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> Doha Round can level trading field - Lamy
Doha Round can
level trading field - Lamy
The Post,
Zambia, February 24, 2011
CONCLUSION of the
Doha round will help level the playing field for Africa and
correct historical injustices in the global trade rulebook,
says WTO director general Pascal Lamy.
The Doha Development
Round or Doha Development Agenda is the current
trade-negotiation round of the World Trade organization which
commenced in November 2001 and its objective is to lower trade
barriers around the world, which allow countries to increase
trade globally.
As of 2008, talks
have stalled over a divide on major issues such as
agriculture, industrial tariffs and non-tariff barriers,
services and trade remedies.
Officiating at a
launch of CUTS International’s latest publication on
Agriculture in Africa in Switzerland on Tuesday, Lamy stated
that the book had responded positively to the issues
surrounding Africa becoming a net-food importer.
He stated that
Africa became a net-food importer in the 1980s when the prices
of its key commodity exports failed and its agriculture slowed
down resulting in the current food trade deficit of around
US$20 billion.
“It is vital to
understand how Africa moved from being a net-food exporter to
being a net-importer but the goal of this discussion is not
how to bring Africa back to export supremacy. Rather, the goal
should be to see how African agriculture can become more
efficient can become more efficient and competitive.
Efficiency and self-sufficiency are two different concepts,”
Lamy stated.
He observed that a
country could have a perfectly efficient and competitive
agricultural system but still be an importer of food.
“Europe, for
example, exports nine per cent of the world’s food, and
imports 12 per cent, so being a food export powerhouse does
not preclude being a major importer too and the same for
Africa that needs to become more efficient, and in that
efficiency it needs to discover specialization since it will
make no sense it will make no sense for Africa to produce
everything for itself,” Lamy stated.
He stated that the
publication had demonstrated that import-substitution policies
and lack of investment in agriculture have been the principal
culprits.
“In my view, the
Doha Round can make a modest contribution to helping lift
Africa’s agriculture. It will give least developed countries
duty-free, quota-free, access to export markets,” stated Lamy
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