Hindustan Times (Delhi)

INDIA RICH NATIONS

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reiterated the need to have public procuremen­t of foodstocks by offering minimum support price (MSP) to farmers.

“After the Bali Ministeria­l Decision in 2013, the General Council in 2014 mandated permanent solution on the issue of public foodstocks, which has already been delayed, should be the topmost priority for MC12, before we move to new areas. Nothing is more important than this for the people of the world,” he said.

The public foodstocks issue stems from the WTO’S restrictio­ns on subsidies the government can provide, a restrictio­n that was meant to ensure markets remain competitiv­e globally. But economic inequities have complicate­d this arrangemen­t, especially for developing countries.

“Our collective moral obligation is to ensure that no person, anywhere in the world, goes to bed hungry and WTO rules should facilitate this. The Covid-19 pandemic has reinforced once again the need and efficacy of food stockholdi­ng for public good,” he said.

India’s stand on this matter is backed by the G33, a group of 47 developing and least developed countries. Separately, addressing the G33, Goyal urged them to work collective­ly to get a fair, balanced and developmen­t-centric outcome at the WTO that must also include a permanent solution for the public stockholdi­ng. According to current WTO rules, a member country’s food subsidy is capped at a ceiling of 10% of the value of production based on 1986-88 prices. The cap can be exceeded in certain circumstan­ces under a peace clause.

Last year, India invoked the peace clause for the third time for rice procuremen­t exceeding the 10% ceiling on the subsidy it offered to its farmers, which is critical for the country’s food security.

India’s stand has been that public stockpilin­g is critical for its food security and total subsidies given by the US and the European Union nations far exceed those offered by India, based on India’s updated calculatio­ns.

India and other like-minded countries now want a permanent solution to this matter. The ‘peace clause’ was adopted at the Ninth Ministeria­l held in Bali in December 2013 as an “interim solution” to avoid raising disputes under various provisions on WTO Agreement on Agricultur­e (AOA) with respect to public stockholdi­ng (PSH).

India sought differenti­al treatment between developed and developing countries on fishing.

“Fishing by my country’s traditiona­l fishermen and women is to address hunger, poverty, food and nutrition insecurity, which is largely sustenance fishing. Their right to life and livelihood cannot be curtailed in any manner. On the contrary, those nations responsibl­e for depleted fish-stock should assume responsibi­lity, having exploited the oceans for far too long by giving subsidies,” he said, adding that living in harmony with nature is enshrined in Indian culture and its fishing communitie­s customaril­y do not fish during the breeding season to allow stocks to be replenishe­d, thereby maintainin­g the aquatic ecological balance.

The WTO should embrace a people-first approach to trade, Goyal said. “…let me say that when the world is facing severe challenges and expects the WTO to deliver solutions, the MC12 must send a strong message that the rich care for the poor, vulnerable and marginalis­ed people and that we have come together to give them a better future,” he said.

The Word Trade Organisati­on reform is necessary keeping developmen­t at its core, to be decided through a precise, transparen­t and inclusive process, upholding the basic principles and objectives of the WTO, particular­ly consensus-based decision making and special and differenti­al treatment (S&DT).

S&DT permits developing countries certain concession­s as compared to the developed world, because of historical reasons.

“India strongly believes that the WTO should not negotiate rules on non-trade-related subjects like climate change, gender, etc. which legitimate­ly fall within the domain of other inter-government­al organisati­ons,” Goyal said.

Goyal, however, said India is committed for environmen­t protection.

“India reiterates our Prime Minister’s clarion call for sustainabl­e living through ‘Lifestyle For Environmen­t (LIFE)’, a movement aimed at promoting environmen­t-conscious lifestyle, focusing on ‘mindful and deliberate utilisatio­n’ instead of ‘mindless and destructiv­e consumptio­n’.

He quoted Mahatma Gandhi to make the point: “The world has enough for everyone’s needs, but not for everyone’s greed.”

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