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Analysing Multifunctionality

This article analyzes the impact of the Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture (URAA) on agricultural trade negotiations, with a focus on considering non-trade concerns like food security and environmental protection. It explores the concept of multifunctionality in agriculture, the jointness of desirable outputs, and the multifunctional aspects of agriculture related to the environment. The article also discusses different policy instruments for achieving environmental objectives and the need for further analysis to understand the distortions caused by domestic agricultural policies.

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Analysing Multifunctionality

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  1. Analysing Multifunctionality Uruguay Round Agreement on agriculture (URAA)-countries agreed to resume agricultural trade negotiations by late 1999, with the aim of making further reductions in trade distortions. New negotiations will take into account “non-trade concerns”, including food security and the need to protect the environment. WTO limits trade-distorting policies, not policy objectives. Policies are subject to different levels of discipline, referred to as “boxes”, according to their degree of trade distortion Green box=no, or minimal trade distorting effects. Amber box=support that is linked to production that distorts markets and trade.

  2. Multifunctionality and Traditional Agricultural Policy Goals • There are several externalities/non-food functions that result from the production of food, and can have both positive and negative externalities which are not accounted for in the market. • In the multifuncitonality debate the existence of (primarily positive) externalities is used as justification for government intervention. • However, multifunctional services do not necessarily require government provision. In some instances club goods provide an alternative. Organisations like the Nature Conservancy, through admissions and membership fees, finance the preservation of unique ecological niches. • Membership in WTO makes member countries accountable for these international “spill over” effects. It constrains domestic policies to being targeted to domestic markets and to be “minimally trade distorting.” • Multifunctional services are typically local in nature. Thus one size-fits-all policies set at the national level are inefficient.

  3. Agricultural price support programs are an inferior means to multifunctional ends because they distort production and trade. • Thus there is the requirement that domestic policies be minimally trade-distorting prevents one country’s domestic policy from adversely affecting resource allocation in other countries. Jointness of Desirable Outputs and Agricultural Production • In the multifunctionality debate, “jointness” has been used to characterize a production relationship where two outputs can be produced only simultaneously. • Some countries have used the joint product concept to argue that production of a non-food output is linked to production of the agricultural commodity. They claim that production-linked payments are necessary to obtain socially desired non-food outputs. • Because production of the agricultural commodity is required to create a by-product, then it is equally efficient to target policies toward production of either the agricultural commodity or the by-product. • The “jointness” argument falls apart when agricultural production is not the only possible source of providing the amenity.

  4. Multifunctional Aspects of AgricultureThe Environment • Three main functions of agriculture-environment, food security and rural development. • Many countries cite positive environmental externalities as a rational for government support of their agricultural sectors. • Determining the appropriate amount of the positive or negative externality requires a trade-off between all benefits and all costs. • For both positive and negative externalities, the costs of policies are generally easier to measure than benefits. • In terms of environmental policy instruments government based schemes may not be efficient. A market-based approach that relies on private insurance to accomplish environmental goals, at no or minimal cost to the government, may be able to achieve the same level of adoption at less cost.

  5. Instruments for Modifying Levels of the Environmental Functions Public Cost share (EQIP) Regulation (pesticide use restrictions) Land set aside payments (CRP) Taxation of inputs Tax reductions Private Land buyouts (National Preservation Trust, Ducks Unlimited) Insurance Emission trading Performance bonding • These instruments are more directly targeted to achieving environmental objectives than production-linked instruments that have incidental environmental impacts.

  6. Summary • Economic arguments under multifunctionality hinge on the existence of an exclusively joint relationship between agricultural production and non-food outputs. • In reality, most non-food outputs can be produced independently of agriculture and a range of policy instruments and private actions are available to achieve each objective related to non-food outputs. • The WTO respects member country sovereignty and does not evaluate the merits of agricultural policy objectives. • The degree of international spillovers or distortions from domestic agricultural policies emerges as the critical question for international trade agreements. • Further analysis is needed to identify the types and magnitudes of distortions from different types of domestic policies.

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