1 / 11

International agricultural trade rules and global challenges facing Europe

International agricultural trade rules and global challenges facing Europe. Niek Koning Farm policy analyst (emeritus Wageningen University). A bit of history : John Maynard Keynes & global commodity markets.

zita
Download Presentation

International agricultural trade rules and global challenges facing Europe

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. International agricultural trade rules and global challenges facing Europe Niek Koning Farm policy analyst (emeritus Wageningen University)

  2. A bit of history:John Maynard Keynes & global commodity markets • In 1928, globaloversupplyslashedthebuying power of commodity exportingcountriescausing exports of industrialcountriestoplummet • The ensuingdownwardspiralentailedthe Great Depression Nazi takeover in Germany  World War II • Keynes mastermindedthe 1944 Bretton Woods Conference thatlaidthe foundations forthepostwarinternationaleconomic order • His leadingidea: market economy is unstableandshouldbestabilizedtoprevent new disasters • His blueprint included a buffer stock system forstabilizinginternational commodity markets

  3. Andtoday? Commodity market instabilitystill has disruptiveeffects

  4. Andtoday? Commodity market instabilitystill has disruptiveeffects Besides, we are facedwith new agricultural-trade-relatedglobalchallenges: • Populationbomb in Africa • Climate change • Risk of increasedglobal food scarcity

  5. Andtoday? Commodity market instabilitystill has disruptiveeffects Besides, we are facedwith new agricultural-trade-relatedglobalchallenges: • Populationbomb in Africa • Climate change • Risk of increasedglobal food scarcity Ad 1: Populationbomb in Africa • UN medium scenario: Africanpopulationfrom 1.2 to 4.4 billionby 2100 • May causeuncontrollablemigration • Onlypro-pooreconomicgrowthcandefusethistime bomb • Involveseffective incentives forhouseholdstoreducetheiroffspring • Pro-poorgrowthrequiresgovernment support forsmallholderinnovation • Agricultural development is needed as a starting motor but is hamperedby market failures • It requiresa policy U-turn in Africa, but alsostabilization of internationalcommodity marketsandanunalienableright forpoorcountriestoprotecttheir farmers • Poorcountriescan’tuse direct payments, only input subsidies and import tariffs

  6. Andtoday? Commodity market instabilitystill has disruptiveeffects Besides, we are facedwith new agricultural-trade-relatedglobalchallenges: • Populationbomb in Africa • Climate change • Risk of increasedglobal food scarcity Ad 2: Climate change • Better farm practices (including practices that restore soil carbon) can reduce agriculture’s net emission of greenhouse gases as well as raise crop yields • International traderulesshouldallowcountriestofavoursuchpractices • Right to keep domesticprices at a level where farmers canuseclimate-friendlymethods • Right torequirethatimported farm products are climate-friendlyproduced • N.B.: Greenhouse gas emissions have global, notjustdomesticenvironmentaleffects. (Sowhyshould we beobligedto import commoditiesproducedin waysthathurtus?)

  7. Andtoday? Commodity market instabilitystill has disruptiveeffects Besides, we are facedwith new agricultural-trade-relatedglobalchallenges: • Populationbomb in Africa • Climate change • Risk of increasedglobal food scarcity Ad 3: Possibleincrease in global food scarcity • ‘Industrial Revolution’ was a Fossil Fuel Revolution • Substitution of fossil for living biomass in energy & materials • Increase in global farm output through fertilizer and motorized transport / irrigation • This Fossil Fuel Revolution is now gradually being exhausted, while the rise of new middle classes & poverty-driven population growth continue raising global demand • Reverse substitution, increased scarcity of land & water, much harder to raise yield potential of crops • Gap filling is notenough! Preventingscarcityrequiresinnovationsthatallowquantumleaps in living biomassproductionand make energy & materials carbon-independent • Apart from public investment in research, thisrequiresstabilization of international commodity & energy marketstoreduce investment risk

  8. Andtoday? Commodity market instabilitystill has disruptiveeffects Besides, we are facedwith new agricultural-trade-relatedglobalchallenges: • Populationbomb in Africa • Climate change • Risk of increased global food scarcity In itself, a gradualincreasein global food pricesmightnotbedisastrous… …but whatifcontinuingpoverty, soaringpopulationgrowthandclimatewill have turnedAfricainto a powder keg… …andthe trend change in food marketsinteractswitha cyclic pricefluctuationtocreate extreme rises in food pricesthatcausesthekeg toexplode?

  9. Inplicationsforinternationaltraderules • International commodity marketsshouldbestabilized • International buffer stocks (à la Keynes), supplementedbytradequotas (minimum import & maximum export) andflexiblebiofuel mandates toprevent buffer stock overflowing • Countriesshouldbeallowedtostabilizeand support theirdomesticagriculturalprices • Poorcountriesshould have anUNALIENABLE right toprotecttheir farmers • Dumping of surplusesandcrowding-out of importsshouldbepreventedbymultilaterallyagreedtradequotas, notbyrestrictingdomesticpricepolicies • Countriesshouldbeallowedtorequirethatimported farm products are produced in a climate-friendly way

  10. Thus far, debates on CAP reform andinternationalagriculturaltraderules have been dominatedbymercantilist export desiresandtug-of-war between European regions… …Isn’tit time togive more weighttothe real globalchallengesfacing Europe? N.B.: A multilateralframeworkthatallows Europe torehabilitateagriculturalprice policy as thegeneralfarm income policy instrument support wouldalso help Europe topurifyitsinternalregional politics (byeconomizing on direct paymentsandusingthemforlessfavouredareasand real agro-environmental services only)

  11. Thanks! For elaborationsee:

More Related