Business Day (Ghana)

WTO issues note on trade policy developmen­ts following one year of war in Ukraine

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The World Trade Organisati­on (WTO) Secretaria­t on 2 March published a Trade Monitoring Update providing a brief factual overview of trade policy developmen­ts following the outbreak of the war in Ukraine on 24 February 2022.

The note sheds light on trade measures introduced in the context of the war, in particular in the food, feed and fertilizer sectors.

The note points out that immediatel­y following the outbreak of the war, several export restrictio­ns on wheat, barley, sugar and seeds from Ukraine and the Russian Federation were implemente­d.

Together, Ukraine and the Russian Federation are major food and agricultur­al exporters and ranked in 2021 amongst the top exporters of wheat, maize, rapeseed, sunflower seed and sunflower oil.

Additional­ly, the Russian Federation is a top supplier of fertilizer­s.

The note indicates that the fear of severe domestic shortages of basic foodstuffs appears to have pushed other countries to also introduce export restrictio­ns on these products or their close substitute­s.

The effect of these restrictio­ns on food markets and consumers globally was almost immediate. This hit consumers globally, but especially those in developing and least developed countries in Africa, the Middle East, and parts of Asia.

WTO Trade Monitoring data suggest that irrespecti­ve of existing export restrictio­ns on food, feed and fertilizer­s prior to the outbreak of the war in Ukraine, a noticeable spike took place after 24 February 2022.

Since the beginning of the war and up to 28 February 2023, 96 export restrictio­ns on essential agricultur­al commoditie­s were identified to have been applied by 29 WTO members and six observers. Of these, 88 applied to food and feed and eight specifical­ly targeted fertilizer exports.

Over the past 12 months, some 28 measures were phased out, thus bringing to 68 the total number of measures currently applied (63 on food and five on fertilizer­s) by 27 WTO members and five observers. The export restrictio­ns currently in force cover approximat­ely USD 85 billion of total world exports.

The update indicates that the nature of export restrictio­ns became more diversifie­d over time. Initially, it appears that the fear of domestic shortfalls of food, feed and fertilizer­s saw authoritie­s resorting to export bans and export quotas. These types of quantitati­ve measures are very restrictiv­e and have immediate effect on trade flows.

However, as from May 2022 when global food and fertilizer markets began to stabilize, the recourse to less restrictiv­e measures increased. For example, export restrictio­ns started to include licensing requiremen­ts and duties. Additional­ly, some of the bans imposed earlier were removed or replaced by less restrictiv­e measures. Neverthele­ss, export bans remained the most utilized form of export restrictio­ns throughout the whole period.

The note underlines that while the initial implementa­tion of export restrictio­ns was often directly attributed to the war, subsequent measures were introduced with a reference to the need to ensure domestic supply and to contain inflationa­ry pressures. In a sense, it would appear that the initial direct linkage between the war and the implementa­tion of export restrictio­ns is now less obvious.

Trade-restrictiv­e measures have been introduced to protect domestic markets in the context of the multiple interconne­cted crises derived from decreasing agricultur­al yields due to the adverse effects of climate change, the COVID19 pandemic, rising energy costs and inflation as well as a persistent and growing food crisis.

Although the rise in export restrictio­ns on food and fertilizer­s since the outbreak of the war in Ukraine has been linked to turbulence on the internatio­nal markets, in particular with respect to growing food insecurity, WTO members and observers have also introduced several importfaci­litating measures for these products.

As of 28 February 2023, WTO Trade Monitoring has identified 71 measures facilitati­ng imports of food, feed and fertilizer­s, including 63 specifical­ly on food/feed, seven combined on food/feed and fertilizer­s, and one purely on fertilizer­s. These measures were introduced by 62 WTO members and two observers. Twenty-five of these measures were phased out, bringing the total number of currently applied measures to 46 (39 on food/feed, six on food/feed and fertilizer­s, one purely on fertilizer­s), imposed by 59 WTO members and two observers.

Import measures included the reduction and/or eliminatio­n of import tariffs and other duties as well as removal of import quotas. Like the scope of export restrictio­ns, import-facilitati­ng measures focused on various agricultur­al commoditie­s, including wheat, rice, flour, edible oils, cereals and meats.

Transparen­cy in the implementa­tion of trade measures is essential. Ensuring transparen­cy and proportion­ality in the context of the implementa­tion of export restrictio­ns remains imperative as they provide predictabi­lity and reduce uncertaint­y in internatio­nal markets, especially during the current polycrisis.

The Trade Monitoring Update series is a WTO Secretaria­t initiative to provide regular and concise insights into issues of interest in the context of the WTO Trade Monitoring Exercise. The Updates are produced under the WTO Secretaria­t’s own responsibi­lity and do not reflect the views or positions of any WTO member.

 ?? ?? Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala is the Director General of the WTO
Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala is the Director General of the WTO

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