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ASA Urges President Bush to Safeguard Interests of U.S.
Producers in WTO Negotiations
Saint Louis, Missouri... June 1, 2006...The American Soybean
Association (ASA) today expressed its concerns to President George W. Bush
about the present situation in the Doha round World Trade Organization
(WTO) agricultural negotiations. U.S. agriculture has strongly supported
the Doha round as a means of balancing the global playing field and
tackling the many inequities in world agricultural markets.
"Reductions in, and limitations on, domestic support for U.S.
agriculture are only acceptable if the negotiations yield an important net
gain for American farmers and ranchers through commitments on market
access and other trade-distorting policies by our trading partners,"
said ASA President Bob Metz, a soybean producer from West Browns Valley,
S.D. "Reflecting this understanding, our negotiating team emphasized
that the very generous U.S. offer on domestic support put forward in
October 2005 was fully conditioned on achieving the U.S. proposal to
increase market access for farmers and ranchers."
At this point in the negotiations, however, it seems clear that other
countries have "pocketed" the U.S. offer on domestic support
without being prepared to even come close to the U.S. proposal on
increasing market access in both developed and developing countries.
Moreover, these countries are pushing U.S. negotiators to make even
greater concessions in domestic support.
"Under these circumstances, we believe that it is important to
make clear that American agriculture will not support any deeper cuts in
domestic support than those already proposed by the administration,"
Metz said. "If negotiators are forced to scale back the level of
ambition from the U.S. proposal on agricultural market access in order to
reach an agreement, the level of ambition in cutting trade-distorting
domestic support must be commensurately reduced from the U.S.
proposal."
ASA also insists that the treatment of "sensitive" products
for developed countries and "special" products for developing
countries must be limited in order to preserve the market access gains
achieved through overall tariff reductions. The value of any tariff cut
proposals will be greatly eroded by extensive exceptions for sensitive and
special products. The need to achieve significant increases in market
access in developing, including newly acceded, country markets is
especially important because these countries, which account for 81 percent
of the world’s population, represent the markets of the future.
"ASA is urging President Bush and the U.S. negotiators to insist
that any WTO agricultural agreement maintain a high level of ambition
and achieve significant and commercially meaningful increases
in market access in both developed and developing country
markets," Metz said. "While an agreement short of the U.S.
market access proposal is not our objective, any such
outcome must result in commitments on domestic support
commensurate with this diminished market access result.
On behalf of its 25,000 farmer-members, ASA looks forward to continuing
to work with President Bush and his negotiating team to reach an agreement
that farmers and ranchers will be able to support.
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For more information contact:
Bob Metz, ASA President, 605/880-1552, bobmetz@prtel.com
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, 314/576-1770, bcallanan@soy.org
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