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EU tables new offer on services and industrial goods in Doha talks

Sommaire: EU tables new offer on services and industrial goods in Doha talks (28 October 2005: Brussels)

Today the EU has tabled new proposals on agriculture and other areas of the DDA trade talks to its negotiating partners in the 'Five Interested Parties' (FIPs). The European Union recognises that agricultural negotiations have now entered a critical phase and these proposals represent a comprehensive, substantive and credible contribution. The EU proposals bridge the different proposals tabled by other WTO Members. These proposals must unlock immediate progress in other areas of the Doha negotiations, particularly, trade in industrial products and services, which are crucial to the European economy. The EU proposals are fully conditional on satisfactory movement in other areas of the negotiation. The cuts offered are within the European Commission's mandate.

The EU's proposals will allow WTO Members to converge on the middle ground in agriculture negotiations. The cuts proposed go further than the EU's original offer and significantly further than the cuts agreed in the Uruguay Round. More importantly, the average cut is higher and is more uniformly applied in the various levels of tariffs. In the Uruguay Round, the highest tariffs received the lowest cuts. The EU's new proposal ensures that the higher the original tariff, the higher the reduction. The proposal is fully within the current negotiating mandate given to the Commission. However it is at the outer limit of that mandate.

EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson said: "The EU's offer is substantial, offering new market access in agriculture and driving down trade-distorting farm subsidies. We want to move in a way that is tolerable for the EU's reforming agricultural sector, and does not eliminate the preferential access Europe already offers to some of the world's poorest countries. Europe's major partners need to understand that this offer is conditional on immediate movement in negotiations on trade in industrial goods and services as well as in other areas of the agricultural negotiation. These areas are important to Europe, and to developing countries and provide the only route to a balanced Doha outcome."

EU Agriculture Commissioner Mariann Fischer Boel said: "The EU has radically reformed its agricultural policy. Today's new proposals on tariffs respect our commitment to offer substantial improvements in market access, without putting those reforms into question. This is a bold move which will mean big new challenges but also opportunities for EU farmers. We need to get something in return: real, meaningful reforms in other developed countries, international recognition of our Geographical Indications, real curbs on other countries' trade-distorting export programmes, and far-reaching offers in other parts of the negotiation. The Doha Round is about much more than just agriculture, and others must give as well as take."

The Offer

Conditional on satisfactory movement in other areas, the EU offer proposes:


The Conditionalities

EU proposals in market access are strictly conditional on further clarification from other developed countries on the elimination of their forms of export support. US commitments on Food Aid and Export Credits are not yet sufficient. Australia, Canada and New Zealand need to provide further commitment on the reform of their State Trading enterprises. The EU also seeks real disciplines on the most trade-distorting US farm payments (Counter Cyclical Payments).

The EU proposals are also strictly conditional on the acceptance by our negotiating partners of a number of proposals in the negotiating areas of the DDA outside of agriculture:

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