The Borneo Post

G20 agricultur­e ministers slam protection­ism, pledge WTO reforms

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BUENOS AIRES: Agricultur­e ministers from the Group of 20 ( G20) countries criticised protection­ism in a joint statement, and vowed to reform World Trade Organisati­on (WTO) rules, but did not detail what steps they would take to improve the food trade system.

In the statement, they said they were “concerned about the increasing use of protection­ist non-tariff trade measures, inconsiste­ntly with WTO rules”.

The ministers from countries including the US and China, in Buenos Aires for the G20 meeting of agricultur­e ministers, said in the statement they had affirmed their commitment not to adopt “unnecessar­y obstacles” to trade, and affirmed their rights and obligation­s under WTO agreements.

The meeting came amid rising trade tensions that have rocked agricultur­al markets. China and other top US trade partners have placed retaliator­y tariffs on American farmers after the Trump administra­tion put duties on Chinese goods as well as steel and aluminum from the European Union, Canada and Mexico.

US growers are expected to take an estimated US$11 billion hit due to China’s retaliator­y tariffs. Last week, the Trump administra­tion said it would pay up to US$ 12 billion to help farmers weather the trade war. US Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue told Reuters in an interview on the sidelines of the meeting that Trump’s plan would include between US$ 7 billion and US$ 8 billion in direct cash relief that US farmers could see as early as late September.

Despite the payments, the measures are “not going to make farmers whole,” Perdue said.

Citing the Trump administra­tion’s relief measures, German Agricultur­e Minister Julia Kloeckner said farmers “don’t need aid, (they) need trade.”

“We had a very frank discussion about the fact that we don’t want unilateral protection­ist measures,” Kloeckner said in a news conference after the meeting.

The ministers, whose countries represent 60 percent of the world’s agricultur­al land and 80 per cent of food and agricultur­al commoditie­s trade, did not specify which measures they were referring to in the statement. Asked for details, Kloeckner said the ministers did not want to “criticize a single country.”

“We all know what happens if a single person or country doesn’t adhere to WTO rules, trying to get a benefit for themselves through protection­ism,” she said.

“This will usually lead to retaliator­y tariffs.”

In the statement, the ministers said they agreed to continue reforming the WTO’s agricultur­al trade rules.

“Independen­t of all the news there was surroundin­g (the meeting), we managed to reach a unanimous consensus,” Argentine Agricultur­e Minister Luis Miguel Etcheveher­e said.

US President Donald Trump and European Commission President Jean- Claude Juncker struck a surprise deal on Wednesday that ended the risk of further escalating trade tensions between the two powers.

After the meeting, Trump said the European Union would buy “a lot” of US soybeans. Earlier, Kloeckner told Reuters that the trade relationsh­ip between the US and the European Union was improving, but that there was no guarantee the bloc would import the quantity of soybeans that Washington expects. — Reuters

 ??  ?? G20 Agricultur­e Ministers is seen at an visit at the 132th annual Argentine Rural Society’s Palermo livestock and agricultur­e camp exhibition in Buenos Aires, Argentina. — Reuters photo
G20 Agricultur­e Ministers is seen at an visit at the 132th annual Argentine Rural Society’s Palermo livestock and agricultur­e camp exhibition in Buenos Aires, Argentina. — Reuters photo

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