; and substantial reductions in trade-distorting
domestic support. We agree that special and differential
treatment for developing countries shall be an integral part
of all elements of the negotiations and shall be embodied in
the Schedules of concessions and commitments and as
appropriate in the rules and disciplines to be negotiated, so
as to be operationally effective and to enable developing
countries to effectively take account of their development
needs, including food security and rural development. We take
note of the non-trade concerns reflected in the negotiating
proposals submitted by Members and confirm that non-trade
concerns will be taken into account in the negotiations as
provided for in the Agreement on Agriculture.
-
-
“14. Modalities for the further commitments, including
provisions for special and differential treatment, shall be
established no later than 31 March 2003. Participants shall
submit their comprehensive draft Schedules based on these
modalities no later than the date of the Fifth Session of the
Ministerial Conference. The negotiations, including with
respect to rules and disciplines and related legal texts,
shall be concluded as part and at the date of conclusion of
the negotiating agenda as a whole”.
5. The present paper does not claim to be agreed in whole or
in any part and is without prejudice to the positions of
participants. Square brackets are used in a number of places
for a variety of purposes, such as to put forward figures for
indicative purposes, to suggest alternatives, or possible
formulations. Where text is not in square brackets, this does
not convey any degree of acceptance. In a few areas, the text
has not been fully elaborated and any resulting unevenness may
need to be ironed out.
6. It is the Chairman's earnest hope that the Special Session
to be held on 25-31 March will be used by participants for
meaningful and serious negotiations. Only constructive
engagement by participants will create the space for
establishing modalities in line with the Doha mandate.
GENERAL
PROVISIONS AND TERMS > back to top
7. Unless otherwise specified below, the following general
provisions and terms shall apply:
(a) Product
coverage
The product coverage as specified in Annex 1 of the Agreement on
Agriculture shall apply (hereafter referred to as “agricultural
products”).
(b) “Year”
“Year” in the context of these modalities refers to the annual
basis (calendar year, financial or marketing year) to be
specified in Members' draft Schedules.
(c) “Commitment”
The term “commitment” includes concessions.
(d) Starting-point
of reduction commitments
The starting-point for the first instalment of the reduction
commitments in all areas shall be the beginning of year 1 of the
respective implementation periods. Subsequent reductions shall
be made at the beginning of each of the following implementation
years.
MARKET
ACCESS > back to top
Tariffs
8. Tariffs,
except in-quota tariffs, shall be reduced by a simple average
for all agricultural products subject to a minimum reduction per
tariff line. The base for the reductions shall be the final
bound tariffs as specified in the Schedules of Members. Except
as provided in paragraph 16 below, the tariff reductions shall
be implemented in equal annual instalments over a period of
[five] years, applying the following formula:
-
(i) For
all agricultural tariffs greater than [90 per cent ad
valorem] the simple average reduction rate shall be [60] per
cent subject to a minimum cut of [45] per cent per tariff
line.
-
(ii)
For all agricultural tariffs lower than or equal to [90 per
cent ad valorem] and greater than [15 per cent ad
valorem]
the simple average reduction rate shall be [50] per cent
subject to a minimum cut of [35] per cent per tariff line.
-
(iii) For
all agricultural tariffs lower than or equal to [15 per cent
ad valorem] the simple average reduction rate shall be [40]
per cent subject to a minimum cut of [25] per cent per
tariff line.
In applying this formula, where the tariff on a processed
product is higher than the tariff for the product in its primary
form, the rate of tariff reduction for the processed product
shall be equivalent to that for the product in its primary form
multiplied, at a minimum, by a factor of [1.3].
9. Where participants apply non-ad valorem tariffs, the
allocation of any tariff item in categories (ii) and (iii) above
shall be based on tariff equivalents to be calculated by the
participant concerned in a transparent manner, using three-year
average external reference prices or data, based on a recent
representative five-year period, excluding the highest and the
lowest entry. Full details of the method and data used for these
calculations shall be included in the tables of supporting
material for the draft Schedules and shall be subject to
multilateral review.
Special
and Differential Treatment
10. In implementing their market access commitments,
developed country Members shall take fully into account the
particular needs and conditions of developing country Members by
providing for greater improvement of opportunities and terms of
access for agricultural products of particular interest to these
Members, including the fullest liberalization of trade in
tropical products, whether in primary or in processed form, and
for products of particular importance to the diversification of
production from the growing of illicit narcotic crops, or crops
whose non-edible or non-drinkable products, while being lawful,
are recognized as being harmful for human health.
11. Developing
countries shall have the flexibility to declare up to [ ]
agricultural products at the [6-digit] [4-digit] HS level as
being special products with respect to food security, rural
development and/or livelihood security concerns and designate
these products with the symbol “SP” in Section I-A of Part I of
their Schedules (hereafter referred to as “SP products”). This
concept will be evolved in further technical consultations.
12. For all agricultural products other than SP products, the
reduction commitments of developing countries shall be
implemented applying the following formula:
-
(i) For all agricultural tariffs greater than [120 per
cent ad valorem] the simple average reduction rate shall be
[40] per cent subject to a minimum cut of [30] per cent per
tariff line.
-
(ii) For all agricultural tariffs lower than or equal
to [120 per cent ad valorem] and greater than [60 per cent
ad valorem] the simple average reduction rate shall be [35] per
cent subject to a minimum cut of [25] per cent per tariff
line.
-
(iii) For all agricultural
tariffs lower than or equal to [60 per cent ad valorem]
and greater than [20 per cent ad valorem] the simple average reduction rate shall be [30] per
cent subject to a minimum cut of [20] per cent per tariff
line.
-
(iv) For all agricultural
tariffs lower than or equal to [20 per cent ad valorem] the simple average reduction rate
shall be [25] per cent subject to a minimum cut of [15] per
cent per tariff line.
13. Where participants apply non-ad valorem tariffs, the
provisions of paragraph 9 above apply.
14. The simple average reduction rate for all SP products
shall be [10] per cent subject to a minimum cut of [5] per cent
per tariff line.
15. In all cases, the base for the reductions shall be the
final bound tariffs as specified in the Schedules of Members.
The reduction commitments shall be implemented in equal annual
instalments over a period of [ten] years.
Preferential
Schemes
16. In
implementing their tariff reduction commitments, participants
undertake to maintain, to the maximum extent technically
feasible, the nominal margins of tariff preferences and other
terms and conditions of preferential arrangements they accord to
their developing trading partners. As an exception to the
modality under paragraph 8 above, tariff reductions affecting
long-standing preferences in respect of products which are of
vital export importance for developing country beneficiaries of
such schemes may be implemented in equal annual instalments over
a period of [eight] instead of [five] years by the
preference-granting participants concerned, with the first
instalment being deferred to the beginning of the [third] year
of the implementation period that would otherwise be applicable.
The products concerned shall account for at least [20] per cent
of the total merchandise exports of any beneficiary concerned on
a three-year average out of the most recent five-year period for
which data are available. Interested beneficiaries shall notify
the Committee on Agriculture, Special Session accordingly and
submit the relevant statistics. In addition, any in-quota duties
for these products shall be eliminated. The preference-providing
Members shall undertake targeted technical assistance programmes
and other measures, as appropriate, to support
preference-receiving countries in efforts to diversify their
economies and exports.
Tariff
Quotas
Tariff
Quota Volume
17. Final
bound tariff quota quantities or values as specified in Members'
Schedules (hereafter referred to as "tariff quota volume") which
are equivalent to less than [10] per cent of "current" domestic
consumption of the product concerned shall be expanded to that
level. However, for up to one-quarter of the total number of
tariff quotas concerned, a Member may opt for binding the tariff
quota volume at a level equivalent to [8] per cent of that
consumption, provided that the volumes for a corresponding
number of tariff quotas concerned are expanded to [12] per cent.
18. “Current” domestic consumption means the average
consumption of the period 1999-2001 or of the most recent
three-year period for which data are available. Full details of
the method and data used for the calculations of domestic
consumption for the products concerned shall be included in the
tables of supporting material for the draft Schedules and shall
be subject to multilateral review.
19. The expansion of tariff quota volumes shall be
implemented in equal instalments over a period of [five] years.
The starting-point for implementing the expansion of tariff
quotas shall be the beginning of year 1 of the implementation
period. Additional market access opportunities provided by the
expansion of tariff quotas shall be on an MFN basis.
Special
and differential treatment
20. Developing countries shall not be required to expand
tariff quota volumes for SP products. For other agricultural
products, final bound tariff quota volumes as specified in
Members' Schedules which are equivalent to less than [6.6] per
cent of “current” domestic consumption of the product concerned
shall be expanded to that level. However, for up to one-quarter
of the total number of tariff quotas concerned a Member may opt
for binding the tariff quota volume at a level equivalent to [5]
per cent of that consumption, provided that the volumes for a
corresponding number of tariff quotas concerned are expanded to
[8] per cent.
21. The modalities in paragraphs 18 and 19 above apply,
except that the commitments by developing countries shall be
implemented over a period of [ten] years.
In-quota
Tariffs
22. There
shall be no requirement to reduce in-quota tariffs, except that
(i) in-quota duty free access shall be provided for tropical
products, whether in primary or in processed form, and for
products of particular importance to the diversification of
production from the growing of illicit narcotic crops, or crops
whose non-edible or non-drinkable products, while being lawful,
are recognized as being harmful for human health, and (ii) in
respect of tariff quotas where fill rates on average of the most
recent [three] years for which data are available have been less
than [65] per cent.
Special
and differential treatment
23. Developing
countries shall not be required to reduce in-quota tariffs,
except as provided for under the provisions of (ii) in paragraph
22 above.
Tariff
Quota Administration
24. The
administration of tariff quotas shall be subject to disciplines
as outlined for further consideration in Attachment 1 to this
document. It is noted that this outline is the subject of
ongoing technical consultations.
Special
Safeguard Provisions
Article
5 of the Agreement on Agriculture
25. The
provisions of Article 5 of the Agreement on Agriculture shall
cease to apply for developed countries [at the end of the
implementation period for the further tariff reductions] [[two]
years after the end of the implementation period for the further
tariff reductions].
Special
and differential treatment
26. An
outline of a possible new special safeguard mechanism to enable
developing countries to effectively take account of their
development needs, including food security, rural development
and livelihood security concerns, is currently subject to
technical work and will be included at the appropriate stage in
Attachment 2. The right to invoke this mechanism shall be
reserved by designating in Schedules with the symbol “SSM” the
products concerned. In addition, items already currently covered
and designated with the symbol “SSG” shall be eligible for
measures under Article 5 of the Agreement on Agriculture,
provided, however, that measures under a new safeguard mechanism
shall not be taken concurrently with measures under Article 5.
State
Trading Import Enterprises
27. State
trading import enterprises shall be subject to disciplines as
outlined for further consideration in Attachment 3 to this
document. This outline is to be the subject of further technical
consultations.
Other
Market Access Issues
28. It
is recalled that under paragraph 13 of the Doha Ministerial
Declaration non-trade concerns will be taken into account in the
negotiations as provided for in the Agreement on Agriculture.
Such concerns have been taken into account in various parts of
the present text (and not only in market access). Nevertheless,
further consideration needs to be given to non-trade concerns
and other market access issues identified in paragraph 28 of
document TN/AG/6 dated 18 December 2002 and the extent to which
these issues should be taken into account in the modalities to
be established and/or subsequent work.
EXPORT
COMPETITION > back to top
Export
Subsidies
29. The
basis for the further commitments on export subsidies shall be
the final bound budgetary outlay and quantity commitment levels
as specified in Members' Schedules.
30. For a set of agricultural products representing at least
[50] per cent of the aggregate final bound level of budgetary
outlays for all products subject to export subsidy commitments,
final bound levels of budgetary outlays and quantities as
specified in Members' Schedules shall be reduced over [five
years (n = 5)] using the following formulae with the constant
factor c equal to [0.3] (Attachment 4 to this document provides
an illustration of the operation of these formulae):
-
(1)
Bj = Bj-1 - c · Bj-1 with j = 1, ….. , n
(2) Qj = Qj-1 - c · Qj-1 with j = 1, ….. , n
with
B = budgetary outlays Q = quantities c = constant factor j =
implementation year and B0 and Q0 being the base levels, respectively.
31. At
the beginning of [year 6], budgetary outlays and quantities
shall be reduced to zero.
32. For
the remaining products, final bound levels of budgetary outlays
and quantities as specified in Members' Schedules should be
reduced over [nine years (n = 9)] instead of [five] years using
the formulae (1) and (2) above. However, for these products the
constant factor c shall equal [0.25]. At the beginning of [year
10], budgetary outlays and quantities for these products shall
be reduced to zero.
Special
and differential treatment
33. For a set of agricultural products representing at least
[50] per cent of the aggregate final bound level of budgetary
outlays for all products subject to export subsidy commitments,
final bound levels of budgetary outlays and quantities as
specified in developing country Members' Schedules shall be
reduced over [ten years (n = 10)] using the formulae (1) and (2)
above, with the constant factor c equal to [0.25]. At the
beginning of [year 11], budgetary outlays and quantities shall
be reduced to zero.
34. For the remaining products, final bound levels of
budgetary outlays and quantities as specified in developing
country Members' Schedules should be reduced over [twelve years
(n = 12)] instead of [ten] years using the formulae (1) and (2)
above. However, for these products the constant factor c shall
equal [0.2]. At the beginning of [year 13], budgetary outlays
and quantities for these products shall be reduced to zero.
35. The exemptions for developing countries under Article 9.4
for certain transport and marketing-cost subsidies set out in
Article 9.1(d) and (e) of the Agreement on Agriculture shall be
continued for the time of the implementation period of the
further export subsidy commitments to be undertaken by
developing countries.
Export
Credits
36. Export
credits and export credit guarantees and insurance programmes
shall be subject to disciplines as outlined for further
consideration in Attachment 5 to this document. It is noted that
this outline is the subject of ongoing technical consultations.
Food
Aid
37. International
food aid shall be subject to disciplines as outlined in a
revised draft for consideration in Attachment 6 to this
document. This revised draft will itself be the subject of
further technical consultations.
State
Trading Export Enterprises
38. State
trading export enterprises shall be subject to disciplines as
outlined for further consideration in Attachment 7 to this
document. This outline is to be the subject of further technical
consultations.
Export
Restrictions and Taxes
39. Except
as provided for in paragraph 2(b) of Article XI and Articles XX
and XXI of GATT 1994, the institution of new export
prohibitions, restrictions or taxes on foodstuffs shall be
prohibited.
Special
and differential treatment
40. The new disciplines under paragraph 39 above are not applicable to developing countries. For these
Members, the provisions of Article 12 of the Agreement on
Agriculture shall continue to apply.
DOMESTIC
SUPPORT > back to top
Annex
2 of the Agreement on Agriculture (Green Box)
41. The
provisions of Annex 2 of the Agreement on Agriculture shall be
maintained, subject to possible amendments as outlined in a
revised draft for consideration in Attachment 8 to this
document. This revised draft will itself be the subject of
further technical consultations.
Special
and differential treatment
42. Possible
amendments to Annex 2 of the Agreement on Agriculture are
outlined for further consideration in Attachment 9 to this
document. This outline, which is to be the subject of further
technical consultations, includes several essentially editorial
changes as compared to the previous version.
Article
6.2 of the Agreement on Agriculture
43. The
provisions of Article 6.2 of the Agreement on Agriculture shall
be maintained and enhanced as outlined for further consideration
in Attachment 10 to this document. This outline, which is to be
the subject of further technical consultations, includes an
essentially editorial change as compared to the previous
version.
Article
6.5 of the Agreement on Agriculture (Blue Box)
44. Direct payments under production-limiting programmes
provided in accordance with the provisions of Article 6.5 of the
Agreement on Agriculture (Blue Box payments) [shall be capped at
the most recent notified level and bound at that level in
Members' Schedules. These payments shall be reduced by [50] per
cent. The reductions shall be implemented in equal annual
instalments over a period of [five] years.] [shall be included
in a Member's calculation of the Current Total Aggregate
Measurement of Support (AMS)].
Special
and differential treatment
45. For
developing countries, [the commitment shall be implemented in
equal annual instalments over a period of [ten] years, with the
rate of reduction being [33] per cent.] [Blue Box payments shall
be included in a Member's calculation of the Current Total AMS
as of the [fifth] year of the implementation period.] Amber
Box
46. The
final bound Total AMS as set out in Members' Schedules shall be
reduced by [60] per cent in equal annual instalments over a
period of [five] years.
47. Article 6.3 of the Agreement on Agriculture shall be
amended so as to ensure that the Current AMS for individual
products shall not exceed the respective average levels of such
support provided over the period 1999-2001.
Special
and differential treatment
48. For developing countries, the final bound Total AMS shall
be reduced by [40] per cent in equal annual instalments over a
period of [ten] years.
Other
matters
Inflation
49. Scheduled
Total AMS commitments may be expressed in national currency, a
foreign currency or a basket of currencies. In case a foreign
currency or a basket of currencies is used and the final bound
Total AMS in a Member's Schedule is expressed in national
currency (or another foreign currency) and a participant wants
to avail itself of this option, the final bound Total AMS shall
be converted using the average exchange rate(s) as reported by
the IMF for the year at issue.
50. The provisions of Article 18.4 shall be maintained. Article
6.4 of the Agreement on Agriculture (de minimis)
51. The
de minimis level of 5 per cent under subparagraph (a) of Article 6.4 of the Agreement on Agriculture shall be reduced annually by
[0.5] percentage point over a period of [five] years.
Special
and differential treatment
52. The de minimis level of 10 per cent under
subparagraph (b) of Article 6.4 of the Agreement on Agriculture
shall be maintained.
53. Developing countries shall have the flexibility to credit
to the non-product-specific de minimis support an amount
of any negative product-specific support up to the equivalent of
10 per cent of the respective Member's total value of production
of the basic agricultural product concerned during the relevant
year LEAST-DEVELOPED
COUNTRIES > back to top
54. In addition to the special and differential treatment
provisions above, least-developed countries shall not be
required to undertake reduction commitments. [However, they are
encouraged to consider making commitments commensurate with
their development needs on a voluntary basis, including in
response to requests from their trading partners.]
55. Developed countries [should] [shall] provide duty- and
quota-free access to their markets for all imports from
least-developed countries.
OTHERS > back to top
Recently
Acceded Members
56. Members that have recently acceded to the WTO shall have
the flexibility to defer the respective implementation periods
by [2] years. Others
57. Participants will further consider the possible
introduction of additional forms of flexibility for certain
groupings (e.g. SIDS, vulnerable developing countries,
transition economies) which have made specific proposals to this
effect (TN/AG/6 refers).
ATTACHMENT
1 > back to top
Tariff
Quota Administration
Draft
for further consideration of possible disciplines regarding
tariff quota administration
1. Tariff concessions in Part I of a Member's Schedule which
are limited to specified quantities or values of a product or
products (“tariff quota commitments”) shall be administered in
conformity with the provisions of this Article and, subject to
these provisions, in accordance with other relevant WTO
provisions, including those of the Agreement on Import Licensing
Procedures.
2. Tariff quota commitments shall be administered in a manner
which ensures that the market access opportunities represented
by such commitments are made fully and effectively available. To
this end the following general requirements shall be complied
with:
-
(a) Tariff quota commitments shall be administered in a
transparent and predictable manner and, to maximum practicable
extent, in the same way as other tariff concessions.
(b) Domestic purchasing requirements or other measures having
the same effect shall not be imposed, directly or indirectly, on
or in connection with importation of tariff quota products.
(c) Except as specifically described in Schedules, no
seasonal restrictions shall be imposed on imports under tariff
quotas.
(d) A tariff quota commitment shall not be administered in a
manner which precludes the importation of any product within the
tariff description of the commitment, or which restricts
importation of such products in processed form or for sale to
final consumers.
(e) Methods of tariff quota administration shall not be
employed which result in the attribution to importers of
commercially non-viable allotments.
(f) Only imports of tariff quota products from MFN suppliers
shall be credited as imports against tariff quota commitments.
(g) Export or re-export requirements shall not be imposed in
connection with the importation of tariff quota products.
(h) An importer shall be treated no less favourably than
another on the basis of degree of foreign affiliation or
ownership.
(i) No charges, deposits or other financial requirements
shall be imposed, directly or indirectly, on or in connection
with the administration of tariff quota commitments or with
importation of tariff quota products other than as permitted
under the GATT 1994.
3. The following specific requirements shall apply to the
methods of tariff quota administration referred to hereunder
(“year” in this context refers to the calendar, marketing or
other annual basis to which the commitment relates as specified
in a Member's Schedule):
(a) In the case of tariff-only methods of administration and
methods not requiring import licences as a condition of
importation: access opportunities shall be made available from
the beginning of the year concerned and timely advance public
notice shall be given of any suspension of the opportunity to
import at the in-quota rate of tariff.
(b) In the case of methods of administration under which
import licences are a requirement:
(i) The total quantity or value of a tariff quota shall
be allocated to importers sufficiently in advance of the year to
which they relate so as to enable imports to be effected from
the beginning of that year and to facilitate imports from
developing countries and distant suppliers.
(ii) No restrictions shall be applied with respect to
retail distributors and other end-users applying for and being
allotted shares of tariff quotas. Nor shall conditions or
formalities be imposed which would prevent any importer from
utilizing fully the share which has been allocated to it within
the period of validity of the corresponding import licence.
(iii) Tariff quota licences shall be valid for a period
of [eight] months and shall not be transferable without the
concurrence of the administering authority.
(iv) The quantity or value of any tariff quota commitment
which remains unused following the expiry of the period of
validity of the licences initially issued in connection with
that tariff quota shall be reallocated in time to enable
importation before the end of the year concerned.
(c) In the case of allocation of tariff quota shares to
supplying countries: where an allocated country-specific share
remains unused or is consistently under-utilized, such unused or
under-utilized share shall be re-allocated to non-traditional
suppliers.
4. The provisions of this Article shall apply to tariff quota
commitments that are administered by or through state trading
enterprises.
5. In addition to the requirements of Article X:1 of GATT
1994 relating to publication, Members administering tariff quota
commitments shall establish Internet Websites on which all
relevant information relating to their administration of tariff
quota commitments can be accessed, including information
regarding administrative requirements and procedures, the
business and e-mail addresses of importers to whom tariff quota
shares have been attributed, and current tariff quota fill
rates. Developing country Members shall have the option of
establishing centralized enquiry points instead of Websites.
6. Special and differential treatment: developed country
Members shall accord special and differential treatment to
products from developing country Members in connection with the
allocation of expanded access under existing or new tariff
quotas resulting from the negotiations under the Doha
Development Agenda. For the purposes of Article XIII of GATT 1994, where a tariff quota has been allocated in full or in part
among developing country suppliers the individual country
allocations shall be as specified in the Schedule of the Member
concerned; and any re-allocation of shortfalls shall be made
among the developing country suppliers concerned. Developed
country Members shall, on request, provide to the maximum extent
possible advisory and marketing assistance in order to
facilitate imports from developing countries under tariff
quotas.
ATTACHMENT
2 > back to top
Draft for further consideration of a possible new safeguard
mechanism for developing countries
(Text to be included following further technical work)
ATTACHMENT
3 > back to top
State Trading Import Enterprises
Draft for further consideration of possible provisions for a new
Article 4.3 of the Agreement on Agriculture
3.(a) Members
shall ensure that state trading import enterprises are operated
in conformity with the provisions of this Article and, subject
to these provisions, in accordance with Article XVII and other
relevant provisions of GATT 1994, this Agreement and other WTO
agreements. For the purposes of this Article, state trading
import enterprises shall include any governmental or
non-governmental enterprise, including a marketing board, which
has been granted or which enjoys de facto as a result of its
governmental or quasi governmental status, exclusive or special
rights, privileges or advantages, including any statutory or
constitutional powers, in the exercise of which or by virtue of
which such state trading import enterprises (hereinafter
referred to as “governmental import enterprises”) influence
through their purchases and sales the level, direction or prices
of imports.
(b) Members shall ensure that governmental import enterprises
are not operated in such a way as to nullify or impair the
benefits of market access concessions and of the commitments
relating to non-tariff measures under Article 4.2 of this
Agreement.
(c) Any Member which establishes or maintains a governmental
import enterprise shall notify relevant information on the
operations of that enterprise in accordance with a format and at
intervals to be established by the Committee on Agriculture.
(d) The disciplines regarding governmental import enterprises
shall not unduly impede developing countries in the pursuit of
their legitimate food and livelihood security and rural
development objectives. The notification requirements to be
established under subparagraph (c) above shall provide for
appropriate special and differential treatment for developing
countries.
ATTACHMENT
4 > back to top
Illustration
of the Operation of the Export Subsidy Reduction Formula
1. In
accordance with paragraph 29, the following formulae are to be
applied for the reduction of export subsidies:
-
(1)
Bj = Bj-1 - c · Bj-1 with j = 1, ….. , n
(2) Qj = Qj-1 - c · Qj-1 with j = 1, ….. , n
with
B = budgetary outlays Q = quantities c = constant factor j =
implementation year and
B0 and Q0 being the base levels, respectively.
2. The
following table illustrates the operation of these formulae.
Column 1 refers to the base level and the implementation years.
Column 2 provides the path of reductions expressed, for each
implementation year, as a percentage of the base level of
budgetary outlays (formula (1)) or quantities (formula (2)) for
the product concerned if the constant factor c equals 0.15.
Columns 3 to 6 provide the corresponding paths for alternative
values of the constant factor c.
Export
subsidy reduction formula
(Base
level = 100 per cent of final bound level of budgetary
outlays/quantities)
|
|
Constant
Factor c |
|
|
0.15 |
0.2 |
0.25 |
0.3 |
0.35 |
|
Base
level |
Per
cent |
|
100 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
|
Year |
“Current”
bound level in per cent of base level |
|
1 |
85.0 |
80.0 |
75.0 |
70.0 |
65.0 |
|
2 |
72.3 |
64.0 |
56.3 |
49.0 |
42.3 |
|
3 |
61.5 |
51.2 |
42.2 |
34.3 |
27.5 |
|
4 |
52.3 |
41.0 |
31.6 |
24.0 |
17.9 |
|
5 |
44.5 |
32.8 |
23.7 |
16.8 |
11.6 |
|
6 |
37.8 |
26.2 |
17.8 |
11.8 |
7.6 |
|
7 |
32.1 |
21.0 |
13.4 |
8.3 |
4.9 |
|
8 |
27.3 |
16.8 |
10.1 |
5.8 |
3.2 |
|
9 |
23.2 |
13.4 |
7.6 |
4.1 |
2.1 |
|
10 |
19.7 |
10.7 |
5.7 |
2.9 |
1.4 |
|
11 |
16.7 |
8.6 |
4.3 |
2.0 |
0.9 |
|
12 |
14.2 |
6.9 |
3.2 |
1.4 |
0.6 |
3. For example, if the constant factor c equals 0.3 (Column 5), then at the beginning of implementation year 1, the bound
level of budgetary outlays will have to be reduced to 70 per
cent of the final bound level of budgetary outlays (formula (1)). At the beginning of implementation year 2, the bound level
of budgetary outlays will have to be reduced to 49 per cent of
the final bound level of budgetary outlays, at the beginning of
implementation year 3 to 34.3 per cent and so forth. If the
constant factor c equals 0.2, the corresponding percentages are
80 per cent, 64 per cent, 51.2 per cent and so forth.
4. The application of formula (2) in a practical case could
look as follows: If the final bound quantity for product x
equals 500 tonnes (base level Q0) and a constant factor of 0.3
is chosen, the calculation using formula (2) above yields the
following results for the bound levels for the first three years
of implementation (“current” bound levels Q1, Q2 and Q3):
|
Base
level Q0 = 500 tonnes |
“current”
bound level in year 1, …, 3 |
|
Year |
in
tonnes |
in
per cent of
base level
(Column
5 of table above) |
|
1 |
Q1
= Q0 - c · Q0 = 500 - 0.3 · 500 = 350 |
70.0 |
|
2 |
Q2
= Q1 - c · Q1 = 350 - 0.3 · 350 = 245 |
49.0 |
|
3 |
Q3
= Q2 - c · Q2 = 245 - 0.3 · 245 = 171.5 |
34.3 |
and
so forth.
ATTACHMENT
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Export
Credits
Draft
for further consideration of a possible new Article 9 bis or 10
bis of the Agreement of Agriculture on Governmental Support for
Export Financing
General
1. Subject to the provisions of this Article, Members shall
not, directly or indirectly, provide support or enable support
to be provided for or in connection with the financing of
exports of agricultural products or the credit and other risks
associated therewith otherwise than on market- related terms and
conditions. [Each Member accordingly undertakes not to provide
export financing support otherwise than in conformity with this
Article.] [Each Member accordingly undertakes not to provide
export financing support otherwise than in conformity with this
Article and with the commitments as specified in that Member's
Schedule.]
Forms
and providers of export financing support subject to discipline
2. Export
financing support that is subject to the provisions of this
Article includes:
(a) direct
financing support, comprising direct credits/financing,
refinancing, and interest rate support;
(b) risk
cover, comprising export credit insurance or reinsurance and
export credit guarantees;
(c) government-to-government
credit agreements covering the imports of agricultural products
exclusively from the creditor country under which some or all of
the risk is undertaken by the government of the exporting
country;
(d) any
other form of governmental support, direct or indirect,
including deferred invoicing and foreign exchange risk hedging.
3. The
provisions of this Article shall be applicable to export
financing support provided by or on behalf of: government
departments, agencies, or statutory bodies, at both the national
and sub-national levels; any financial institution or entity
engaged in export financing in which there is governmental
participation by way of equity, provision of loans or
underwriting of losses; any governmental or non-governmental
enterprise, including a marketing board, which has been granted
or enjoys de facto exclusive or special rights, privileges or
financing advantages, including statutory or constitutional
powers, in the exercise of which or by virtue of which support
for or in connection with the financing of exports is provided;
and any bank or other private financial, credit insurance or
guarantee institution which acts on behalf of or at the
direction of governments or their agencies.
Terms
and conditions
4. Export financing support which is provided in conformity
with the following terms and conditions shall be deemed to
comply with paragraph 1 above:
(a) Maximum repayment term: the maximum repayment term of a
supported export credit shall not exceed the period beginning at
the starting point of credit and ending on the contractual date
of the final payment. The “starting point of a credit” shall be
no later than the weighted mean date or actual date of the
arrival of the goods in the recipient country for a contract
under which shipments are made in any consecutive six-month
period. The following maximum repayment terms shall be
respected:
-
(i) for breeding cattle: [ ] months for contracts up to
and including [ ]; and [ ] months for contracts exceeding
[ ];
-
(ii) for agricultural vegetable reproduction material: [
] months;
-
(iii) for exports of agricultural products to developing
countries, as specified in paragraph 9(a) below: [.. months];
-
(iv) for exports of basic foodstuffs to least-developed and
for net food-importing developing countries as listed in
document G/AG/5/Rev.5, as specified in paragraph 10(a) below;
-
(v) for all other products and destinations: [six
months/180 days].
(b) Cash payments: a minimum cash payment shall be required
to be paid, by or on behalf of the importer, at or before the
starting point of the supported credit, representing not less
than [15] per cent of the total amount of the contract/shipment
value but excluding interest as defined in subparagraph (c)
below. Cash payments shall not be financed.
(c) Payment of interest: in the case of direct financing
support, “interest” excludes premiums and other charges for
insuring or guaranteeing supplier or financial credits, banking
fees or commissions relating to the export credit, and
withholding taxes imposed by the importing country. Interest
shall be payable. Where the repayment term exceeds 180 days,
interest shall be payable not less frequently than every six
months, with the first payment to be made no later than six
months after the starting point of export financing.
(d) Minimum interest rates: interest rates in respect of
direct financing support shall not be below the actual cost of
borrowing for the funds so employed (including the cost of funds
if capital was borrowed on international capital markets in
order to obtain funds of the same maturity), plus an appropriate
risk-based spread reflective of prevailing market conditions:
provided however that, for repayment terms of twenty-four months
or longer, Members shall use Commercial Interest Reference Rates
(CIRRs) as published by the OECD, plus an appropriate risk-based
spread reflective of prevailing market conditions.
(e) Repayment of principal: the principal sum (transaction
value minus cash payment) of an export credit shall be repayable
in equal, regular six-monthly instalments starting not later
than six months after the starting point of the credit.
(f) Premiums in respect of coverage of risks under export
credit insurance, reinsurance and export credit guarantees:
premiums shall be charged, shall be risk-based and shall be
adequate to cover long-term operating costs and losses. Premium
shall be expressed in percentages of the outstanding principal
value of the credit, shall be payable in full at the date of
issuance of cover and shall not be financed. Premium rebates
shall not be accorded. Furthermore, support in the form of
export credit insurance, reinsurance or guarantees shall not be
provided in respect of export financing contracts whose terms
and conditions are not otherwise in conformity with the
provisions of this paragraph.
(g) Foreign exchange risk: Export credits, export credit
insurance, export credit guarantees, and related financial
support shall be provided in freely traded currencies. Foreign
exchange exposure deriving from credit that is repayable in the
currency of the importer shall be fully hedged, such that the
market risk and credit risk of the transaction to the
supplier/lender/guarantor is not increased. The cost of the
hedge shall be incorporated into and be in addition to the
premium rate determined in accordance with this Article.
(h) Period of validity of export financing offers: credit
terms and conditions (e.g., interest rates for direct financing
support and all risk-based terms and conditions) offered for an
individual export credit or line of credit shall not be fixed
for a period exceeding six months without payment of premium.
Non-conforming
financing support
5. Export financing supports which do not conform with all
the relevant provisions of paragraph 4 of this Article,
hereinafter referred to as “non-conforming export financing”,
constitute export subsidies for the purposes of this Agreement
and are subject to specific export financing reduction
commitments under this Article.
6. The commitments for each year of the implementation
period, as specified in Part IV, Section IV, of a Member's
Schedule, represent with respect to non-conforming financing
support:
-
(a) in the case of scheduled reduction commitments relating to
the value of non-conforming export financing support, the
maximum level of such financing support in value terms, that
may be provided in that year in respect of the agricultural
product, or group of products concerned;
(b) in the case of scheduled quantity reduction commitments,
the maximum quantity of an agricultural product, or group of
products, in respect of which non-conforming export financing
may be provided in that year; and
(c) in the case of commitments relating to repayment terms,
the maximum and degressive non-conforming repayment terms that
may be supported in each successive year of the specified
implementation period.
Emergency
exception
7. An emergency situation is defined as a sudden, significant
and unusual deterioration in a Member country's economy and its
ability to finance current imports of basic foodstuffs, and
which may have far-reaching consequences such as social
deprivation or unrest. In the event of such an emergency the
importing Member country concerned may request an exporting
Member to provide more generous export financing terms than are
permissible under this Article. A Member making such a request
shall concurrently notify the Committee on Agriculture in
writing accordingly. The Member to whom such a request is
addressed shall consider the request for more generous terms in
accordance with the need to sustain the viability of its export
credits, export credit guarantees, or export credit insurance
programmes.
Transparency
and notification
8. No later than three months after the entry into force of
this Article each Member shall submit a notification concerning
that Member's export financing programmes, export financing
bodies and other related matters in accordance with the format
specified in Annex [ ] hereto. This notification shall be
updated at the beginning of each subsequent year. At not less
than [ ] monthly intervals Members shall submit a notification
to the Committee on Agriculture in which details are provided of
export financing commitments entered into in accordance with the
format specified in Annex [..] hereto. Least-developed country
Members shall not be required to submit such notifications.
[Note: the Annexes referred to in this paragraph to be developed
at the appropriate stage.]
Special
and differential treatment
9. In respect of imports of agricultural products, special
and differential treatment in favour of developing country
Members shall comprise:
-
(a) longer maximum repayments terms of up to [ ] months;
(b) repayment of the principal sum in equal and regular
instalments not less frequently than annually, with the first
payment due no later than twelve months after the starting point
of credit;
(c) payment of interest not less frequently than annually,
with the first interest payment to be made no later than twelve
months after the starting point of credit.
10. In respect of imports of basic foodstuffs least-developed
countries and net food-importing developing countries as listed
in G/AG/5/Rev.5 shall be accorded:
-
(a) additional longer maximum repayment terms of up to [ ]
months;
(b) differential and more favourable interest rates and/or
premiums.
11. Developing country Members providing direct export
financing support may use London Interbank Offered Rates (Libor
rates) and CIRRs, plus an appropriate risk-based spread, as
minimum interest rate benchmarks.
12. For developing country Members the provisions of this
Article, other than those relating to notification and
transparency, shall enter into force at the beginning of the
year following the end of the developing country implementation
period for export subsidy commitments: provided that, with
respect to any product or group of products for which a
developing country Member is listed as a significant exporter in
document G/AG/2/Add.1, these provisions shall become applicable
with effect from the entry into force of this Article; and
provided further that the provisions of Article 9.4 of this
Agreement shall also apply to export financing.
Other
Matters
13. The
provisions of Articles 3.1, 3.3, 8, 10.1 and 10.3 of this
Agreement shall apply mutatis mutandis to the commitments with
respect to export financing under this Article.
14. [Annexes
hereto comprise….]
ATTACHMENT
6
> back to top
Article
10.4 of the Agreement on Agriculture
Draft
for further consideration of a possible replacement of paragraph
4 of Article 10 of the Agreement on Agriculture
4. (a) Members recognize that international food aid and
the commitments undertaken in this regard under the Food Aid
Convention play a critically important role in alleviating
hunger and in contributing to world food security, particularly
in responding to emergency food situations and to other food and
nutrition needs of developing countries. The following
provisions are accordingly intended not to limit the role of
bona fide international food aid, but to ensure that such aid is
not used as a method of surplus disposal, nor as a means of
achieving commercial advantages in world export markets.
(b) Members donors of international food aid, whether
provided in-kind or in the form of financial grants to be used
to purchase food for or by the recipient country, shall ensure:
-
(i) that, in the case of food aid to meet or relieve
emergency or critical food needs arising from natural disasters,
crop failures or humanitarian crises and post-crisis situations,
such aid is provided on the basis of pledges and commitments to,
or in response to appeals from, specialized United Nations food
aid agencies, other relevant regional or international
intergovernmental agencies, non-governmental humanitarian
organizations and private charitable bodies, or in response to
an urgent government-to-government ministerial request for
assistance in meeting food needs in the immediate aftermath of a
natural disaster;
(ii) that food aid for other purposes, including under
programmes and projects to enhance nutritional standards amongst
vulnerable groups in least-developed and net food-importing
developing countries, is provided exclusively in the form of
untied financial grants to be used to purchase food for or by
the recipient country: except that such food aid may be provided
in-kind within the framework of programmes and projects operated
by specialized United Nations food aid agencies, or through
non-governmental humanitarian organizations or private
charitable bodies under agreements concluded with a donor
Member; provided full details of the food aid to be provided
under such agreements are notified to the Committee on
Agriculture by the Member concerned.
(iii) that food aid is provided exclusively in fully grant
form;
(iv) that the provision of food aid is not tied directly or
indirectly, formally or informally, explicitly or implicitly, to
commercial exports of agricultural products or of other goods
and services to recipient countries.
(c) Members shall ensure that their food aid transactions are
carried out in accordance with the procedures under the FAO
“Principles of Surplus Disposal and Consultative Obligations”,
including, where appropriate, the system of “Usual Marketing
Requirements”. Any Member may raise any matter relating to a
donor Member's compliance with these principles and requirements
under Article 18.6 of this Agreement.
(d) Members which are recipients of food aid undertake not to
re-export such food aid otherwise than as may become appropriate
as part of a food aid transaction initiated by a specialized
United Nations food aid agency.
(e) Members shall report on the form in which food aid is
provided, as well as on the products, amounts, destinations,
channelling and other relevant terms and conditions of their
food aid operations, on the basis of a format and at intervals
to be established by the Committee on Agriculture.
(f) Food aid transactions which are not in conformity with
the provisions of subparagraphs (b) and (c) above and which
cannot be accommodated within limits of a Member's export
subsidy reduction commitments shall be deemed for the purposes
of Article 10.1 of this Agreement to constitute non-commercial
transactions which circumvent that Member's export subsidy
commitments.
ATTACHMENT
7 > back to top
State
Trading Export Enterprises
Draft
for further consideration of possible additional provisions for
inclusion as
a new Article 10.5 of the Agreement on Agriculture
5. (a) Members shall ensure that state trading export
enterprises are operated in conformity with the provisions of
this Article and, subject to these provisions, in accordance
with Article XVII and other relevant provisions of GATT 1994,
this Agreement and other WTO agreements. For the purposes of
this Article, state trading export enterprises include any
governmental or non-governmental enterprise, including a
marketing board, which has been granted or which enjoys de facto
as a result of its governmental or quasi-governmental status,
exclusive or special rights, privileges or advantages, including
any statutory or constitutional powers, in the exercise of which
or by virtue of which such state trading export enterprises
(hereinafter referred to as “governmental export enterprises”)
influence through their purchases and sales the level, direction
or prices of exports.
(b) Members shall ensure that governmental export enterprises
are not operated in such a way as to circumvent export subsidy
commitments under this Agreement nor in such a manner that would
nullify or impair the conditions of competition in world export
markets that would prevail in the absence of such special
rights, privileges or advantages. To this end Members undertake:
-
(i) to ensure that exports of a product by a governmental
export enterprise do not take place at a price less than the
price paid by such an enterprise to the domestic producers of
the product concerned;
(ii) not to restrict the right of any interested entity to
export, or to purchase for export, agricultural products;
(iii) not to grant special financing privileges, including
government grants, loans, loan guarantees, or underwriting of
operational costs, to governmental export enterprises that
export for sale, directly or indirectly, a significant share of
the respective Member's total exports of an agricultural
product.
(c) The provisions of subparagraph (b) above, other than (b)(i),
shall not apply to developing country Members.
(d) The provisions of subparagraph (b)(ii) above shall enter
into force progressively on the basis of a plan to be negotiated
and specified in Part IV, Section V of the Schedule of the
Member concerned.
(e) Any Member which establishes or maintains a governmental
export enterprise shall notify relevant information on the
operations of that enterprise in accordance with a format and at
intervals to be established by the Committee on Agriculture.
ATTACHMENT
8 > back to top
Annex
2 of the Agreement on Agriculture
Possible
amendments for further consideration (changes in italics)
1. Addition
to paragraphs 5, 6, 11 and 13:
Reference
to base periods
Payments
shall be based on activities in a fixed and unchanging
historical base period. All base periods shall be notified.
2. Modification of subparagraphs 7(a), (b) and (c):
Compensation criteria with respect to government financial
participation in income insurance and income safety-net
programmes.
(a) Eligibility for such payments shall be determined by an
income loss, taking into account only income derived from
agriculture, which exceeds 30 per cent of average gross income
or the equivalent in net income terms (excluding any payments
from the same or similar schemes) in the preceding five-year
period or a three-year average based on the preceding five-year
period, excluding the highest and the lowest entry. Any
producer meeting this condition shall be eligible to receive the
payments from the government.
(b) The amount of such payments by governments shall
restore a producer’s income to no more than 70 per cent of
income derived by that producer from agriculture in the
averaging period used to trigger eligibility for payment.
(c) The amount of any such payments shall relate solely to
income derived from agriculture of the farm enterprise as a
whole; it shall not relate to the type or volume of
production (including livestock units) undertaken by the
producer; or to the prices, domestic or international, applying
to such production; or to the factors of production employed.
3. Modification of subparagraphs 8(a), (b) and (d):
Compensation criteria with respect to payments (made either
directly or by way of government financial participation in crop
insurance schemes) for relief from natural disasters.
(a) Eligibility for such payments shall arise:
- in the case of direct payments related to
disasters: only following a formal recognition … excluding
the highest and lowest entry.
- in the case of government financial
participation in crop insurance schemes: eligibility for such
payments shall be determined by a production loss which exceeds
30 per cent of the average of production in an actuarially
appropriate period.
- in the case of the destruction of animals or
crops to control or prevent diseases named in national
legislation or international standards: the production loss may
be less than the 30 per cent of the average of production
referred to above.
(b) Payments made under paragraph 8 shall be applied
only in respect of losses of income, livestock (including
payments in connection with the veterinary treatment of
animals), land or other production factors due to the natural
disaster or destruction of animals or crops in question.
(d) Payments made under paragraph 8 shall not exceed
the level required to prevent or alleviate further loss as
defined in criterion (b) above.
4. Addition at the end of subparagraph 10(d):
Structural adjustment assistance provided through resource
retirement programmes
(d) Payments shall not … remaining in production.
Payments shall be time limited.
5. Addition at the end of subparagraph 11(a), modification of
subparagraph 11(b), and inclusion of new subparagraph 11(b) bis:
Structural adjustment assistance provided through investment
aids
(a) Such structural disadvantages must be clearly defined.
(b) The amount of such payments in any given year shall not
be related to, or based on, the type or volume of production or
inputs into the production (including livestock units) …
(b bis) The
amount of such payments in any given year shall not be related
to, or based on, the use of factors of production in any given
year after the base period.
6. Modification of scope of paragraph 12:
Payments under environmental programmes/animal welfare
payments
(a) Eligibility for such payments shall be determined as part
of a clearly-defined government environmental, conservation or
animal welfare programme and be dependent on the
fulfilment of specific conditions under the government
programme, including conditions related to production methods or
inputs.
(b) The amount of payment shall be limited to the extra costs
or loss of income involved in complying with the government
programme.
ATTACHMENT
9 > back to top
Annex
2 of the Agreement on Agriculture
Possible
new elements of special and differential treatment for further
consideration (changes in italics)
1. Inclusion of a new sentence at the end of paragraph 3:
Public stockholding for food security purposes
The volume and accumulation … product and quality in question.
Developing country Members shall be exempted from the
condition in paragraph 3 that the volume and accumulation of
food security stocks shall correspond to predetermined targets.
2. Inclusion of new paragraph 6 bis:
Payments to maintain domestic production capacity of staple
crops for food security purposes in developing countries
-
(a) Eligibility
for such payments shall be determined by reference to
clearly-defined criteria in government programmes designed to
provide support for the producers of staple crops.
(b) Total
production of the crop shall account for no less than [X] per
cent of the total value of agricultural production and:
- total consumption of such crop shall account for no less than
[Y] per cent of the total domestic consumption of agricultural
products in terms of calorie intake; or
- total export of such crop shall account for no less than [Z]
per cent of the total export of a particular country.
(c) The
amount of payment shall be limited to the minimum to maintain
domestic production capacity of such crop of the Member
concerned.
3. Inclusion of new paragraph 6 ter:
Payments to small-scale producers/family farms for the purpose
of maintaining rural viability and cultural heritage in
developing countries
-
(a) Eligibility
for such payments shall be determined by reference to clearly
defined criteria in government programmes designed to provide
support for small-scale producers/family farms.
(b) Small-scale
producers/family farms shall be defined in national legislation,
taking into account such factors as total annual sales, share of
hired farm labour, off-farm income, etc.
(c) The
amount of such payment shall be limited to the minimum level for
continued existence of such farms based on the purpose of
maintaining rural viability and cultural heritage.
(d) The
payment shall not mandate or in any way designate the
agricultural products to be produced by the recipients.
4. Modification of subparagraphs 7(a), (b) and (c):
Compensation criteria with respect to government financial
participation in income insurance and income safety-net
programmes.
-
(a) Eligibility for such payments shall be determined by an
income loss, taking into account only income derived from
agriculture, which exceeds 30 per cent of average gross income
or the equivalent in net income terms (excluding any payments
from the same or similar schemes) in the preceding three-year
period or a three-year average based on the preceding five-year
period, excluding the highest and the lowest entry, or, in
the case of developing country Members, a certain proportion
of average gross income or the equivalent in net income terms
(excluding any payments from the same or similar schemes)
which shall be clearly defined in national legislation. Any
producer meeting this condition shall be eligible to receive the
payments.
(b) The amount of such payments shall compensate for less
than 70 per cent of the producer's income loss in the year the
producer becomes eligible to receive this assistance, or, in
the case of developing country Members, shall compensate for
less than a certain proportion of the producer's income loss,
which shall be clearly defined in national legislation.
(c) The amount of any such payments shall relate solely to
income derived from agriculture of the farm enterprise as a
whole; it shall not relate to the type or volume of
production … production employed.
5. Modification of subparagraph 8(a):
Payments (made either directly or by way of government financial
participation in crop insurance schemes) for relief from natural
disasters
-
(a) Eligibility for such payments shall arise only following
formal … excluding the highest and the lowest entry, or, in
the case of developing country Members, [exceeds 10 per cent of
the average of production in the preceding year] [exceeds a
proportion to be determined in national legislation of the
average of production in the preceding three-year period].
6. Modification of subparagraph 10(b):
Structural adjustment assistance provided through resource
retirement programmes
-
(b) Payments shall be conditional upon the retirement of land
from marketable agricultural production for a minimum of three
years, or, in the case of developing country Members, one
year, and in the case of livestock … disposal.
7. Inclusion of new sentence at the end of subparagraph
13(a):
Payments under regional assistance programmes
-
(a) Eligibility for such payments …… temporary circumstances.
Developing country Members shall be exempted from the
condition that disadvantaged regions must constitute a clearly
designated contiguous geographical area with a definable
economic and administrative identity.
ATTACHMENT 10 > back to top
Article
6.2 of the Agreement on Agriculture
Possible
amendments for further consideration (changes in italics)
In accordance with the Mid-Term Review Agreement that government
measures of assistance, whether direct or indirect, to encourage
agricultural and rural development are an integral part of the
development programmes of developing countries, and in
accordance with paragraph 13 of the Doha Ministerial Declaration
the following measures in developing country Members shall
be exempt from domestic support reduction commitments:
(i) investment subsidies which are generally available to
agriculture
(ii) agricultural input subsidies generally available to
low-income or resource-poor producers
(iii) domestic support to producers to encourage
diversification from growing illicit narcotic crops or those
whose non-edible or non-drinkable products, being lawful, are
recognized [by WHO] as harmful for human health
(iv) subsidies for concessional loans through
established credit institutions or for the establishment of
regional and community credit cooperatives
(v) transportation subsidies for agricultural products
and farm inputs to remote areas
(vi) on-farm employment subsidies for families of
low-income and resource-poor producers
(vii) government assistance for conservation measures
(viii) marketing support programmes and programmes aimed
at compliance with quality and sanitary and phytosanitary
regulations
(ix) capacity building measures with the objective of
enhancing the competitiveness and marketing of low-income and
resource-poor producers
(x) government assistance for the establishment and
operation of agricultural cooperatives
(xi) government assistance for risk management of
agricultural producers and savings instruments to reduce
year-to-year variations in farm incomes
Domestic support meeting the criteria of this paragraph shall
not be required to be included in a Member's calculation of its
Current Total AMS.
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