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Dominique van der Mensbrugghe and Kym Anderson The World Bank Washington DC, 6 December 2005. Modeling full global trade policy reform and Doha scenarios. Three questions to be addressed.
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Dominique van der Mensbrugghe and Kym Anderson The World Bank Washington DC, 6 December 2005 Modeling full global trade policy reform and Doha scenarios
Three questions to be addressed • Why have the World Bank’s estimates of the economic gains from full global trade reform changed over time? • What is at stake currently? • How do those gains from full global reform compare with the gains from partial reform commitments that might emerge out of the Doha Development Agenda?
First question: Why do the numbers change? I. New estimate of gains from full global merchandise trade reform reflect changes in: • Growth, structural changes and policy reforms between 1997 and 2001 • An improvement in the incorporation of preferences and specific tariffs • And recent policy changes (China’s WTO accession, phase-out of textile and clothing quotas, and EU expansion). II. New estimates of gains from Doha scenarios reflect: • Interpretation of WTO’s July 2004 Framework Agreement • Ability to utilize both bound and applied tariff rates.
Key messages, however, remain the same: • Multilateral trade reform raises income and lowers poverty • Major income gains come through agricultural reform • For developing countries, South/South reform is as important as greater market access in the North • Doha can lead to substantial income gains but… • Could be gutted by widespread use of exemptions • Needs significant offers especially from developing countries to overcome binding overhang
Comparison of GTAP5 and GTAP6 tariffs(Percent, 1997 for GTAP5, 2001 & 2005 for GTAP6) Agriculture and food Apparent significant reform between 1997 and 2001… …Small aggregate impact of preferences, but more important at regional/sectoral level …Move from 2001 to 2005 mainly impacts developing countries, particularly China’s WTO accession commitments. Source: GTAP (release 5.4 and 6.0 and own trade-weighted aggregation).
Comparison of GTAP5 and GTAP6 tariffs(Percent, 1997 for GTAP5, 2001 & 2005 for GTAP6) Agriculture and food Non-agriculture (NAMA) Source: GTAP (release 5.4 and 6.0 and own trade-weighted aggregation).
Solid downward trend in applied tariffs(simple average tariffs, percent) Agriculture Non-agriculture Note: Tariffs shown are simple averages across countries and goods. Source: UNCTAD Trains database.
Real income gains from full global trade reform(Difference in real income from baseline in 2015, $billion) Developing High-income Source: Linkage model simulations.
Decomposition of baseline by region(Percent difference in real income in 2015) GTAP 6 w/ preferences (2001) GTAP 6 w/o preferences (2001) GTAP6 Baseline (2005) Source: Linkage model simulations.
Why poverty impacts have changed(Decline in number of poor ($2/day) with global full merchandise trade reform) Note: Though a large proportion of the change in the poverty impact comes from the change in the baseline, the poverty forecast for 2015 has also changed from 2.3 billion to 2.0 billion. Source: Linkage model simulations.
Second question: What is at stake currently? • What are the costs of current protection and agric subsidies, due to: • agriculture relative to manufacturing policies? • developed relative to developing countries’ policies? • and own- relative to other-countries’ policies? • within agriculture, tariffs relative to export subsidies and domestic support? • which farm commodity programs matter most? • how are cotton markets affected? • of relevance to the Cotton Initiative
Cost of current protection policies by 2015 • Global cost of current tariffs on all goods plus agricultural subsidies: $287 billion p.a. • plus cost ofservices regulations (so times 2?) • As % of GDP, cost to developing countries is 1/3rd higher than to high-income countries • and nearly twice as high for Sub-Saharan Africa • These costs are potential gains from liberalization
Intuition behind why agric market access dominates subsidies in terms of welfare and trade • 60% of PSE for OECD countries is due to ‘market price support” from tariffs and export subsidies • Need to add non-OECD agric protection, which mostly comes from tariffs • PSE only refers to primary agric; cost of support for processed agric (even net of the inflated prices of protected farm products) is even bigger than for primary agric – and all via trade measures • Trade measures are roughly twice as costly as direct producer support, because they also distort the consumer side of market See Anderson, Martin and Valenzuela, ‘The Relative Importance of Global Agricultural Subsidies and Market Access”, Dec. 2005 Download at www.worldbank.org/trade/wto
Contribution of key products to global welfare cost of agricultural protection, %
Share of global output exported, percent(excluding intra-EU trade)
Take-away messages on costs of current policies • Potential gains from further trade reform are large • DCs, esp. SSA, would gain disproportionately, notwithstanding non-reciprocal tariff preferences • But DCs would gain as much from DC reform, including own, as from rich-country reform • Agricultural reforms are the highest priority for goods, from global, DC and SSA welfare viewpoints • & market access is the main area for agric reform gains
Third question: What gains to expect from Doha? I. Less aggressive reductions (than in GEP 04) • Scenarios based on interpretation of July 2004 Framework Agreement (AgBook) • Huge improvements in ability to model scenarios due to new database that includes applied and bound tariffs II. New Doha scenarios: we examine the importance of… • Binding overhang • Sensitive and special products • Special and differential treatment
Bound Applied Big cuts in bound rates needed to reduce applied agricultural tariffs, because of “binding overhang” % av. tariff, trade-weighted Source: K. Anderson and W. Martin eds. 2006 Agricultural Trade Reform and the Doha Development Agenda, New York: Palgrave MacMillan
Tiered formula cuts for bound tariffs in agriculture Formula cuts for bound tariffs in non-agriculture… • 50% for high-income • 33% for developing, 0% for LDCs Source: Anderson, Martin and van der Mensbrugghe (2006), Chapter 12 in Agricultural Trade Reform & the Doha Development Agenda, (AgBook).
Also, big cuts needed to reduce binding overhang in domestic support(‘Water’ in aggregate measure of support) US$ billion Bound Applied —EU proposal —US proposal —G-20 proposal Source: de Gorter and Cook (2006), Chapter 7 in Trade, Doha, and Development: A Window into the issues, edited by R. Newfarmer.
Doha scenarios(Percent gain in real income from Doha scenario as share of global trade reform) High-income Developing Ag+NAMA-SDT—No exemptions, no caps, no SDT. Ag+NAMA—Same as above but includes SDT. AgOnly—Only agriculture, no exemptions, no caps, includes SDT. Ag-SSP+Cap—Same as above plus exemptions (HIC-2%, LMY-4%) and caps (200%). Ag-SSP—Same as above but no caps.
Implications if Doha negotiators are to deliver a pro-development outcome • Developing countries need to become more fully engaged by making more aggressive market access offers, in both agric and non-agric • High-income countries need to find ways to contain the welfare-limiting effect of allowing less reform for sensitive products (SPs), such as: • Restricting the % of tariff lines (e.g, ≤1%?) • Or defining the restriction in terms of imports • Insisting on more than trivial cuts in SP tariffs • Requiring large TRQ expansions for all SPs • Imposing a cap (e.g. ≤ 100%?) on all SP tariffs