Saint Louis, Missouri
May 19, 2004
Representing the 25,000
producer-members of the
American Soybean Association (ASA), Board member and
past-President Bart Ruth, a soybean and corn farmer from Rising
City, Neb., testified on the status of agricultural trade
negotiations before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee
on Agriculture. World demand for soy-related exports,
particularly high protein soybean meal and livestock products,
is growing rapidly. Expansion of developing economies has
spurred rising demand for and ability to afford a more
nutritious diet.
"With 96 percent
of the world’s population living outside our borders, and most
of its growth in countries with low per capita consumption of
soy products, our foreign markets will only continue to expand,"
Ruth said. "U.S. farmers need to compete for these expanding
markets, and to do so, we need to bring down tariffs on
soy-related products in importing countries, and prevent their
replacement with non-tariff barriers."
The purpose of
today’s hearing was to review the broad agenda of issues
involving agricultural trade, and how these issues have changed
considerably over the past decade, as have strategies for
addressing them. Ruth presented an overview of the current
situation, and then commented on soybean priorities in the World
Trade Organization (WTO), Free Trade Agreement (FTA)
negotiations, and several other important trade issues.
Since the 1970’s,
the U.S. has exported one-half of each year’s soybean crop,
either as whole soybeans, soybean meal and oil, or in the form
of livestock products. Soybean and soy product exports alone are
currently valued at $8 to $10 billion, making the U.S. soybean
industry the largest positive contributor to the national trade
balance.
"We must require
both developing as well as developed country competitors to
comply with the same disciplines on production and
trade-distorting farm support programs that we must meet," Ruth
said. "And we must eliminate the distorting effects of our own
domestic farm policies in discouraging soybean plantings when
market signals indicate otherwise."
Each of these
goals will be addressed during negotiations the agriculture
community faces over the next three to four years. Current talks
to reach agreement on a framework for agriculture as part of the
Doha Development Agenda will reach a critical point at the
mini-Ministerial in late June. Even if a framework is reached,
actual commitments will need to be negotiated, and the time
frame for completion will be uncertain.
ASA was an early
and strong supporter of Doha WTO trade proposals to require
countries to improve market access by bringing higher tariffs
down faster than lower tariffs. ASA has supported making
significant reductions in trade-distorting domestic support,
provided that countries with comparatively higher levels of
support, particularly the European Union, make proportionately
greater reductions, and that developing country exporters are
subjected to similar disciplines.
"We are concerned
that, if countries are able to protect all or most of their
sensitive import commodities from meaningful tariff cuts, we
won't see the expansion of markets for soybeans, soybean meal,
and livestock products needed to justify accepting substantial
reductions in domestic support and changes in our export credit
program that will dramatically decrease its effectiveness," Ruth
said. "A formula must be found that will ensure a significant
increase in market access for U.S. soy and livestock products,
as well as other key U.S. agricultural commodities."
Of particular
concern to ASA is the failure of the various negotiating texts
to distinguish between least developed and advanced developing
countries by allowing self-designated developing countries to
exempt themselves from disciplines required of developed
countries. Countries that are world-class producers and
exporters of soybeans and other commodities, like Brazil, should
not be allowed to exempt themselves from meaningful market
access commitments or have the unlimited ability to implement
trade-distorting domestic support and export policies.
"ASA is also
concerned by efforts to eliminate non-emergency foreign food
assistance provided under P.L. 480 Title 1 and other food aid
programs," Ruth said. "Assistance in the form of food is
essential to help developing countries alleviate poverty, combat
diseases such HIV/AIDS, and develop economically. We recommend
that any disciplines on food aid be considered separately from
reforms in export-related programs, and urge that food aid
experts be included in future negotiations."
ASA continues to
be concerned by indications that the European Union (EU) intends
to ignore its requirements under the 1992 Blair House Agreement
of the Uruguay Round of multilateral trade negotiations. Under
Blair House, the EU agreed to restrict subsidized oilseed area,
and to limit production of oilseeds for industrial purposes on
so-called set-aside land. After several reforms, the EU now
maintains that its oilseed supports are either not crop-specific
or that support has been decoupled and, as a result, the Blair
House acreage restrictions no longer apply.
"ASA and other
U.S. oilseed organizations believe the EU must be reminded of
its Blair House obligations, which have been bound in the EU's
WTO commitments," Ruth said. "The United States must be prepared
to aggressively challenge the EU if it breaches its
obligations."
Regarding FTAs,
ASA supports passage of the Central America Free Trade
Agreement, Dominican Republic, and Morocco FTAs. ASA welcomes
the start of the Andean FTA, and is supportive of the Australia
FTA, provided the livestock phytosanitary issues are resolved.
ASA is anxious to see the conclusion of the Southern African
Customs Union FTA, in which ASA hopes to see soy protein used in
a model for supplementary feeding of people receiving
anti-retroviral drugs to combat HIV/AIDS, as well as
supplementing local diets to fight malnutrition and low
productivity.
In regards to
trade in biotech-enhanced crops, Ruth said, "U.S. agriculture
must confront the growing challenge to our farm exports by
non-science-based claims by the European Union that restrict the
availability and competitiveness of food products derived from
U.S. biotech commodities by imposing stigmatizing labeling and
onerous traceability requirements. Unless the U.S. and other
biotech producing and exporting countries challenge the EU's
Traceability and Labeling regulations, we will continue to lose
foreign markets, not only in Europe but in other countries that
choose to, or are pressured to, follow the EU's example." |