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Nontrade concerns: the new agricultural protectionism

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World Bank and University of Adelaide. Outline. Agriculture's multifunctionality' ... cows in alpine pasture? ( pay directly) biodiversity? ( pay for hedgerows, eg) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nontrade concerns: the new agricultural protectionism


1
Non-trade concerns the new agricultural
protectionism?
  • Kym Anderson
  • World Bank and University of Adelaide

2
Outline
  • Agricultures multifunctionality
  • why is it being raised now?
  • Basic principles, and their application to
  • food security
  • rural environment
  • viability of rural areas
  • Economics of quarantine/SPS
  • If time rural poverty in DCs China

3
Multifunctionality why is it being raised now?
  • Was agreed to in UR
  • see Art. 20(c) of URAA
  • The concern is that reduced support for farming
    may damage the rural environment, reduce food
    security, make rural communities less viable,
    etc.
  • being thought of as public goods produced jointly
    with farm goods

4
Basic principles
  • Sovereign govts have the right to determine
    national policy objectives
  • The debate is over the means by which govts
    strive for those goals
  • Need to bear in mind
  • intl rights and obligations
  • market failures, eg due to externalities
  • in production and consumption
  • in non-agric sectors as well as agric
  • government failures in intervention

5
Six lessons from theory and past policy practice
  • 1. Where there are several policy objectives, an
    equal number of policy instruments is required to
    deal with them efficiently
  • 2. The lowest-cost measure will be that which
    addresses the concern most directly
  • 3. Hence trade measures are rarely the best way
    of addressing non-trade concerns

6
Six lessons(continued)
  • 4. Trade libn will improve economic welfare so
    long as optimal domestic interventions are in
    place to deal with non-trade concerns, and are
    adjusted as trade is freed
  • 5. The extent of achievement of non-trade
    objectives may not be as great with as without
    trade libn
  • the price of gains from trade

7
Six lessons(continued)
  • 6. Whenever govt intervenes, even if it is to
    overcome a market failure, there is a risk of
    government failure
  • which could be more welfare-reducing that the
    market failure being targeted
  • could occur at the bureaucratic and/or political
    level

8
Why strive for the most efficient way to achieve
societys objectives?
  • Because achieving those objectives requires
    resources
  • And the fewer resources required to achieve each
    objective, the more there will be for achieving
    others and/or for preserving resources for future
    generations

9
Do farmers make more of a non-marketed
contribution than other producers?
  • All sectors generate both marketed and
    non-marketed products
  • Some non-marketed products are more desirable
    than others, and some are undesirable
  • Since tastes and preferences change over time and
    differ between countries, so too do societies
    valuation of non-marketed products

10
(continued)
  • Does farming produce more non-marketed ve
    externalities/public goods than other sectors?
  • net of -ve externalities/public bads?
  • If so and if they are under-supplied, what are
    the most efficient ways to get their optimal
    provision?
  • are those measures WTO-consistent?
  • Import barriers and other price-supports are
    inefficient instruments for boosting their supply
    (as well as WTO-inconsistent?)

11
The policy task thus involves several steps
  • Get a sense of societys willingness to pay for
    the non-marketed by-product
  • Determine the most efficient measure for
    encouraging farmers or others to supply that
    by-product for society
  • Then determine the optimal level of encouragement
  • equate marginal social benefit wit marginal
    social cost of intervention
  • cf sharpening of surgical instruments

12
Examples of non-trade concerns 1. food security
  • Food security is not synonymous with food
    self-sufficiency
  • Rather, its a consumer issue
  • ensure that everyone always has access to a
    threshold supply of basic food necessary for
    survival
  • Requires threshold income and savings (or credit
    access) and a well-functioning market for staple
    foods
  • Note that agricultural protection exacerbates
    food security, by raising consumer prices of food

13
Food security (continued)
  • What if the intl market is thin, as with rice?
    Or there is a risk of an export embargo (as
    permitted under GATT Article XXI)?
  • Try long-term contracts with trading partners, or
    subsidize stockholding of staples (allowed in
    Annex 2 of URAA as a green box item)
  • If greater domestic prodn is desired, agric RD
    (another green box item) which lowers domestic
    costs of production is better than price support

14
Example 2 environmental protection
  • Local environment is generally helped by lowering
    output price supports and taxing pollutive farm
    inputs
  • But in the case of ve externalities, subsidize
    just their provision, to the optimal degree,
    de-coupled from farming (and even farmers?)
  • rural landscape? (vs golf courses?)
  • cows in alpine pasture? (pay directly)
  • biodiversity? (pay for hedgerows, eg)

15
What about negative externalities from farming?
  • They (and food safety risks) tend to increase
    with the intensity of input use, which in turn is
    greater the more product prices are raised or
    input prices are subsidized
  • taxes would be better on pollutive inputs
  • Aside would global ag protection cuts worsen the
    global environment?

16
Example 2 viability of rural areas
  • Is agriculture the only (or even main) economic
    activity in rural areas?
  • Wouldnt targeted supports for essential services
    in remote areas be a lower-cost option?
  • Regional supports in one country harm rural areas
    in other countries
  • What is optimal degree of support?

17
Conclusions on non-trade concerns
  • Likely to become more contentious as trade
    distortions are lowered
  • Need to be dealt with in WTO because they can
    affect trade
  • Should be handled in the same way for all sectors
  • Current WTO rules are adequate
  • Requires targeted, precise interventions in each
    case, rather than blunt price-support or trade
    measures

18
What about negative env. externalities from
imports?
  • The quarantine/SPS trade issue another
    opportunity to re-instrument agric protection
    (notwithstanding the SPS Agreement)?
  • SPS policy assessment today is about where
    environmental policy assessment was 3 decades
    ago, in the sense that benefit-cost analysis is
    rarely used
  • and is not encouraged in SPS Agreement, where
    consumer welfare is ignored

19
How can BCA assist SPS policy-making?
  • Just as zero pollution may be too little, so zero
    pest importation may be too expensive to be
    optimal
  • the economic gains from importing risky products
    have to be weighed at the margin against the cost
    of potential plant, animal or human health
    consequences
  • As part of that calculus, costs of alternative
    ways of reducing health risks from importation
    need to be considered

20
3 ways import bans can increase the risk of major
disease outbreaks
  • It may lower the natural immunity of plants or
    animals to disease
  • It may encourage smuggling
  • It may lead farmers into a false sense of
    security and so lower their spending on
    precautionary measures including RD

21
Ways of reducing health risks from importation
  • Alternatives to the extreme of an import ban
    include
  • selective imports from disease-free regions
  • pre-shipment inspection
  • temporary isolation on arrival (eg on an island)
  • spraying on arrival
  • monitoring after importation
  • RD to develop disease-resistant or
    pesticide-responsive varieties
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