Trade liberalisation policies, intra-regional trade and opportunities for sustainable agricultural development.
Hussain, Zakir ; Qureshi, Riaz Hussain ; Jehangir, Waqar A. 等
1. INTRODUCTION
Many of the Near East (NE) countries are currently opening their
agricultural markets at three distinct but interacting levels:
unilateral liberalisation, regional integration schemes and multilateral
trade liberalisation. These changes hold important implications for
intra- and extra-regional trade, use of agricultural resources and
sustainability of agricultural development in the NE countries.
Unilaterally, and since the late 1980s, most countries of the
region have liberalised their agriculture sectors by eliminating or
reducing input subsidies, removing or reducing guaranteed producer
prices, reducing the number of subsidised commodities and liberalising
the exchange rate and the trade regime. Most of the implicit and
explicit subsidies for agricultural inputs and outputs were withdrawn.
However, some of the NE countries were able to continue supporting
agriculture mainly for food security reasons. Experiences showed that
domestic reform is necessary but not sufficient condition for economic
growth.
Agricultural trade liberalisation is also taking place in the
context of several Regional Trading Agreements (RTAs) most important
among which are the Arab Free Trade Area (AFTA), the Gulf Co-operation
Council (GCC), the Arab Maghreb Union (AMU) and the EU-Mediterranean
Agreements (Table 1). Despite lack of clear and significant success,
regional integration continues to be an issue of great concern in the
Near East and promotion of intra-regional agricultural trade remains key
objective in all RTAs in the region. The current developments in the
international economic environment including the new rules of
international trading system set by the Uruguay Round Agreement (UR),
the EU-Mediterranean Agreements (EMA), and the proliferation of
regionalism world-wide bring regional co-operation in the Near East
again to the forefront.
The most remarkable development in the agricultural trade
liberalisation process is the accession of many NE countries to the WTO and the commitments they made under its various agreements, particularly
the Agreement on Agriculture (AoA) and the Agreement on the Application
of Sanitary and Phyto-sanitary Measures (SPS). Although the commitments
made by the NE countries in these agreements are less binding than those
made in unilateral reforms and regional trading agreements, they are
more binding and long-lasting.
The Uruguay Round was a turning point in the evolution of
agricultural policy. For the first time, a large majority of countries
agreed a set of principles and disciplines to reduce the trade
distortions caused by agricultural policies. Several WTO Agreements are
directly related to the agricultural sector. Despite progress achieved
in the implementation of these agreements, the international trading
system remains unbalanced. Moreover the complexity of import regimes and
of accessing tariff rate quotas as well as the costs of complying with
SPS and TBT agreements continue to create obstacles to market expansion
which may be insurmountable especially for small economies.
The negotiations for continuing the reform process were launched in
February 2000 and are now well advanced. The vast majority of developing
countries entered the Uruguay Round with under-developed agricultural
sectors and insufficient resources to raise productivity and output in
line with their food needs and production potential. Their farmers were
forced to compete with the treasuries of the world's richest
countries in export markets and in their home markets. While consumers
in developing countries could be said to "benefit" from the
availability of subsidised supplies, the situation was unstable and
unsustainable.
There is growing concern that liberalisation of agricultural trade
will have a wide ranging impact on the environment. Trade liberlisation
will affect production and consumption patterns with associated
environmental issue. Liberalised agricultural trade and the
corresponding new rules will increase volume of international trade and
create a paradigm shift in regional production patterns. This will in
turn affect the environmental quality with attendant impacts (both
positive and perhaps more negative) on NE countries which are already
confronting environmental issues. The interrelationship and
interdependence of trade liberalisation and environment is a widely
debated issue in the NE countries.
This document intends to discuss the trade liberalisation policies
and their implication for intra-regional trade and sustainable
agricultural development in NE countries and to recommend practical
actions for the Governments and FAO.
2. SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT AND INTERRELATED ENVIRONMENTAL AND TRADE ISSUES
The World including the NE Region is witnessing climatic changes.
The last 150 years were characterised by the improvements of modern
irrigation. This seems to be winding down. The cultural, economic and
political forces that shaped this era are being realigned. On the
economic front, irrigation expansion in many areas has reached the point
of diminishing returns. The NE countries are no exceptions and are more
vulnerable to such global climatic and trade changes because of their
ecology and narrow resource base. There is a long list of issues
confronting the NE agrarian and production base. The most striking
challenges are water scarcity, environmental degradation, production
instability and food insecurity, and trade related issues.
2.1. Environmental Degradation and Water Scarcity
Water scarcity for irrigation is becoming a factor in sustainable
production for many of the important food-producing countries in the
Near Region (Egypt, Pakistan, Iran, and Morocco). In many NE countries
(Yemen, Syria, Saudi Arabia) farmers are pumping ground water faster
than nature is replenishing it, causing a steady drop in water table.
Groundwater over-pumping may be the single biggest threat to NE
agriculture. Over-tapped rivers are noticed and the consequences are
fairly visible. Ground water overdraft is even more serious problem.
Global warming will further exacerbate the issue of water insecurity in
NE countries. The pace of dam building is slowing down because of the
resource constraints, environmental concerns and regional conflicts
(Kala Bagh dam in Pakistan). The surface waters though deficit, if
managed properly, could only ensure the sustainability of agriculture.
Thus water productivity, getting more crops per drop, seems to be the
agricultural frontier for NE countries in the 21st century. The options
for improving irrigation water productivity involve technical,
managerial, institutional, and agronomic aspects.
Of all the environmental degradation, the most threatening is the
scourge of salt, where Southern Iraq is a clear example. The share of
salt affected area in the total irrigated area is 26 percent, 30
percent, and 33 percent in Pakistan, Iran and Egypt respectively. The
problem is also noticed in the Gulf countries. Pakistan and the Aral Sea basin countries have two of the world's most intractable salt
problems. This twined with water logging is threatening the very natural
resource base of many NE countries. The situation is further aggravated with the excessive use of fertiliser and pesticide use as result of crop
intensification. The use of fertiliser and pesticide has recently
declined. Yet there is need to encourage more bio-fertilisers and
bio-pesticides use in order to control environmental damage.
The production instability and food security are inter-related.
Most of the rain-fed agriculture is experiencing erratic cereal
production. The production instability index (coefficient of variation)
is 29 percent for all NE countries. The highest variation is in UAE (85
percent) and Morocco is 55 percent. Major variation is attributed to
yields of crops. By and large all NE countries are food deficit and
fulfil their food requirements from imports. Neither the UR AoA nor the
definition makes any reference to income levels, poverty, or employment
generated by agriculture in these countries. Given the centrality of
agriculture to the livelihoods of the world's poor, this is a
serious omission. In the light of this, and international
community's undertaking at the World Food Summit, food security
should have figured far more explicitly and prominently in UR AoA. At
present most of the NE countries, having per capita water available
below 1700 [M.sup.3] are net food importers (Table 2). Water long left
of the food security equation, may now be driving it. As domestic
competition for water spills into international competition for grain,
it will be the poor, of these food deficit nations that lose out. Thus
litigation water has to play a key role in meeting this challenge in all
NE countries.
2.2. High Commodity Concentration of Agricultural Trade
Agricultural trade in the Near East is characterised by high
commodity concentration: high dependence on food imports and dominance
of fruit and vegetables in the regions agricultural exports. Both
characteristics have direct bearing for the use of the limited
agricultural resources in the region.
High Dependency on Food Imports. For the region as a whole, imports
of cereals as a proportion of the total annual consumption, expanded
from 15 percent in 1970-75 to 33 percent in 1980-85 and slowed only
slightly to 30 percent in 1990-96 and again slightly increase to 33
percent in the year 1997-99. The import dependence vary considerably
among the countries. In 1997-99, for instance, Egypt, Algeria, Yemen and
the Gulf states imported over 50 percent of their requirements of wheat
and wheat flour, the staple food in these countries. High dependence on
food imports means that countries are exposed to some risks. Ability to
import is, therefore, an essential component of a sustainable food
security in the region. The LIFDCs in the region in particular are
facing difficulties in developing adequate foreign exchange earnings to
finance food imports.
Multilateral reforms are also expected to leave a negative impact
on food aid and subsidised food exports to the region. By virtue of the
high import dependence access to concessional food imports is extremely
important for many Near East countries to supplement their domestic
supplies. In the past, countries in the region benefited from low world
prices and the subsidised exports associated with food and the export
subsidy and credit programmes of the EU and the US. During the early
1990s, a large part of US wheat exports to the Middle East and North
Africa countries was covered under the Export Enhancement Programme
(EEP). Since 1995, however, the volume of subsidised exports declined
sharply.
The multilateral liberalisation of agriculture therefore carries
the risk of increasing food import bills, but for several reasons, the
feared changes in international food prices as a result of the Uruguay
Round have not really materialised so far. The sharp increase in cereal
prices during 1995-96, however, was related partly to the Uruguay Round.
The experience of the NE countries with this price hike, though,
demonstrates the kind of economic and political risks associated with
high import dependence in the region. Some countries managed to cope
with the increase while others were forced to cut down their import
volumes. Attempts by some countries to adjust to the increase in world
cereal prices have resulted in public unrest.
Dominance of Fruit and Vegetables in the Regions' Agricultural
Exports. Live animals, cotton lint, pulses and cereals are principal
agricultural exports for few countries in the Near East, while exports
of fruit and vegetables are important for almost all the countries in
the region. On average, exports of fruit and vegetables constituted
about 40 percent of the region's total value of agricultural
exports during 1992-96. This share exceeded 50 percent in Algeria,
Lebanon, Morocco, and Islamic Republic of Iran. These shares are
expected to increase further in the future as the growing scarcity of
water may drive many countries to shift further to the production of
fruit and vegetables, which have a relatively high returns to water use.
The main external market for fruit and vegetables is the EU.
Tariffs on fruit and vegetables in the EU vary by product, season and
country of origin, with higher tariffs being imposed during the periods
when imports compete with domestic production. Many countries from the
region claimed that the implementation of the Uruguay Round did not
result in tangible improvements in market access for their fruit and
vegetables. Most of the fruit and vegetables in the EU are protected by
the 'entry price' system, which appears, in most of the cases,
to provide protection of the same magnitude as that provided by the
'reference price' system under old CAP.
Fruit and vegetables exports, however, should benefit from the
implementation of the SPS Agreement, since these have been subjected to
the greatest uncertainty in the past in terms of phyto-sanitary
standards. But no clear improvement in this respect has been felt so
far.
3. INTRA-REGIONAL TRADE
Intra-regional trade in the NE was seen as a vehicle for improving
national and regional food security and for enhancing utilisation of
region-wide agricultural resources. Several arguments have been advanced
in support of promoting regional co-operation in agriculture in the Near
East. First, given their small economic size--all countries in the Near
East together account for less than 4 percent of world agricultural
trade-enhancing trade among themselves would expand trade with third
countries and would eventually increase their share of global trade.
Thus, greater co-operation among Near East countries should be
recognised as a prerequisite to the integration with the global economy.
Second, there is some good potential for regional exchange on
agriculture products that has not been exploited so far. Countries of
the region need to broaden their production base on a complementary
rather than competitive basis, improve their resource use efficiency and
exploit economies of scale.
There are a number of other cogent factors that would augur well
for greater co-operation among Near East countries in agricultural trade
matters. These include: (a) the ongoing unilateral policy reforms in the
region will provide a new impetus to trade, production and investment
along each country comparative advantage and thereby promote an
efficient division of labour both at the regional and international
levels; (b) regional co-operation is seen as an appropriate instrument
for bargaining more effectively within the World Trade Organisation
(WTO) and in bilateral negotiations with larger and more developed
countries; and (c) with the accession of 16 countries from the region to
the WTO all existing RTAs not concurring with the WTO rules would need
to be adjusted, which, in almost all the cases, necessitates further
liberalisation of regional markets.
The major RTAs (Table 1) in the Near East include the Greater Arab
Free Trade Area, the Agreement for Facilitation and Promotion of
Intra-Arab Trade, the Council for Arab Economic Unity (CAEU), the
Economic Co-operation Organisation (ECO) the Gulf Co-operation Council
(GCC) and the Arab Maghreb Union (AMU). The EU agreements with some
countries from the region are of two types. First, interim agreements
leading to the formation of customs unions and at a final stage to full
accession into the EU. Countries having such agreements are Cyprus,
Malta and Turkey. Second, limited free trade area agreements
(Euro-Mediterranean Free Trade Area) are based on non-reciprocity, but
also include some elements of preferential treatment particularly in
agricultural products. Agreements under the Euro-Mediterranean Free
Trade Area have been concluded with Egypt, Jordan, Morocco and Tunisia
and are currently being negotiated with Algeria, Lebanon and Syria.
Despite all these regional and sub-regional integration agreements,
the performance of intra-regional trade including agricultural trade,
remained low and stagnant due to the following constraints: (a) low
share of intra-regional trade in total trade; (b) high geographical
concentration; and (c) high commodity concentration with limited
exchange of cereals. In the 1980s, live animals, meat, fish and fish
products were predominantly directed to regional markets, while
vegetables, fruits and agricultural raw materials such as cotton reveal
a clear extra-regional orientation. Pakistan and Turkey supplied not
less than 50 percent of the intra-regional exports of cereals, which, in
the case of Pakistan, is mainly rice. Somalia and Sudan are the major
suppliers of live animals, while meat is supplied mostly by Turkey and
Syria.
The impact of RTAs on intra-regional trade, despite the many
provisions offered for the removal of trade barriers among member
countries of the above trade-related co-operation agreements, was
limited and marginal. The share of the Middle Eastern countries (8-9
percent) is among the lowest in the intra-regional trade (export plus
import) in the total trade. The present regional economic co-operation
mechanisms might be necessary but are not sufficient devices for the
expansion of intra-regional trade. Therefore, any liberalisation efforts
would have little effect on intra-regional trade. It is important to
investigate whether or not poor intra-regional agricultural trade is an
inevitable consequence of the prevailing economic characteristics of
countries in the region and whether greater gains can be reaped from
more appropriate forms of integration based on more conducive economic
policies and enabling trade environment.
There seems to be a greater scope for intra-regional trade in rice,
live animals, fruit, vegetables and pulses. Historically, agricultural
export flows from the Near East consisted primarily of vegetables,
fruits, rice, live animals and meat products and cotton. For wheat,
vegetable oils and sugar, however, the region remains dependent on the
outside world, and chances for intra-regional trade in these commodities
are very limited. The main intra-regional trade products are meat,
vegetables, fruit, pulses and to some extent rice. The potential trade
in cereals, however, is rather limited. It is estimated that even if
exports of wheat and sugar of all countries in the region were to be
directed only to regional markets they will not meet more than 16
percent and 9 percent of the region's requirements for two
commodities respectively.
The diversity in natural endowments among countries within most of
the existing sub-regional groupings limits the scope for exchange
between existing sub-regional grouping. Complementarity of resources and
contrast in comparative advantage are clearer between than within these
sub-regional groupings. Available data on production and trade suggest
that ECO has a clear comparative advantage in the production of cereals
(especially rice), AMU and ACC in fruit, vegetables and pulses, GCC in
poultry and East African countries (Somalia, Sudan) in meat and live
animals.
Estimates of import instability indices in Table 3 indicate that
cereal imports instability is relatively low at the regional level
compared with that of individual countries. In order to stabilise
short-run fluctuations in exports and imports, future markets could be
used at the regional level by establishing, for instance, a marketing
unit that carries out transactions on future markets.
Estimates of production stability for cereals have shown that
production levels at the regional/sub-regional levels were much more
stable than those at the individual country levels (Table 3). Almost all
countries in the region recorded instability indices greater than 15
percent, with about two thirds of these countries recording instability
indices greater than 25 percent, while for the region as a whole, the
instability index is only 10 percent, suggesting that regional
co-operation could reduce production fluctuations significantly and all
countries will gain as a result. Establishing an early-warning system
and exchanging information on food production prospects could be viable
options to deal with production instability.
Despite the relatively good potential for economic co-operation in
agriculture, and the several RTAs implemented over the last 2-3 decades,
the potential benefits remained untapped, with intra-regional trade
performed poorly. All forms of integration efforts have been faced with
complicated structural and policy obstacles. The existing active
sub-regional arrangements have yet to demonstrate their vitality in
agriculture. The major constraints and challenges facing intra-regional
agricultural trade in the Near East are: (a) little diversity in
agricultural products; (b) the choice of integration approach; (c)
non-tariff barriers; (d) insufficient trade supporting services; and (e)
divergent political and economic interests [Hag Elamin (1998)]. (1)
It seems imperative for the NE countries to develop and take a
position in wide range of agricultural trade issues concerning their
negotiations with the rest of the world. The common regional stand will
carry a weight in global trade negotiations. The existing regional and
sub-regional groupings can play a vital role for developing a common
agenda and strategy in the international trade milieu. The promotion of
intra regional trade will also serve as a vehicle for food security in
the NE countries. There is a demonstrated need to develop integrated
regional approach for agricultural trade to hedge against rising food
prices and associated risk and uncertainties confronting the NE
countries.
4. EXPERIENCE WITH IMPLEMENTING WTO AGREEMENT ON AGRICULTURE
All countries in the Near East region, being members of the WTO or
not, are concerned about the multilateral negotiations on agriculture.
However, the agricultural and economic systems of the Near East
countries vary widely, since their interest and concerns about the
multilateral negotiations on agriculture are hardly similar. Some are
exporters of temperate products, some export tropical products while
others have virtually no agricultural exports. Many trade liberalisation
experiences and policy options could be drawn based on the
implementation of the AoA in the NE.
Of the 31 NE countries, only 16 are members of the WTO and 6 are
observers, of which 4 have applied for accession. Four of the observers
have applied to join the WTO and most of the remaining are seriously
considering of applying for membership. Kazakhstan is at an early stage
of negotiations to WTO. In general, NE countries have not been faced
with undue difficulties in meeting their AoA commitments during the
period 1995-2000. On domestic support, the overwhelming majority of
developing countries have reported zero or less than de minimis total
base AMS levels (Table 4). Most of these countries have no reduction
commitments on domestic support but they do not have WTO
"rights" to use "amber box" support in excess of the
de minimis level in future. On market access, most of the NE countries
secured high tariff bindings for most of their agricultural products,
though some of them bound at low levels.
5. OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN THE
CONTEXT OF THE NEW NEGOTIATIONS ON AGRICULTURE
Opportunties and challenges facing agriculture in the NE in the
context of the WTO negotiations on agriculture have been expressed
widely in several proposals submitted to the new negotiations on
agriculture. Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, Pakistan and Turkey have submitted
comprehensive proposals covering many aspects of the AoA, while some
others (besides Egypt and Morocco, Djibouti, Mauritania and Tunisia)
have done so through the WTO African Group. These proposals have
articulated clearly the issues and concerns facing them and contain
specific proposals for negotiations. Issues arising from the
implementation of the UR agreements, as well as those emerging for the
forthcoming negotiations on agriculture, are outlined below from the
perspective of the ability of the NE countries to join WTO in more
favourable terms, enhancing sustainable use of water resources in the
region, developing domestic capacities in agriculture, improving access
to foreign markets and enhance the domestic food security.
5.1. Accession to the WTO
The overwhelming concern for the non-WTO members has been the terms
of accession to the WTO. Five Near East countries (Algeria, Lebanon,
Kazakhstan, Oman, Saudi Arabia and Sudan) have applied to join the WTO,
and are facing some institutional challenges in their accession process.
Non-WTO member countries of the region are also concerned about the
setting of the terms of accession post-Uruguay Round treating countries
on the basis of the most recent three years for which data were
available and hard negotiations on the tariff ceiling bindings were seen
as being tighter conditions than previous negotiations. For instance,
Saudi Arabia has faced the possibility of not being treated as a
developing country, which if applied would deprive Saudi Arabia from all
the privileges offered to developing countries in the context of the
special and differential treatment. A country like Kazakhstan faces a
special problem, given the transitional nature of its economy.
5.2. Sustainable use of Water Resources
Water use issues increasingly require integration into analysis of
agriculture and trade. This is particularly true in the Near East
countries, where agricultural production rests on a relatively scarce
water resources. The water issue relates to the multilateral trade
reforms in three important aspects. First, scarcity of water means
increasing dependence on the international market for supply of basic
food and other agricultural commodities. Therefore, increases in world
market prices for agriculture products, as a result of multilateral
trade liberalisation or otherwise, may imply increased drain on water
resources. Trade liberalisation in the context of the WTO, therefore,
needs to be taken in tandem with a reform of water and other
environmental resource prices. What is required is a judicious mix of
reforms to prices of agricultural commodities, water and land. Second,
most countries in the region provide heavy subsidies, both operational
and investment, to irrigation water. Under the existing AoA
requirements, almost all subsidies to capital investment in irrigation
could be exempted from the reduction commitment under Article 6.2 of the
UR AoA. Any further reforms within the WTO on allowance for such type of
support will have far reaching implications for agriculture in the NE.
Third, given the high dependency on rainfed agriculture with high
variability in rainfall, countries of the Near East experience heavy
fluctuations in food production. Cereal production, in particular,
remains highly variable in the region. In Sudan, Morocco and Syria, for
example, food production falls below the annual average by more than 30
percent every three to four years as a result of weather variations.
5.3. Developing Domestic Capacities in Agriculture
Enhancing the domestic capacities of the sector is crucial for the
socio-economic development of the NE countries. While the AoA
acknowledges the need for special and differential treatment (SDT) for
developing countries and has a number of provisions on the subject,
these provisions have been seen by many developing countries as falling
short of what is necessary and as failing to provide the requisite
policy flexibility. This section addresses some of the issues at stake
regarding domestic policy flexibility to develop the agricultural
potential of NE countries.
Border Protection. It is sometimes necessary to maintain a degree
of border protection in order to implement a domestic support policy by
supporting producer prices may still be supported through tariffs. In
general, the bound tariffs in most of the NE countries are sufficiently
high to allow for a considerable degree of protection at the border. (2)
However, there are issues in this area that need to be noted.
First, most NE countries chose to offer a uniform, single rate of
binding for all agricultural products. With the tariffs now bound and
facing further reductions in the new round of negotiations on
agriculture, some of these countries might need to approach tariff
reductions carefully. Second, some countries have bound their tariffs at
very low levels and consequently now have little room for manoeuvre in
the use of the tariff as a contingency measure against price
fluctuations on world markets.
Domestic Support. Although many of these countries are not
currently constrained by the domestic support provisions of the AoA,
they may find their policy options limited in the future. As mentioned
earlier, most of the countries in the region have claimed zero Base
Total AMS (Table 4). This may limit options for these countries to use
direct price support measures in the future. Besides, all countries have
submitted their AMS in domestic currency terms. The major problem of
this relates to inflation and depreciation of domestic currency that
would tend to inflate Current AMS relative to AMS commitment levels.
Some of the NE countries have been faced with difficulties in their
domestic support submissions to the WTO because of problems relating to inflation and currency depreciation.
Like many other developing countries, NE countries claim that in
order for them to develop fully their agricultural potential, the main
requirement would be a reform of policies in developed countries that
distort world agricultural markets as there is a substantial imbalance
in the levels of domestic support and export subsidies allowed to
developed countries, on the one hand, and developing countries, on the
other, under the AoA.
The major markets for the agricultural exports of the NE countries
are in the developed world, mainly Europe. For several reasons, the
implementation of the AoA commitments in the developed countries does
not seem to have created greater access opportunities for agricultural
exports from the Near East. The choice of the base year 1986-88, a
period of particularly low world price levels, has locked-in high tariff
rates period. In addition, the simple average formula adopted in the
Uruguay Round allowed developed countries to make smaller cuts on
commodities that were most directly in competition with their own
domestic production. Among these commodities are fruit and vegetables,
olive oil and pulses, which are also major exports of the Near East
region. Another significant constraint for countries of the region is
the special provision for the EU to adopt the 'entry price'
system in fruit and vegetables, such important export commodities for
the region, has limited scope for the Near East exports to the EU. In
some cases such as cucumber and tomatoes, market access declined
following the adoption of the entry price system. In addition, the
Special Safeguards (SSG) for products of fruit and vegetables, both a
price-triggered and a quantity-triggered versions, have been used.
The minimum and current access commitments made by the developed
countries also do not favour major export crops of the region. In the
EU, the biggest market for the Near East, minimum and current access
commitments were set for cuts of 'high quality' beef, pig
meat, poultry meat, eggs, butter, specified cheese and
'quality' wheat, products which are generally not exported by
countries of the region. In its minimum access commitments the EU has
aggregated all vegetables into one category and all fruit into another.
As a result of this aggregation, the quantities of imports of the EU
from each of the two categories during 1986-88 was more than 5 percent
of its base year internal consumption and as such the minimum access
commitment was not applicable. The situation could have been different
if a product by product approach had been followed.
Erosion of the value of trade preferences constitutes another
problem for the region. To the extent that tariffs reduction in the
developed countries were effective they will erode the countries'
margins of preference and cause their competitive position to
deteriorate vis-a-vis other suppliers. Tariff escalation also remained a
barrier to the processed food exports of the region. Many countries such
as Cyprus, Turkey, Lebanon, Egypt and the Maghreb countries have good
export potential for processed food products, but they are still
constrained by high trade barriers in many OECD countries. Although
tariff escalation in the fruit and vegetables sector is reduced in the
EU post-Uruguay Round, it still remains considerable (Table 5). In
addition, difficulties and high costs in complying with SPS standards in
the EU markets remain a barrier to exports from the Near East. The above
mentioned problem areas are of particular concern to the Near East
countries, for they directly affect the translation of the AoA
commitments into real trading opportunities, and most of them have
already been tabled for negotiations in the new negotiations on
agriculture.
5.4. Securing Adequate Supplies and Stable Prices for Food Products
Access to the Special Agricultural Safeguards (SSGs). World
agricultural market instability remains a major problem for NE countries
because of their high dependence on imports and the weakness of their
agricultural sectors. Thus, access of these countries to WTO-compatible
safeguard measures remains an issue of great concern to them. However,
all countries of the region, apart from Morocco and Tunisia, do not have
access to SSGs, which is simpler to use. Several NE countries have
clearly indicated in their proposal for the new negotiations on
agriculture the importance of allowing them to use SSGs in order for
them to safeguard their domestic food producers and consumers.
Operationalising the Marrakesh Decision on LDCs NFIDCs. Of the
current WTO Members from the region, two (Djibouti and Mauritania) are
among the LDCs while four others (Egypt, Morocco, Pakistan and Tunisia)
are NFIDCs, and therefore, they are eligible to receive such financial,
technical and food assistance as envisaged in the Marrakesh Ministerial
Decision on Measures Concerning the Possible Negative Effects of the
Reform Programme on LDCs NFIDCs. This Decision has yet to be
implemented. Despite the sharp increase in cereal prices in 1995-96,
which was partly due to the Uruguay Round, it had been difficult to make
use of this Decision because there was no agreement that the rise was
related to the Uruguay Round. At the same time, LDCs and NFIDCs of the
region did not seem to have benefited from the IMF Contingency and
Compensatory Financing Facility (CCFF) during 1995-96.
5.5. Promotion of Intra-regional Agricultural Trade
Changes in the policy environment in the region following the UR
AoA are expected to have pronounced effects on both the magnitude and
direction of intra-regional trade. First, the main effect of the UR AoA
on intra-regional trade will emanate from the tariffication process, as
non-tariff protection in most of the countries in the region
discriminates against agricultural products that could be competitively
supplied from other countries within the region. Hence, a tariffication
on MFN basis ensures positive effects on intra-regional trade. Benefits
of tariffication will go beyond improvement in the magnitude of
intra-trade as it may serve to improve its stability as well. Second,
reduction in import tariffs should generally encourage a region-wide
exchange of products on MFN basis, though it may have a negative impact
on the exchange within the existing economic groupings in the region
(e.g. GCC, ECO and AMU) due to the erosion of the margins of preferences
within these groupings. This current large gap between bound and applied
tariffs in many NE countries could be exploited by RTAs in the region.
Other WTO agreements such as the SPS, TBT, and TRIPS offer great
opportunity for the Near East countries to harmonise their standards and
regulations, which would provide an environment conducive to the
promotion of intra-regional trade. Indeed the most significant effect of
the UR would emerge from its rules of conduct and the general
improvement in policy discipline.
The broad scene seems to suggest that the WTO agreements, on
balance, would create limited but positive improvement in intra-regional
agricultural trade. The magnitude of the increased benefits depends a
great deal on the way each country implemented its UR commitments and on
the level of co-ordination within and between existing sub-regional
groupings.
5.6. Institutional Set-up to Address Trade- and Environment-related
Issues
Many NE countries have no formal institutional capacity to address
the trade and environmental issues and are unable to prepare necessary
documentation under the UR AoA. Given the sizable number of NE countries
for which detailed supporting tables are not available, and the analysis
based on scanty data, underestimates the prevalence of Green Box
compatible environmental programmes. Therefore, this disparity lends
support to the apprehension by many NE countries that environmental
exception to Article 6 mainly favours the developed countries. The
participatory determination, design, and implementation of product
standards, production methods, packaging and labeling requirements, are
lacking in many respects. There is lack of coordination and
institutional back up among the relevant ministries to address WTO/AoA
issues. Even at the WTO headquarters, representation of the NE countries
is at a junior level; often the officers are ignorant about rules and
regulation of the WTO. Thus institutional support both at home and
abroad is weak. NE countries should seriously consider strengthening the
institutional set up and representation at WTO should be at the
Ambassador level coupled with well-trained analytical team.
Legal and institutional capacities for planning and implementing
trade policies in the countries of the region are generally weak. In
order to be able to take advantage of and defend their rights, as well
as meet their obligations under the WTO, these countries must develop
their capacity to participate effectively in the WTO system. They should
take full advantage of the opportunities that accession to the WTO
offers, and try to focus on this issue in their future negotiations.
Since the process of proving injury and developing cases for settlement
at the Dispute Settlement bodies at the WTO is a very demanding and
expensive task for a single country to sustain, a collective action
could be the best approach.
6. SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS
Many of the Near East (NE) countries are currently opening their
agricultural markets at three distinct but interacting levels:
unilateral liberalisation, regional integration schemes and multilateral
trade liberalisation. These changes hold important implications for
intra- and extra-regional trade, use of agricultural resources and
sustainability of agricultural development in the NE countries.
Since the late 1980s, most countries of the region have liberalised
their agriculture sectors by eliminating or reducing input subsidies,
removing or reducing guaranteed producer prices, reducing the number of
subsidised commodities and liberalising the exchange rate and the trade
regime. Most of the implicit and explicit subsidies for agricultural
inputs and outputs were withdrawn. However, some of the NE countries
were able to continue supporting agriculture mainly for food security
reasons. Experiences showed that domestic reform is necessary but not
sufficient condition for economic growth.
Agricultural imports out weigh export in the region and most
countries are net food importers. During 1990-1999, agricultural imports
increased by 17 percent while agricultural export increased by 30
percent. The NE countries seem to have good export potential in high
value crops (fruits and vegetables) and fish.
The total intra-regional agricultural export for the Near East
reaches about 9 to 10 percent of the total agricultural export. The
commodity pattern of intra-regional trade is centered on few items like
live animals and fish that are also concentrated among few partners.
Most of the trading agreements in the region are effective in promoting
intra-trade relationship. Major constraints and challenges facing
intra-regional trade are: lack of diversity in agricultural products,
non-tariff barriers, the choice of integration approach, failure of
outward-orientation, lack of trading support services and divergent
political and economic interests.
Of the 31 countries of the NE Region, 16 are members and 6 are
observers of WTO. The accession to WTO is gaining ground and most of the
remaining countries are applying for membership. Those who are members
have already reduced tariff substantially (due to Structural Adjustment
Programme) and thus fulfill reduction commitments. The level of
Aggregate Measures of Support (AMS) for agriculture is either negative
or very low. The information on Sanitary and Phyto-Sanitary Measures
(SPS) in NE countries is scanty and often not available. The NE
countries have not yet developed or enacted laws governing Trade-Related
Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS). The institutional
support to address WTO issues is weak or perhaps non-existent in all NE
countries.
The experience of implementing the AoA has shown a number of basic
shortcomings in the provisions that the NE countries should consider in
the on-going negotiations: (a) inequity in the way the AoA was designed
and applied; (b) lack of recognition of the pressing need to increase
food production in NE countries; (c) no exemptions to meet food security
objectives; (d) impossibility of correcting anomalies in the tariff
structure, especially for sensitive staple crops; (e) lack of
recognition of the social impact of import increase; and f)
non-implementation of the Marrakech Decision. Therefore, it seems
exigent to bring about changes in UR AoA to provide enhanced Special and
Differential Treatment (S&D) measures in the Agreement. This will
enable NE countries to address their food security and developmental
concerns in a better way.
NE Countries are encouraged to request that Domestic Support
measures should include support to low income resource poor farmers;
measures to increase domestic production; transport spending for food
deficit areas; and higher level of de minimis level with low or zero
AMS. Market Access should include: exemption of food security crops from
reduction commitments; renegotiations of low tariff bindings related to
food security crops; availability of revised SSG to all developing
countries as part of AoA. It is recommended that NE non-member countries
must apply for accession to WTO in order to be part of the global
village. They should develop strong institutional support to prepare for
WTO negotiations and promote intra-regional trade in order to mitigate
negative effects of trade liberalisation.
The NE countries must develop their agricultural strategies based
on comparative advantage and improved resource use efficiency especially
irrigation water. They should develop TRIPS and SPS rules and
regulations to address WTO issues. FAO could continue providing
technical support for developing sustainable agricultural development
strategies with environmental and trade orientation, continue enhancing
the analytical capacity of the member countries in the trade related
policy areas, support the development of food control and safety, and
continue its support in developing regional food security programmes.
REFERENCES
Hag Elamin Nasredin (1998) The Impact of the Uruguay Agreements on
Intra-regional Agricultural Trade in the Near East. Rabat: Morocco.
FAO (2000) Opportunities and Challenges for Regional Agricultural
Trade in the Near East. (Draft Paper).
Hag Elamin, Nasredin (1908) Implementation of the Uruguay Round
Agreement on Agriculture in the Context of Emerging Issues in Food and
Agriculture Sector in the Near East. Rabat: Morocco.
World Resources (1998-99) A Guide to the Global Environments.
Environmental Change and Human Health, World Resources Institute.
Comments
I must thank the Pakistan Society of Development Economist's
management who honoured me by asking me to comment on the paper; and
also the authors who put a lot of efforts to write this paper. It is a
relevant and timely presentation on a hot topic, of trade liberalisation
and related policies.
Let me highlight the strengths of the paper:
* The scope of the paper is very large. It covers 21 Arab and 10
non-Arab near Eastern Countries, which may also be classified into
oil-rich vs. non-oil rich countries.
* Spearheading the major concerns of WTO regime especially, in
respect of Agreement on Agriculture (AoA) with the focus of food
security issues of poor and marginal families.
* A detailed and an exhaustive write up prepared either consulting
literature or making use of personnel experiences by the learned
authors.
The following is my feedback to refine the final paper:
* The title of the paper needs revision to cover the entire scope
of both inter- and intra-regional trade implications as discussed in the
contents of the paper.
* Some of the abbreviation used in the paper are presented without
explanations (for example in pages 2, 3 and others i.e., S & D,
LIFDCs MICs and DECs, etc).
* A lot of repetition of concepts in respect of AoA, SPS, TRIPS and
TBT presented for interpreting agricultural and environmental
implications. The consolidation and synthesis may be done to reduce the
volume of paper, which is already 46 pages and does not meet the
requirements of the Pakistan Society of Development Economist's
seminar proceedings. However, presently it is not reader friendly.
* As the authors clearly reiterated the importance of comparative
advantage towards the analysis of trade liberalisation policies. In the
present paper, this analysis is missing from many countries in respect
of crop, livestock and horticulture sub-sectors of the agricultural
economy to adjudge the capacity and structure of the corresponding
countries as well as across the desired regions and sub-regions as per
classification of trade purposes. This is one of the major limitations
of this paper that invites the arrays of criticism.
* For example, many data tables are borrowed from secondary source
and were not adjusted as per requisite analyses under the norms of time
series data for the perspective of policy analysis of trade
liberalisation regime.
* The classification of Near Eastern countries is not justified
according to the workable requisite regional, socio-economic and
cultural norms, ecology and trade boundaries. It should be matching with
the resource endowments and comparative advantage of the respective
countries to fetch real benefits from the available and potential crop,
livestock and high value crops in terms of market access.
* The authors specially made a note of data limitations to conduct
policy analysis in some countries concerning to environmental
indicators. A good pesticide policy paper is recently documented by the
team of PARC/NARC scientists including social and biological with the
funding assistance from UNDP/FAO entitled "Policies and Strategy
for Regional Use of Pesticides in Pakistan (2001)". It may be a
good reference for the support of policy analysis desired in this paper.
Moreover, this paper contains good information on:
--Pesticide regulatory policies;
--pesticide use externalities and the cost associated towards
society analysis; and
--an availability of information suits to determine standards of
SPS measures for the reference of WTO regime implications.
* One more recent reference pertaining to LDCs could be useful to
update the knowledge base of trade liberalisation policy analysis:
"Globalisation and the South: Some Critical Issues" by Martin
Khor, Third World Network Publication. This book discusses and could
guide reasonably to learn about an adequate range of options of when,
how and to what extent, a country should open her economy.
* The authors in the paper highlighted a proposal of institutional
capacity building but proper guidelines were lacking. As this paper
explains mostly about what is there but where, who, and how is needed to
be elaborated for meeting the real purpose of the paper. * The emphasis
on research and development (R&D) modalities need to be worked out
carefully for assuring sustainable:
--knowledge generation;
--dissemination; and
--participatory monitoring of adoption trends, etc.
* The tables presented at the end of the paper need to be checked
for showing discrepancy free presentation in terms of measure of units
and proper analysis.
Thanks for patience and attention to my comments please.
Ikram Saeed
Social Sciences Institute, National Agricultural Research Centre,
Islamabad.
(1) Hag Elamin N. (1998) The Impact of Uruguay Round Agreements on
Intra-regional Agricultural Trade in the Near East. A paper presented at
the FAO Expert Meeting on ... Rabat, Morocco.
(2) Nevertheless, for several temperate-zone products, tariffs are
much higher in developed countries.
Zakir Hussain, Riaz Hussain Qureshi, and Waqar A. Jehangir
respectively are Professor, Department of Agricultural Economics, Vice
Chancellor, University of Agriculture, Faisalabad and Senior
Agricultural Economist, International Water Management Institute,
Lahore.
Table 1
Regional Trade Agreements and Organisations for
Economic Cooperation and Trade in the Near East Countries
Organisation/Agreement Member Countries
Greater Arab Free Trade Area Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar,
Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan,
and Yemen
The convention for Facilitating Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Saudi Arabia
Trade and Regulating Transit and Syria
Trade Among Arab League
Members
fhe Agreement for Facilitation All Members or Arab League (1)
and Promotion of Intra-Arab
Trade
Council of Arab Economic Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Somalia (2),
Unity (CAEU) Kuwait, Libya Arab Jamahiriya,
Mauritania (2), Sudan (2), Syria,
UAE, Yemen
Arab Common Market (ACM) Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Libya Arab
Jamahiriya, Syria and Yemen
Economic Co-operation Afghanistan, Islamic Republic of
Organisation (ECO) Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Pakistan, (3) Turkey, Tajikistan
and Turkmenistan
The Gulf Co-operation Council Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar,
(GCC) Saudi Arabia, UAE
Arab Maghreb Union (AMU) Algeria, Libya Arab Jamahiriya,
Mauritana, Morocco, Tunisia
The Arab Co-operation Council Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Yemen
(ACC)
Organisation/Agreement Year Status
Greater Arab Free Trade Area 1997 Active
The convention for Facilitating 1953 Inactive
Trade and Regulating Transit
Trade Among Arab League
Members
fhe Agreement for Facilitation 1981 Active
and Promotion of Intra-Arab
Trade
Council of Arab Economic 1957 Inactive
Unity (CAEU)
Arab Common Market (ACM) 1964 Reactivated and
functioning
since 1998
Economic Co-operation 1985 Active
Organisation (ECO)
The Gulf Co-operation Council 1981 Active
(GCC)
Arab Maghreb Union (AMU) 1989 Active
The Arab Co-operation Council 1989 Frozen
(ACC)
(1) Members of the Arab League include Algeria, Bahrain, Djibouti,
Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libyan Arab Jamahiriya,
Mauritania, Morocco, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Syria,
Tunisia, United Arab Emirates and Yemen.
(2) Also member of the Common Market ror Eastern and Southern Afiica
(COMESA).
(3) Also member of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation
(SAARC).
Table 2
Cereal Import Dependence of NE Countries and Per Capita
Availability of Water
Cereal Import
Agriculture as Percent of
Per Capita (Irrigated) Consumption
Countries Water 1998 1998 (%) 1998
Arab Countries
Algeria 460 60 62
Bahrain
Djibouti 88
Egypt 930 86 55
Iraq 1,615 92 30
Jordan 114 75 229
Kuwait 11 60 280
Lebanon 1,315 68 195
Libya 100 87 161
Mauritania 163 92 67
Morocco 1,071 92 41
Oman 393 94
Palestine (O)
Qatar
Saudi Arabia 119 90 194
Somalia 563 97 34
Sudan 1,227 94 9
Syria 456 94 12
Tunisia 371 89 62
United Arab Emirates 64 92 463
Yemen 243 92 78
Sub-total 542 86 111
Non Arab Countries
Afghanistan 2,354 99 6
Cyprus 702
Iran 1,755 92 53
Kazakhstan 4,484 81 12
Kyrgystan 10,394 94 20
Malta 0
Pakistan 1,678 97 10
Tajikistan 11,171 92 25
Turkey 3,074 72 25
Turkmenistan 232 98 55
Subtotal 4,393 91 114
Grand-total 2,467 88 127
Source: World Resources (1998-1999) "A Guide to the Global
Environment". Environmental Change and Human Health. World
Resources Institute.
1. Annual Internal Renewable Water Resources; 2. Annual River Flow.
Table 3
Instability Indices of Agricultural Production and Trade in the Near
East, 1985-98
Production
Area
Harvested Yield Production
Near East Region 4.6 5.8 10.1
ACC 14.5 11.2 20.5
Egypt 13.4 12.2 24.0
Iraq 24.7 12.4 20.9
Jordan 22.2 28.5 261.0
Yemen 9.7 18.7 18.8
AMU 13.9 13.0 33.8
Algeria 31.8 22.3 50.3
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya 27.0 9.0 23.5
Mauritania 29.7 13.3 28.1
Morocco 10.5 37.1 43.1
Tunisia 37.5 29.3 55.7
ECO 9.2 7.2 9.2
Afghanistan 7.7 5.0 11.5
Azerbaijan 5.8 11.7 13.3
Iran, Islamic Republic of 4.8 19.0 17.9
Kazakhstan 23.0 34.5 52.4
Kyrgyzstan 6.3 16.0 19.4
Pakistan 3.9 9.1 12.8
Tajikistan 13.1 31.3 38.2
Turkey 1.4 7.7 8.3
Turkmenistan 26.6 35.2 28.0
GCC 25.5 6.3 32.2
Bahrain
Kuwait 43.7 15.7 43.1
Oman 17.8 14.9 25.9
Qatar 32.3 5.7 34.2
Saudi Arabia 25.6 8.4 32.3
UAE 41.0 31.0 65.0
Others
Cyprus 13.2 28.6 38.8
Djibouti 24.4 6.3 25.2
Lebanon 11.5 17.8 23.5
Malta 12.3 12.6 13.7
Somalia 28.6 28.7 44.0
Sudan 25.2 19.6 36.3
Syrian Arab Republic 14.2 35.4 36.1
Trade
Import Import Export
Quantity Value Quantity
Near East Region 12.1 18.5 12.4
ACC
Egypt 12.4 20.5 72.5
Iraq 51.3 47.2 208.1
Jordan 30.7 35.5 103.9
Yemen 30.2 36.4 95.4
AMU
Algeria 22.6 30.7 158.3
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya 25.6 27.3 na
Mauritania 56.3 56.6 154.4
Morocco 33.7 45.5 212.7
Tunisia 36.5 45.4 97.0
ECO
Afghanistan 35.7 47.2 na
Azerbaijan 38.0 33.1 98.7
Iran, Islamic Republic of 28.8 41.4 249.2
Kazakhstan 188.3 88.5 18.1
Kyrgyzstan 106.7 80.6 102.7
Pakistan 43.2 45.1 31.0
Tajikistan 61.7 41.4 na
Turkey 66.1 72.0 79.2
Turkmenistan 57.7 37.7 na
GCC
Bahrain 31.4 27.6 250.5
Kuwait 33.9 37.9 143.9
Oman 29.9 23.9 80.5
Qatar 19.9 18.0 117.0
Saudi Arabia 21.4 23.3 76.5
UAE 46.2 47.1 49.1
Others
Cyprus 26.9 34.4 45.2
Djibouti 15.7 22.7 204.5
Lebanon 18.1 29.6 156.6
Malta 10.6 35.9 90.8
Somalia 39.7 34.5 na
Sudan 42.7 32.8 133.6
Syrian Arab Republic 42.4 39.9 120.9
Source: Computation are based on data obtained from FAOSTAT (2000).
Table 4
Domestic Support Categories, Export Subsidies and Export Credits
(1995-99-US $ Million)
Domestic Green S&D Blue
Country Year Support Box Box Box
Bahrain 1995 3.1 0.5 2.5 0
Cyprus 1995 213.7 129.6 3.3 0
1996 216.1 128.4 3.3 0
1997 187.6 130.5 3.8 0
1998 194.7 138.5 7.7 0
Egypt 1995 75.4 68.3 7.1 0
1996 78.2 75.8 2.4 0
1997 41.2 38.8 22.4 0
1998 3.7 1.3 2.4 0
Kyrgyz Republic 1998 2.7 2.7 0 0
Malta 1995 0.5 0.5 0 0
1996 0.7 0.7 0 0
1997 1 1 0 0
1998 0.6 0.6 0 0
Morocco 1995 315.7 157 147 0
1996 552.1 378.2 145.3 0
1997 482 317.7 154.7 0
1998 446.5 283.7 149.6 0
Pakistan 1995 451.7 439.9 1 0
1996 407.9 392.4 0 0
1997 335 312.5 0 0
1998 -- -- -- --
Qatar 1995 -- -- -- --
1996 -- -- -- --
1997 -- -- -- --
1998 -- --
Tunisia 1995 122 29.5 30.6 0
1996 123.7 38.9 32.4 0
1997 128.3 43.1 39.7 0
1998 160.5 54.8 45.8 0
Turkey 1995 41.8 0 0 0
1996 972.6 0 678.9 0
1997 470.3 0 0 0
1998 594.2 0 0 0
1999 401.3 0 0 0
UAE 1996 0 0 0 0
1997 0 0 0 0
1998 0 0 0 0
1999 0 0 0 0
Export Export
Country Year Deminimis AMS Subsidies Credits
Bahrain 1995 0 na 0 ..
Cyprus 1995 0 80.7 3.4 ..
1996 8.3 76.1 3 ..
1997 3.6 49.7 1.9
1998 6.3 42.2 3.5 ..
Egypt 1995 0 na 0 ..
1996 0 na 0 ..
1997 0 na 0 ..
1998 0 na 0 ..
Kyrgyz Republic 1998 0 na 0 ..
Malta 1995 0 na 0 ..
1996 0 na 0 ..
1997 0 na 0 ..
1998 0 na 0 ..
Morocco 1995 0 11 0.6 ..
1996 0 28.7 - ..
1997 0 9.6 0.8 ..
1998 0 13.1 0.5 ..
Pakistan 1995 10.8 na 0 ..
1996 15.5 na 1.7 ..
1997 22.5 na 2.3 ..
1998 -- -- 2.8 ..
Qatar 1995 -- -- ..
1996 -- -- 0 ..
1997 -- -- 0 ..
1998 -- 0 ..
Tunisia 1995 0 62 0 ..
1996 0 53.4 1.8 ..
1997 7.2 48.2 5.4 ..
1998 6.3 53.7 6 ..
Turkey 1995 41.8 na 29.9 ..
1996 293.7 na 17.2 ..
1997 470.3 na 38.7 ..
1998 594.2 na 29.1 ..
1999 401.3 na -- ..
UAE 1996 0 na 0 ..
1997 0 na 0 ..
1998 0 na 0 ..
1999 0 na 0 ..
Source: WTO Website 2000.
AMS: Total Aggregate Measure Support.
"..": No notification received.
na: Not available.
Table 5
Uruguay Round Tariff Commitments, Select Near Eastern Countries
Bahrain (1) Cyprus Egypt Oman
Wheat 35 25 5 5
Rice 35 15 20 15
Barley 35 170 10 5
Beef 35 25 10 5
Live Sheep and Goats 35 75 10 5
Meat of Sheep and Goat 35 25 5 5
Poultry Meat 35 30 60 15
Tomatoes 35 50 20 --
Potatoes 35 53 10 10
Citrus Fruit (Orange) 35 75 60 15
Olive Oil 35 245 20 15
Other Vegetable Oils 35 58 20 15
Milk 35 25 30 75
Sugar (Cane) 35 25 20 5
Pakistan (2) Turkey Morocco Tunisia
Wheat 100 180 170 100
Rice 100 45 177 75
Barley 100 180 113 60
Beef 100 225 239 120
Live Sheep and Goats 100 20 289 180
Meat of Sheep and Goat 100 225 289 120
Poultry Meat 100 90 101 75
Tomatoes 100 49 34 150
Potatoes 100 19 34 150
Citrus Fruit (Orange) 100 54 34 200
Olive Oil 100 31 34 120
Other Vegetable Oils 100 31 17
Milk 100 180 87 180
Sugar (Cane) 100 135 168 100
Kuwait Malta
Wheat 100 40
Rice 100 24
Barley 100 26
Beef 100 40
Live Sheep and Goats 100 30
Meat of Sheep and Goat 100 40
Poultry Meat 100 36
Tomatoes 100 36
Potatoes 100 42
Citrus Fruit (Orange) 100 40
Olive Oil 100 0.0
Other Vegetable Oils 100 20
Milk 100 32
Sugar (Cane) 100 240
Source: VETO (1995) Uruguay Round Country Schedule.
(1) Bahrain maintains a bound rate of 200 percent on beer, wine and
other fermented beverages, 100 percent on tobacco and 35 percent on
the rest of the agricultural products.
(2) Pakistan has bound all its tariff rates at 100 percent.