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Derniers articles :

Non reprieve for small farmers in WTO draft text - - 18 July 2007
Reform of US cotton subsidies could feed, educate millions in poor west African countries - - 21 June 2007
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Voir également :


Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE : La Commission européenne fait un pas en arrière sur les services et investissements mais veut imposer la signature immédiate des APE sur les marchandises
République démocratique du Congo : 1ère édition du forum social congolais : les engagements des mouvements sociaux
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE : Agir Ici et maintenant pour arrêter les APE
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE : Act Now to Stop the EPAs!
Afrique de l’Ouest : Rencontre des syndicats de travailleurs et des organisations de producteurs agricoles sur les enjeux du développement agricole et de la sécurité alimentaire dans les négociation de l’APE entre la CEDEAO et l’UE
Sommet du G8 : De « nouvelles » annonces pour camoufler l’échec global du sommet
Forums sociaux : Déclaration du forum de Sikasso 2007
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE : Oxfam et TWN Africa interpellent l’Union Européenne en vue de l’extension de l’accès au marché si des APE ne sont pas conclus d’ici fin 2007
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE : Mobilisation mondiale contre les accords commerciaux inéquitables entre l’Europe et l’Afrique, les Caraïbes et le Pacifique
VIH - SIDA : Sortir de l’impasse : la voie du patent pool
Agriculture - Accès à la terre - Souveraineté alimentaire : Call for Action on the Crisis in Agricultural Commodities
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE : En avant avec la lutte pour arrêter les APE
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE : Forward With The Struggle to Stop The EPAs
VIH - SIDA : Unitaid en pleine contradiction vis-a-vis des génériques
Agriculture - Accès à la terre - Souveraineté alimentaire : La FAO doit revenir à son mandat initial


Site(s) web :

Third World Network Africa :
http://www.twnafrica.org/
Dakar Déclaration - Pour des politiques agricoles et commerciales solidaires :
Unité de Recherche, de Formation et d’Information sur la Globalisation :
Gender and Trade in Africa (GENTA) :
Bilaterals.org :
Public Citizen - Global Trade Watch :
Action for Southern Africa (ACTSA) :
Alternative Information and Development Centre (AIDC) :
EcoNews Africa :
Integrated Social Development Center (ISODEC) :
International Labour Research and Information Group :
International NGO Campaign on Export Credit Agencies (ECA Watch) :
Stop-Think-Resist EPAs’ campaign :
Trade and Development Studies (TRADES) :
Water Not For Sale :


Dernier(s) document(s) :

Des brevets contre des patients: cinq ans après la Déclaration de Doha - Document d’information d’ - 14 November 2006 (PDF - 373.7 kb)
L’Afrique et le Cycle de Doha, Un combat pour la sauvegarde du développement - Document d’information - 14 November 2005 (PDF - 416 kb)
Africa and the Doha Round: Fighting to keep development alive - Briefing Paper - 14 November 2005 (PDF - 276.3 kb)

Oxfam says US must reform illegal cotton subsidies, or lose credibility, following WTO panel ruling

15 October 2007
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The United States must act immediately to reform its trade distorting cotton subsidies, otherwise its credibility as an international trading partner will be undermined, and significant damage will be done to the multilateral trading system, said Oxfam today in response to a WTO panel ruling that confirmed that the US has failed to reform its program sufficiently.

Oxfam said that the US is still paying billions of dollars of such subsidies to its cotton farmers, despite having lost a WTO case against Brazil in 2005, with no encouraging signs of reform coming from the US Congress. There is little time for the US Congress to make more meaningful reforms to agricultural subsidies in order to comply with international trade rules before facing possible retaliation from Brazil.

"This ruling reinforces the need for reductions in US cotton subsidies in both the context of the Doha Round and the 2007 Farm Bill," said Isabel Mazzei, head of the Geneva office of Oxfam International. "The US cannot continue to ignore the WTO and the effects of cotton subsidies on global markets and, ultimately, the livelihoods of poor farmers in the developing world."

In 2005, the WTO ruled that US cotton subsidies violate WTO rules and gave the US until September 2005 to reduce them. In response, the USDA agreed to reform export credit programs to comply with the ruling, and Congress eliminated the Step 2 cotton export subsidy program in 2006. But these programs represent only 10% of the overall cotton subsidy programs and some of the most trade distorting programs, like the counter cyclical payments were left untouched. In September 2006, Brazil asked for a WTO “compliance panel” to determine whether the US has done enough to comply with the ruling. Today, the WTO has confirmed that the US has failed to reform its agricultural subsidies enough to comply.

Not only did the House of Representatives completely ignore the WTO ruling in passing its version of the 2007 Farm Bill, but it elected to take the brazen step of reinstating subsidies for cotton that were eliminated by the previous Congress, parsing the language to try to slide the subsidy under the WTO screen," said Raymond C. Offenheiser, president of Oxfam America. "Indeed, the cotton lobby, representing about 20,000 mostly large producers, has continued to fare well at the expense of the American taxpayer and family farmers both here and in Africa.”

According to a recent study conducted by Dan Sumner and others at the University of California Davis for Oxfam, reforming US cotton subsidies would increase world cotton prices by 6-14%, resulting in additional income that could feed an additional million children for a year or pay school fees for at least two million children living in extremely poor West African cotton growing households. A typical cotton-producing household in West Africa has about 10 family members, an average life expectancy of about 48 years and an adult literacy rate of less than 25 percent. Cotton is often the only source of cash income for these families who live on less than $1 a day per person.

"The House-passed Farm Bill will not pass muster with the WTO," said Offenheiser. "If the US is unwilling to live up to its international trade commitments, how can it expect other nations to comply with the same rules? It is now up to the Senate to rally the political will to finally align our agricultural programs with these international rules."




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