More

US Fined $295 Million Over Illegal Subsidies To Cotton Growers

BRADLEY S. KLAPPER   08/31/09 11:28 AM ET   AP

Cotton

GENEVA — American goods will face around $295 million in annual sanctions as a result of the United States' failure to eliminate illegal subsidies to U.S. cotton growers, the World Trade Organization ruled Monday.

The result was disappointing for Brazil, which has won a series of rulings against the U.S. over the last seven years. The Latin American country had sought to target American goods and drug patents for $2.5 billion worth of economic retaliation.

The WTO ruled that the sanctions should vary depending on U.S. payments each year. Arbitrators used 2006 as a base year for the ruling, and said U.S. payments would have to increase significantly for Brazil to be allowed to punish American drug patents.

"The cumulated amount of countermeasures to which Brazil is entitled to is $294.7 million," the WTO said in a two-part ruling totaling 269 pages.

Washington had argued that the award should not exceed $30 million.

"While we remain disappointed with the outcome of this dispute, we are pleased that the arbitrators awarded Brazil far below the amount of countermeasures it asked for," said Carol Guthrie, spokeswoman for U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk.

Guthrie said the U.S. was also pleased that the WTO rejected Brazil's request for "unlimited" sanctions on U.S. patents and trademarks, and for a one-time award of $350 million in penalties for a subsidy Washington has already repealed.

Monday's ruling was the fifth major decision since the Brazilian government brought the case to the WTO in 2002, alleging that the U.S. was able to retain its place as the world's second-largest cotton producer by paying out some $3 billion to American farmers each year. China is the largest exporter of cotton, while Brazil is fifth.

The WTO's condemnation of the U.S. in September 2004 was seen as a victory for Brazil and for West African countries that claimed to have been harmed by the subsidies. Three decisions since have confirmed that U.S. support programs unfairly help U.S. producers undersell foreign competitors and depress world market prices, dealing a double blow to cotton growers in Brazil and elsewhere.

In response to the legal defeats, the U.S. Congress has scrapped some export credits and in 2006 repealed the "Step-2" cotton-marketing program that made payments to exporters and domestic mill users as compensation for buying higher-priced American cotton.

But last year it approved a new farm bill worth nearly $300 billion that left a number of other contentious cotton programs intact.

"Few WTO disputes have been as difficult – or as politicized – as the fight over U.S. cotton subsidies," says Brendan McGivern, a partner at White & Case law firm in Geneva who represented cotton-growing nations Benin and Chad in the case at no charge until 2004.

"The subsidies paid by the United States to its 25,000 cotton farmers exceed the entire gross national income of virtually every cotton-exporting country in West and Central Africa," McGivern said. "Despite several rounds of litigation and ministerial-level negotiations, this issue remains unresolved."

The United States has consistently argued that cotton should be dealt with as part of a world trade deal among the WTO's 153 members. Those talks have been going on since 2001 and are far from completion.

Brazil and the U.S. have often clashed in the negotiations, which have largely divided rich and developing nations over how to open up farm trade in the industrialized world while easing access for manufacturers and service providers in emerging markets such as China and India.

Critics of the cotton subsidies say they drive down prices, making it impossible for small farms to compete in international markets and more difficult for poorer countries to develop their economies by selling their agricultural produce abroad.

A WTO-proposed draft released two years ago calls on the U.S. to make an 82 percent cut in trade-distorting handouts to American cotton farmers as part of the trade accord. Washington has rejected the cuts, but never proposed an alternative.

The cotton case was the first agricultural case launched by a developing country in the WTO's history.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST WORLD

GENEVA — American goods will face around $295 million in annual sanctions as a result of the United States' failure to eliminate illegal subsidies to U.S. cotton growers, the World Trade Organiz...
GENEVA — American goods will face around $295 million in annual sanctions as a result of the United States' failure to eliminate illegal subsidies to U.S. cotton growers, the World Trade Organiz...
Filed by Ami Cholia  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 17
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Recency  | 
Popularity
02:23 AM on 09/03/2009
As a Brazilian I gotta say im so disapointed.

And some people wonder why we dont want bases in colombia.

The USA is putting their fingers in our pie since they realized how tasty it would be if left un-ruined.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tailgateshirts
07:17 AM on 09/01/2009
well republicans, youll love that we can reduce our deficit, too bad its on the backs of your subsidy buddies!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dr Scott
All I ask is that you make sense
12:47 AM on 09/01/2009
What a joke this is. The legislators who fight for these subsidies and the farmers who receive them are overwhelmingly Republican (who supposedly hate all things socialized). At the town hall meeting here in Lubbock, the cotton capital of the US, congressman Randy Neugebauer was asked why he approved of government (socialized) support for cotton farmers, but not for Americans who don't have health insurance. His "non-answer" answer was predictably twisted and incoherent. I can't wait to hear these hypocrites howl when they find out that the government isn't going to subsidize their industry anymore.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
09:19 AM on 09/01/2009
we'll never get rid of these subsidies. Remember the fight to stop production of a jet fighter the military didn't need or want earlier this year? the Joint Chiefs were against it the President was against it but until the votes were counted we didn't know if we could get rid of it. Your typical politician of any stripe won't ask "can we cut this?" they say "let's have both!"
12:30 AM on 09/01/2009
In the USA, socialism is only a dirty word when it helps poor people. It's OK when the welfare goes to business owners.
06:39 PM on 08/31/2009
and here I thought we were a "free market society" whoda thunk it?

yeah, being sarcastic, I've known about unfair trade practices and tariffs for years, but people keep on believing that tired old party line. I guess cotton farmers are just commies after all?
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Dosadi
Political agnostic
06:23 PM on 08/31/2009
Now lets see if they have the balls to go after the sugar subsidies.
05:48 PM on 08/31/2009
we dont do subsidies --we are free marketeers---
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
03:15 PM on 08/31/2009
great so we get to pay a subsidy to the American cotton farmer and now we get to pay a fine to the Brazilian cotton farmer. We should end all farming subsidies now.
photo
Moshe
Shalom to all
04:50 PM on 08/31/2009
No problem. If you don't mind paying twice as a much as a consumer products usung U.S. subsidized sugar, corn, wheat, etc.. These things are cheap in the U.S. for a reason. End that reason, they won't be cheap anymore.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
05:44 PM on 08/31/2009
we already pay more for sugar than the rest of the world and on top of that we pay a sugar subsidy.
Please explain how paying a farmer to not grow crops makes the crops he does grow cheaper. It would seem that the law of supply and demand would force the price of that product higher since it is now more scarce. Subsidies make the price more expensive for the consumers but provides agricultural corporations with a steadier profit margin.

It seems ironic that on this page someone argues that we should pay farmers to not grow crops while on another huffpo page someone else argues that we should do more to feed the world's hungry.
05:49 PM on 08/31/2009
subsidies are coming out of whose pockets ???
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Raymond Strand
02:37 PM on 08/31/2009
Bringing Cotton production to poorer countries is a terrible idea. Cotton is a water intensive crop, the varying weather conditions in places like Western and Central Africa are terrible to produce cotton large scale. Consider how much resources will be diverted from wheat and corn to produce cotton for some kid's GAP overpriced jeans.

If anything the fact we price out these poor farmers is saving their environment from the destruction that large scale cotton growing brings.
01:50 PM on 08/31/2009
No Comments? How about this:

The Cotton lobby (that helps to keep these subsidies in place) is also complicit in keeping HEMP production illegal.

When, in 1936 the Hemp Decorticator promised to do for Hemp what the cotton gin did for cotton, hemp suddenly became illegal. Mostly due to the efforts of Hearst and Dupont, but the Cotton interest was involved, have no doubt.

Now, if you could get your hands on an original pair of Levis made from hemp, you would find them to be almost as 'good as new'. Cotton jeans, as everyone knows, fall apart within a year or two.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Peter007
02:20 PM on 08/31/2009
Is that why I have holes in my jeans? They don't seem to last long at all.
02:25 PM on 08/31/2009
I also read the paper industry was also responsible for killing hemp production as well. Hemp paper was used everywhere even for our historical documents like the Declaration of Independence! We could so use the industry right about now.
04:44 PM on 08/31/2009
Making paper from hemp is so easy, it has been done for THOUSANDS of years. Making paper from wood pulp was a NEW idea in 1936 and uses a process patented by DUPONT. This is why HEARST was interested in criminalizing hemp: He owned huge tracts of forestland which he wanted to convert into money (at pennies per tree, sad) using DUPONTS process.

Ever been near a paper plant? The process creates a smell that only a Villain could love...

As for cloth: Hemp was used to make ALL the sails that were ever used to discover the world. The Dutch word for Cannabis is 'Canvas'. How many people know that?

Could you imagine trying to sail around Cape Horn with Cotton Sails? It would be impossible. They would be shredded. Canvas (Hemp) did the job for centuries.

Bottom Line: We do NOT NEED COTTON ANYMORE. These subsidies must be repealed. They represent the worst elements of our industrial and trade policies, evidenced here by the US being found to be a miscreant by an international body.

I would recommend those third-world countries who want to help their farmers to get them off cotton and get them growing hemp. It takes much less water, and no pesticides at all, the stalks will grow 30ft high (no good buds on these, just lots of fiber), AND it will nourish the soil with a huge root ball.

Cotton is useful only for applications where tensile strength doesn't matter.