One of the fundamental achievements of the Uruguay Round of multilateral trade negotiations that established the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 1994 was to create the first multilateral framework for disciplines on domestic farm support. However, compliance with international rules must be monitored and the WTO rules for support notifications have proven lax.
Given the dearth of formal notification reports, and the controversies that surround the classification of certain subsidies or assessment of their effects, an up-to-date set of estimated subsidy notifications will provide a valuable contribution to agricultural policy deliberations.
This conference provides such an assessment of domestic support and its potential notification to the WTO for eight countries. An overview paper provides common background and discussion of the domestic support notification rules, related economic and legal issues, possible outcomes of the Doha Round negotiations, and other assumptions underlying projections of future notifications. Each country paper then has the following general design:
Parts 1-4 complete a basic description and analysis of the recent domestic support. Parts 5 and 6 provide analysis relevant to a possible Doha Round implementation period and a basis for a longer-term analysis and assessment by the authors. Broadly, in considering the future there will be different production levels and prices, and therefore expenditures for various support programs. There may be different WTO subsidy constraints, such as those being negotiated in the Doha Round. There is room for re-legislating policy instruments to meet WTO classification criteria and also for challenges to those classifications. These are the issues that are considered for each country.