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India facing trade 'disaster'

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India facing trade 'disaster'
By Isolda Agazzi

GENEVA - As the Eighth Ministerial meeting of the World Trade Organization (WTO) kicked off in Geneva last week, a group of non-government organizations exposed the devastating potential of a free trade agreement currently being negotiated between the European Union and India. If passed, they say the deal would make a mockery of all WTO rules and regulations.

A recent impact assessment on the right to food of the EU-India FTA, researched and compiled by leading advocacy groups including the Delhi-based Third World Network (TWN), the Indian non-governmental organization (NGO) Anthra and Germany charities Misereor, Glopolis and the Heinrich Boll Foundation, concluded that the proposed deal would violate the right to food of a vast segment of the Indian population, particularly those who


rely on the poultry and dairy sectors.

Additionally, the zero-tariffs clause of the free trade agreement (FTA) could lacerate the retail sector by stripping small retailers of any protection against corporate giants.

Having sat on the table since 2007, the agreement could be sealed as early as next year, an outcome that many experts see as "disastrous" for the local economy.

"The EU is asking India to cut its tariffs to zero on at least 92% of all imports, including industrial and agricultural goods," Ranja Sengupta, senior researcher at TWN told Inter Press Service (IPS). "Considering that trade with EU represents 60% of India's total international trade, this would be a disaster, particularly in hitherto protected sectors, like agriculture."

"Our [impact statement] focuses on the dairy and poultry sectors because they employ a large number of very small farmers, many of them operating in their backyards in order to subsist," Sengupta said.

Given that the dairy sector provides 90 millions jobs, slashing tariffs will likely result in a repeat performance of the 1999 milk crisis in India, when EU imports of skimmed milk powder rose from 600 tonnes to 25,000 tonnes, effectively destroying the country's "white revolution" for milk self-sufficiency. Similarly, the pending FTA will flood the market with imports, depress producer prices, reduce incomes and eventually increase debt.

The poultry sector, which consists of 96 million small, landless agricultural households that manage 85% of the poultry stock, is currently guarded by a 100% tariff that actually prohibits imports.

But the FTA could kill these protections. According to Sengupta, Indians consume more poultry legs than breasts and vice versa in Europe. If the EU dumped its poultry legs on the local market, India would not be able to retaliate by exporting poultry breasts to European markets because of the latter's strict health and safety standards.

The WTO advocates lowering tariffs, not removing them altogether. Additionally, the agenda for the ministerial meeting this week includes the question of industrialized countries eliminating government subsidies.

"In sharp contrast, FTAs like the one being negotiated between India and the EU insist on the complete elimination of tariffs but contain no binding clauses about eliminating subsidies," Sengupta said.

Experts are also concerned about the FTA's impact on the retail sector, the second-largest employer in India after agriculture. In the WTO, services trade liberalization is a relatively flexible mechanism because it allows countries themselves to decide which sectors to open up to foreign competition.

"But FTAs make very strong demands to liberalize services in high-employment areas like retail," effectively backing the government into a corner, Sengupta said.

Small vendors have already suffered majors losses as a result of burgeoning domestic retail chains: 15% have seen a decline of their profits against Indian retail stores and 4.2% face annual closure if located near bigger retailers.

Additionally, larger retailers exercise a stranglehold over the market and then discreetly increase the prices they had originally kept low to attract consumers.

Still, Indian domestic retailers, which have already lacerated the market for small retailers, do not even hold a candle to multinational behemoths like Tesco or Carrefour, against whom small retailers in India do not stand a fighting chance.

Though India invests 51% of the country's capital in single-brand retail - one company selling a single, branded product - it has not yet allowed foreign direct investment, which would be "suicide" for smaller stores.

Carrefour has promised to create 1.8 millions jobs but the five NGOs who authored the study on the FTA's impact consider this figure to be unrealistic. Furthermore, 1.8 million new jobs hardly compensates for the estimated loss of 2.9 million to a potentially staggering 6.7 million informal jobs as a direct result of the zero tariffs clause.

"This is a very sensitive issue in the country but unfortunately the public is unaware of the serious impact of the FTA because negotiations are often conducted in secret. Contrary to the WTO, the FTA does not need to be ratified by the national parliament and state governments are not even consulted," Sengupta told IPS.

The EU-India FTA will also go much further than the WTO in the protection of intellectual property.

"India has ratified UPOV 1978, a treaty that provides protection to plant varieties. However, under Indian law, seed breeders' rights are secondary to farmers' rights, enabling the latter to exchange seeds in accordance with our ancient and traditional forms of cultivation, without worrying about 'patents' and 'bio property rights'," Sengupta said.

But the EU is now pressuring India to accede to UPOV 1991 that grants seed breeding companies very strong rights at the expense of farmers, who will no longer be able to exchange, resell and use commercial seeds freely. This is a violation of their right to practice traditional forms of agriculture.

Many advocates are also concerned about the issue of "geographical indications (GIs)", a scheme that assigns certain products special status - based on their production location - and therefore a market advantage. The EU has established 190 GIs for agricultural products, which it wants India to recognize.

"But India is lagging behind in registering its own GIs, which means that EU products will get additional access to markets in India," Sengupta told IPS.

Experts believe that if substantial evidence finds the FTA to have potentially adverse consequences for the Indian people, it should be reviewed and renegotiated.

"There is no point in negotiating at the WTO if these FTAs are signed simultaneously," Sengupta stressed.

(Inter Press Service)
 
I am not worried. All the displaced would probably get high paying jobs in these multinational companies. Farmers would benefit as well as customers. Industry would realign itself. It will reduce the supply bottlenecks that is strangling Indian economy these days. There will be more investment in India specific research and development and localized production. It would add millions of jobs to the the ever increasing factories in India.

If I remember it right, these right groups were there too hunkering down the economic liberalization back in 1991. I guess they moved on to next big thing to ruin.
 
Another violation of rules, threads without links are not allowed as per the rules of this forum. :tdown:
 
The above Free Trade Agreement between the European Union and India will kick out textiles, rice, sugar exports from other countries of the subcontinent.

The concessions in the EU that pakistan have got (for which India supported pakistan) for this year as flood aid will be useless.

Indian goods will be levied very low duty and for some products will be duty free in EU.

It means we will get more euro and jobs in the future.
 

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