Domestic Support and the WTO Negotiations

Posted: 19 Sep 2000

See all articles by Daniel A. Sumner

Daniel A. Sumner

University of California, Davis - Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics

Abstract

In their attempt to maximise trade benefits, agricultural trade negotiators must allocate scarce resources and consider trade-offs across issues such as liberalising foreign border measures or reducing foreign domestic subsidies. Analysis and examples support the notion that more liberalisation will be achieved in the new WTO round by emphasis on lowering border barriers and export subsidies rather than attempting to discipline domestic farm subsidies directly. Analyses of EU grain policy, Korean rice policy and US sugar policy show how reduced export subsidy or more import access have substantial trade benefits, even if farmers are compensated with payments or price supports.

Suggested Citation

Sumner, Daniel A., Domestic Support and the WTO Negotiations. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=241296

Daniel A. Sumner (Contact Author)

University of California, Davis - Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics ( email )

One Shields Avenue
Davis, CA 95616
United States
530-752-5002 (Phone)
530-752-5614 (Fax)

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