RP weighing options on protecting rice market under WTO
An official of the Department of
Agriculture (DA) also disclosed that it would be up to the next
administration to determine whether it would negotiate for the retention
of the quantitative restriction (QR) on rice.
“[The DA] will just make a
recommendation but it will be up to the next administration whether it
will go for the retention of the QR,” said the DA official who is privy
on trade matters.
So far, the official said the DA has not
yet come up with a final recommendation regarding the possible
extension of the QR on rice and that the matter is under “careful
study.”
The DA official also noted that another
area of concern is the current Doha round of negotiations at the WTO.
“We have to consider the Doha round of
negotiations [because] of its impact on sequencing. We [need] to wait
for the final outcome and see whether there will be cuts in the tariffs
on rice,” the official said.
While rice farmers were able to gain a
temporary reprieve from the threat of the removal of the QR in 2004, the
official noted that a number of concessions were given to
member-countries of the WTO who signified their intention to negotiate
the retention of the QR on rice.
“[The Philippines] did not just allow
the entry of rice from other trading partners; we also had to give them
access to our wine market and milk market,” the official said.
The QR has allowed the Philippines to
limit the volume of rice that can be imported by the government every
year, preventing a possible influx of cheap rice imports.
In exchange for extending the QR until
2012, the Philippines agreed to increase its minimum access volume (MAV)
for rice to 350,000 metric tons (MT) as a concession.
The Philippines also reduced tariffs on
rice to 40 percent, from 50 percent in 2007. MAV refers to the minimum
volume of farm produce, which it will allow to enter into the
Philippines at reduced tariffs.
The Philippines filed its intention to
extend the QR on rice in March 2004 as it was set to expire in June
2005. Extensive negotiations for it followed, with Manila holding
discussions with nine countries that signified their intention to
negotiate the request.
Manila had to conduct bilateral
negotiations with nine WTO members, namely, the United States, China,
India, Argentina, Pakistan, Egypt, Canada, Australia and Thailand.
The Philippines obtained formal approval
from the WTO to extend the QR in December 2006.
The government pushed for the extension
of the QR, citing the need to prepare Filipino farmers for international
trade and to achieve rice self-sufficiency.
The Philippines had originally targeted
to achieve rice self-sufficiency by 2010. The government was forced to
move its target to 2013 due to the lack of funding, as well as the
challenges posed by climate change.
Source Businessmirror