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WTO Disciplines on Agricultural Support
Seeking a Fair Basis for Trade

Developed and key developing countries heavily support their farmers. Can the WTO reduce the worldwide harm these unilateral policies cause?

David Orden (Edited by), David Blandford (Edited by), Tim Josling (Edited by)

9781107005440, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 31 March 2011

520 pages, 35 b/w illus. 89 tables
23.5 x 16 x 2.7 cm, 0.93 kg

'At its core, this book makes a compelling argument for the value of transparency … By reading this book, students, researchers, and policy practitioners will gain a deeper appreciation of the role of transparency and will be more sophisticated consumers of WTO notified information in the future.' World Trade Review

Farm support is contentious in international negotiations. This in-depth assessment of the legal compliance and economic evaluation issues raised by the WTO Agreement on Agriculture presents consistent support data and forward-looking projections for eight developed and developing countries (EU, US, Japan, Norway, Brazil, China, India, Philippines), using original estimates where official notifications are not available. Variations over time in notified support in some cases reflect real policy changes; others merely reflect shifts in how countries represent their measures. The stalled Doha negotiations presage significantly tighter constraints for developed countries that provide the highest support, but loopholes will persist. Developing countries face fewer constraints and their trade-distorting farm support can rise. Pressure points and key remaining issues if a Doha agreement is reached are evaluated. Vigilant monitoring for compliance of farm support with WTO commitments will be required to lessen its negative consequences whether or not the Doha Round is concluded.

Part I. Overview of Domestic Support Issues and WTO Rules: 1. Introduction David Orden, David Blandford and Tim Josling
2. The WTO disciplines on domestic support Lars Brink
Part II. Developed Countries: Have High Levels of Support Come Down?: 3. European Union Tim Josling and Alan Swinbank
4. United States David Blandford and David Orden
5. Japan Yoshihisa Godo and Daisuke Takahashi
6. Norway Ivar Gaasland, Roberto Garcia and Erling Vardal
Part III. Developing Countries: Will Low Levels of Support Rise?: 7. Brazil Andre Nassar
8. India Munisamy Gopinath
9. China Fuzhi Cheng
10. Philippines Caesar B. Cororaton
Part IV. Looking Forward: Can Fair Markets Be Achieved?: 11. The difficult task of disciplining domestic support David Orden, David Blandford and Tim Josling
Appendix A. Domestic support provisions of the Agreement on Agriculture
Appendix B. Domestic support provisions of the Doha draft modalities.

Subject Areas: International economic & trade law [LBBM], International business [KJK], International economics [KCL]

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