WTO talks collapse in US-India farm row

Reuters

Posted: Wednesday, Jul 30, 2008 at 1405 hrs IST
Updated: Wednesday, Jul 30, 2008 at 1405 hrs IST


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Geneva, July 30:: Marathon talks on a new global trade pact collapsed on Tuesday as the United States and India refused to compromise over a proposal to help poor farmers deal with floods of imports.

Ministers from other countries expressed incredulity that the trade liberalisation talks could have foundered in their ninth day over a technical measure to restrict imports.

"Someone coming from another planet would not believe that after the progress made, we would not be able to conclude," Brazil's Foreign Minister Celso Amorim said.

"This is a very painful failure and a real setback for the global economy at a time when we really needed some good news," an emotional EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson said, adding that developing countries would suffer most.

The collapse could hurt business sentiment -- even if it will have no immediate impact on trade -- and could fuel protectionist sentiment, encourage more bilateral trade deals and call into question how the world will deal with complex issues like climate change and the food crisis.

The failure to reach a breakthrough at the World Trade Organisation after nearly seven years of talks means the prospects for resuming the Doha talks to free up world trade -- if they can be resuscitated after the setback -- could be put back several years.

But WTO chief Pascal Lamy said ministers wanted him to revive the talks quickly and he would not 'throw in the towel'.

$130 BILLION BOOST LOST

Lamy said the deal would eventually have saved the world economy $130 billion a year just in lower tariffs.

He called ministers from about 35 key WTO players to Geneva last week to seek a breakthrough in the Doha round, launched in late 2001 to boost the world economy and help developing countries export their way out of poverty.

Ministers reached about 80-85 per cent of an outline deal on the core areas of agriculture and industrial goods, he said.

But differences in these areas between rich and poor countries and importers and exporters proved too much to bridge.

The final stumbling block, which dominated talks on Monday and Tuesday, concerned the 'special safeguard mechanism' -- a proposal to let developing countries raise farm tariffs in the face of a surge in imports or collapse in prices.

Developing countries like India and Indonesia said they needed the measure to protect millions of subsistence farmers from unexpected shocks arising from opening up their borders.

But the United States feared its agribusinesses would lose...

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