Brazil Wants All Poor Nations United Against US and EU Subsidies

Brazil’s Minister of Foreign Relations, Ambassador Celso Amorim, called on the different groups of developing nations to unite, in order to make possible the advancement of negotiations at the World Trade Organization (WTO).

"The G20 message is for unity. I’m convinced that only by preserving our unity and strengthening our natural coalition, we will be able to ensure the accomplishment of the Doha Agenda," said Amorim during the African Union’s Ministerial Conference on the WTO Negotiations. The meeting in Arusha, Tanzania, ends today.

The G20 is a group of developing nations, led by Brazil, which negotiates fairer rules for agricultural international trade. Other developing groups include the African, Caribbean and Pacific nations (ACP), and the Least Developed Countries (LDC), which together integrate the G90, the group of the poorest countries in the world.

The Minister reaffirmed the priority of agriculture negotiations at the Doha Round – series of WTO negotiations that began in the city of Doha, capital of the Emirate of Qatar, in 2001.

"Even though the development agenda encompasses a series of important subjects, I consider that the largest potential for positive changes lies with the agricultural sector. It is through agriculture that developing nations can be more competitive and capable of participating in the international market. Furthermore, it is also in the agriculture area that we find the largest distortions."

During his speech, Amorim affirmed that market access through tariff reduction and quotas is an important step, but not enough. He evaluates that these measures can be innocuous when compared to distorting practices, such as the subsidies paid by developed countries to their farmers.

As an example, he mentioned subsidies given to cotton exporters, from 1999 to 2002, by the United States. American producers got US$ 12.5 billion from the government, which represented 89.5% of the US$ 13.9 billion harvest. Brazil complained against this US practice at the WTO and won the dispute.

"It is completely unfair for our farmers to compete with the Treasury of wealthy countries. This is the reason why agriculture is at the heart of the Doha Development Agenda, and is so important for developing nations," said the Minister.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

WEG, Brazilian Engine Maker Multinational, to Boost Exports by 40%

WEG, a Brazilian multinational that is the largest producer of electric engines in Latin ...

Brazil Has US$ 42 Million for Farmers Growing Crops for Biodiesel

Over 50 thousand family farmers and their families will be able to make more ...

Tragedy: 4 Deaths and 4 Months Later Brazilian Indians Still Living by the Highway

The president of Brazil’s National Indian Foundation (FUNAI), Mércio Pereira Gomes, classified the situation ...

On the color of the President’s private parts

Is there a Brazilian fixation with saco (scrotum)? The use of the less than ...

Can Lula End Hunger?

John FitzpatrickBy John Fitzpatrick The beaming, benevolent face of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva ...

Brazil’s Petrobras Joins the Exclusive US$ 100 Billion Club

For the first time ever, Brazil's oil giant state-controlled Petrobras shares reached the value ...

Brazil Learns It Needs Partners in the Arab World to Win That Market

To conquer the Arab market the Brazilian fashion sector companies's best option is to ...

Brazil: We’ve Got Our Geniuses Too

There have been many a "genius" from other continents and countries other than from ...

Carbon Credits to Be Traded at Brazil’s Stock Exchange

The project establishing the Brazilian Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reduction Market (MBre), or carbon credits ...

Brazil’s Industry Output Is Up 3.2% Thanks to Exports

Brazilian industrial production increased in 12 of the 14 areas included in the Regional ...