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ASA Prescribes Soy Priorities for WTO Negotiations
during House Testimony
November 2, 2005... Washington, D.C. ... On
behalf of its 25,000 producer-members, the American Soybean Association
(ASA) today testified before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee
on Agriculture that the outcome of the current negotiations on a new
World Trade Organization (WTO) agreement is critically important to U.S.
soybean producers. A good Doha Round agreement would greatly benefit
U.S. soybean farmers if substantial market access is gained in
developing country markets and world-class developing country exporters
are subject to similar disciplines as developed countries.
"One-half of our annual soybean production is
exported either as soybeans, soybean oil and soybean meal, or in the
form of livestock products," said ASA President Bob Metz, a soybean
and corn farmer from West Browns Valley, S. Dak.
World demand for soybeans is increasing rapidly as
developing countries, which have very low per capita consumption of
these products, improve their standard of living and diet. Many
developing countries have high tariffs on soy and livestock products. As
a result, improving market access through meaningful tariff reductions
in developing countries is a high priority to enhance the profitability
for U.S. soybean farmers and the U.S. soybean industry.
"U.S. soybean farmers also are facing rising
competition from South American producers, particularly in Brazil and
Argentina," Metz said. "Over the past decade, these countries
have emerged as world-class exporters, with mature agricultural
research, production, and processing infrastructure and improving
transportation systems."
Both Brazil and Argentina use a variety of incentives
to encourage production and exports of soybeans and other crops.
However, these countries have been allowed under the Uruguay Round
Agreement to designate themselves as "developing" countries
and to avoid disciplines on their domestic support and export programs.
ASA believes that it is critically important that any Doha Round
Agreement must require that advanced developing country exporters, or
their world-class export sectors, be subject to the same rules and
disciplines in all three pillars as developed countries.
ASA recognizes the proposal advanced by the
Administration as a credible signal to the rest of the world that the
U.S. is prepared to make substantial cuts in trade-distorting domestic
support if, and only if, market access barriers are greatly reduced and
export subsidy practices are eliminated. The proposed cuts in domestic
support would require fundamental changes in the structure of U.S. farm
programs, including the marketing loan, which has been important in
supporting soybean producer income when prices fall.
"In order to support restructuring current
programs, ASA needs assurances that the next farm bill will provide U.S.
farmers with an adequate safety net, and that the current imbalance in
crop program benefits will not continue to distort market signals,"
Metz said.
On market access, the Administration’s proposed
cuts in tariffs by developed countries are substantial, and could expand
soy and meat exports to these markets. However, the U.S. proposal did
not specifically address the need for equally ambitious improvements in
market access by developing countries.
"Developing countries are the markets of the
future," Metz said. "In making the case for trade
liberalization, the Administration has pointed out that 95 percent of
the world’s population lives outside our borders. ASA calls attention
to the fact that 81 percent of this population lives in developing
countries. That’s why the U.S. must ensure adequate market access to
developing country markets."
In addition, ASA is concerned because the
Administration’s proposal does not include specific language requiring
world-class developing country exporters to undertake disciplines in the
three pillars of domestic support, market access, and export subsidy
practices, similar to those required of developed countries.
Recent studies by Informa Economics and the U.S.
Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Service indicate that
Brazilian farmers benefit from a national program that offers credit at
interest rates of from 8.75 to 12.75 percent, compared to the prevailing
commercial business rate of 35 percent. Credit provided under this
program increased by 48 percent in 2004/05, to $13 billion. Subsidized
credit to modernize Brazil’s farm machinery doubled in the same year,
to $5.5 billion. In addition, Brazil has frequently rescheduled farm
debt for up to 25 years at 3 percent interest rates, which in times of
high inflation amounts to giving Brazilian farmers free money.
Brazil also exempts or provides refunds for
agricultural exports from its interstate movement tax, and from social
welfare taxes, amounting to 21.25 percent of the value of the exported
product. Finally, Brazil has a land tax system that encourages farmland
expansion by taxing undeveloped land at a higher rate than land brought
into production.
"ASA believes strongly that these policies must
be subject to discipline under the Doha negotiations," Metz said.
"As with improving market access to developing countries,
aggressive proposals and agreements in this area are key to ASA support
for a WTO agreement."
"U.S. soybean farmers would benefit greatly from
a good Doha Round agreement," Metz said. "However, we would
not be served well by or support a poor or lop-sided agreement that
would require substantial cuts in U.S. amber box domestic support, but
would not result in substantial market access gains to developing
country markets, and that did not make world-class developing country
exporters subject to similar disciplines as developed countries."
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For more information contact:
Bob Metz, ASA President, 605/694-2652, mbobmetz@prtel.com
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, 314/576-1770, bcallanan@soy.org
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