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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Wednesday, November 14, 2001 |
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France backs support to rural development
By Our Special Correspondent
CHENNAI, NOV. 13. State support to ``rural development", which is
an important issue for both India and Europe, should remain in
the ``green box" (of allowable, non-actionable subsidies) of the
World Trade Organisation (WTO) regime, as distinct from direct
subsidy granted to farmers, the French Ambassador, Mr. Bernard de
Montferrand, said here today.
Declaring that Europe had honoured its commitment under the
Uruguay Round to reduce by 36 per cent over six years its
subsidies to the farm sector, Mr. Montferrand said (direct)
subsidies were in vogue in both India and France in view of the
``volatility" of prices of agricultural produce and the
vulnerability of the farm sector to the vagaries of the weather.
Mr. Montferrand, who was addressing a meeting organised by the
Confederation of Indian Industry-Southern Region (CII-SR), said
it was a right decision to reduce the extent of these (direct)
subsidies to prevent distortion of the market, but efforts should
at the same time be made to improve the ``rural environment",
including roads and other infrastructure, in a way that does not
influence the market, ``that is to say, grant green box
subsidies".
The implementation of the Uruguay Round commitment on farm
subsidies had led to a ``revolution" in the European Union's
Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) and ``hurt" European farmers.
Import of agricultural products by Europe exceeded the aggregate
of farm imports by the U.S., Canada, Japan, Australia and New
Zealand.
This would hardly have been possible if the European farm market
was closed to the outside world. The Ambassador said Europe's
operation of its farm sector policy had ``a lot of transparency"
because of the requirement of reporting to the European
Parliament.
Similarly, in textiles, quotas of developing countries had
already been removed to the extent of 50 per cent and some
enhancement of quotas more than envisaged in the Uruguay Round
had also been agreed upon, the Ambassador said.
Emphasising the advantages offered by the WTO as a rule-bound
multilateral forum as distinct from plurilateral or unilateral
mechanisms, Mr. Montferrand said the organisation was not a
``bureaucratic" mechanism imposed from above but on created by
member-countries themselves in their own interest. The fact that
on an average the rulings of the dispute settlement mechanism in
the WTO went 50:50 per cent in favour/against complainant
countries showed that the organisation represented a balance of
interests.
He called for continuation of the cultural exception for cinema
from the WTO regime (namely, MFN treatment and national
treatment) under the General Agreement on Trade in Services
(GATS) in view of the need to preserve the cultural identity and
heritage of member-nations by allowing State support to domestic
cultural products.
Mr. Montferrand listed infrastructure, food processing,
information technology (IT) and consumer goods as areas in which
French companies had plenty to offer to industry in Tamil Nadu.
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