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16 - WTO Accession Commitments on Agriculture: Lessons for WTO Rule-Making

from PART III - Accessions Acquis: Thematic Perspectives and Implementation Challenges

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2017

Diwakar Dixit
Affiliation:
Agriculture and Commodities Division of the WTO
Alexei Kireyev
Affiliation:
International Monetary Fund Institute, Washington DC
Chiedu Osakwe
Affiliation:
World Trade Organization
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Summary

Abstract

This chapter explains how accession negotiations have helped to further the agricultural reform process by upgrading and deepening the existing multilateral rules on trade in agriculture. It provides a broad overview of the existing multilateral disciplines in the area of agriculture, as contained in the Agreement on Agriculture (AoA). Using the experience of the thirty-six concluded accessions, the chapter suggests that a number of commitments, such as extensive market access commitments, ambitious domestic support commitments and comprehensive bindings with regard to export duties, helped establish high benchmarks vis-à-vis the undertakings of the original members of the World Trade Organization (WTO). In market access, the commitments of acceded members are primarily in the form of reductions in tariff bindings, with a very limited use of tariff rate quotas. In domestic support, the commitments of the acceded members have been negotiated based on the respective recourse to such support during a recent three-year period, dependent on the timing of the individual accessions. These commitments are generally more ambitious than the corresponding commitments of the original members under the AoA, which were derived based on the domestic support policy framework existing in 1986–8. Similarly, in the field of export subsidies, the acceded governments’ ambitious efforts to eliminate these highly distorting subsidies helped to create a strong momentum in the broader agriculture negotiations, leading to the eventual agreement on the global elimination of agricultural export subsidies at the Nairobi Ministerial Conference in 2015.

Acceding governments negotiate their accession terms by way of engaging in negotiations with WTO members within the framework of Article XII of the Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization (WTO Agreement). The outcome of the negotiations is included in an instrument referred to as the accession protocol that in turn is integrated into the WTO Agreement. In order to understand the negotiating process, it may be useful to keep in mind the final objective, i.e. to determine the scope and contours of the WTO Agreement that the acceding government will accept to abide by upon successful conclusion of the negotiations and the consequent assumption of WTO membership.

The WTO Agreement may be divided broadly into two parts: the global, rules-based undertakings that all members have to comply with, and the member-specific commitments in the schedule, which are binding on the member concerned.

Type
Chapter
Information
Trade Multilateralism in the Twenty-First Century
Building the Upper Floors of the Trading System through WTO Accessions
, pp. 339 - 356
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2017

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References

Croome, J. (1999). Reshaping the World Trading System: A History of the Uruguay Round. The Hague, Kluwer Law International.Google Scholar
Josling, T. E., Tangermann, S. and Warley, T. K. (1996). Agriculture in the GATT. London, Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
WTO (2013). Accession Commitments Database. Retrieved from acdb.wto.org.

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