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9 - Options for enhancing market access in a new round

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 February 2010

Tim Josling
Affiliation:
Stanford University
Allan Rae
Affiliation:
Center for Applied Economics and Policy Studies
Merlinda D. Ingco
Affiliation:
The World Bank
L. Alan Winters
Affiliation:
University of Sussex
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Summary

Introduction

Along with textiles and a few other goods, agricultural products represent the last bastion of protected national markets in an era of globalism. The highest tariffs in agricultural markets are several times those for manufactured goods. Table 9.1 shows the unweighted average bound tariff on agricultural commodities for twenty major trading countries. The average agricultural tariff – however it is calculated – is probably about 40 percent. Most industrial tariffs are closer to 5 percent, and some manufactured goods are now traded duty-free.

Because most trade barriers have been tariffied, the new round of negotiations will be the first in which the level of agricultural protection is visible and quantified. The question is: what process would best remove these high trade barriers in a reasonable amount of time? Resistance to open markets for agricultural goods is still strong, but the discrepancy between agricultural and non-agricultural tariffs may persuade trade ministers to urge their colleagues to agree to significant cuts.

How do negotiators cut agricultural tariffs to 5–15 percent, or to zero if tariff-free trade becomes the norm? This goal looks to be a tall order: it implies a lengthy period of significant tariff cuts. But the new round of talks will not succeed unless negotiators take substantial steps to reduce these high tariffs perhaps to an average of 20–25 percent.

The problem extends beyond high tariffs: the distribution of tariff rates is uneven, among both commodities and countries.

Type
Chapter
Information
Agriculture and the New Trade Agenda
Creating a Global Trading Environment for Development
, pp. 176 - 193
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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References

Harrison, W. J. and Pearson, K. R., 1996. “Computing Solutions for Large General Equilibrium Models Using GEMPACK,” Computational Economics, 9, 83–127CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hertel, T. W. (ed.), 1997. Global Trade Analysis: Modeling and Applications, Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press
Josling, T., S. Tangermann, and T. K. Warley, 1996. Agriculture in the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, London: Macmillan
Miner, W., T. Josling, D. MacLaren, and S. Tangermann, 1996. “Agriculture and the World Trade Organization: Preparing for the Singapore Ministerial Meeting,” paper presented to the International Policy Council on Agriculture, Food and Trade Seminar, October, Calgary
Tangermann, S., 1997. “A Developed Country Perspective of the Agenda for the Next World Trade Organization Round of Agricultural Trade Negotiations,” paper presented at a seminar in the Institute of Graduate Studies, March 3, Geneva
Tangermann, S. and T. Josling, 1999. “The Interests of Developing Countries in the Next Round of World Trade Organization Agricultural Negotiations,” paper prepared for the UN Conference on Trade and Development Workshop on Developing a Proactive and Coherent Trade Agenda for African Countries, June 29–July 2, Pretoria

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