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28 CHAPTER 2 The World Trade Organization


In 1947, the GATT was signed with the goal of reducing protectionism and discrimination in international trade. The agreement was followed by a series of rounds of international negotiations to reduce protectionism and other distortions in trade. These agreements have been successful in dramatically reducing the protection on manufactured goods; the average tariff fell from 38 to 4 percent between 1947 and 1994. Because of a reluctance to extend trade liberalization to agriculture, however, the average agricultural tar- iff remained high, 60 percent in 1994 (Ingco and Nash 2004). The Uruguay Round, signed in 1994, established the WTO to monitor and enforce the trade agreements; it also included the Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture (URAA), which attempts to reduce agricultural protection, limit agricultural subsidies, and make trade policy more transparent.


The URAA reduces agricultural protection through the following commit-


ments: • Quantitative restrictions (such as import quotas) and other NTBs (such as variable levies) were to be converted to tariffs or tariff rate quotas. An exception is import requirements related to sanitary and phytosanitary prod- ucts; these are regulated by the Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures, which also came out of the Uruguay Round.


• Each country sets a maximum (bound) tariff rate for each product. In industrialized countries, the bound tariff is the tariff equivalent of the earlier quantitative restrictions.


• Countries agree to reduce the bound tariff rate for each product according to a specific schedule.


• Developing countries are given special and differential treatment. They are allowed to set bound tariffs above the tariff equivalent of the earlier quantitative restrictions. They have a longer schedule (10 years instead of 6 years) to implement the changes, and their tariff reductions are gener- ally two-thirds those required of industrialized countries. The LDCs are exempt from commitments.


In order to reduce farm subsidies, the URAA defines different types of government spending on agriculture, as follows: • Green box expenditures include those on agricultural research and exten- sion, infrastructure, animal and plant health programs, food safety programs, disaster relief, anti-poverty feeding programs, and farm credit. These are not subject to limits by the URAA.


• Blue box expenditures include payments to farmers, which are combined with supply controls and are based on production or planted area in a base period. These are not subject to limits by the URAA.


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