US wins WTO ruling on Chinese grains; decision may also affect India

*The WTO agreed with the US complaint that China had paid farmers too much for wheat, Indica rice and Japonica rice in 2012-2015 *China's move provided an artificial incentive for farmers to produce more, lowering prices worldwide

Geneva/Beijing: The United States won a World Trade Organization (WTO) ruling on China's price support for grains, successfully challenging a calculation methodology that is also used by India.

A WTO adjudication panel agreed on Thursday with the US complaint that China had paid farmers too much for wheat, Indica rice and Japonica rice in 2012-2015. A disputed corn subsidy had already expired.

"China's excessive support limits opportunities for U.S. farmers to export their world-class products to China," US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said in a statement. "We expect China to quickly come into compliance with its WTO obligations.

China said on Friday it regretted the lack of support from experts, noting that government support for agriculture was a common practice and allowed under WTO rules.

China would continue to promote development of its agriculture sector in line with WTO rules and safeguard the stability of the multi-lateral trade system, the Ministry of Commerce said in a statement.

The US trade representative's office filed the complaint in September 2016, saying China had paid farmers nearly $100 billion more than allowed by the WTO rules. That provided an artificial incentive for farmers to produce more, lowering prices worldwide.

China's WTO membership agreement permits trade-distorting subsidies of up to 8.5% of the total value of production.

China argued that it was not breaching that limit because only the grains procured by government should be counted as subsidised. The United States successfully argued that state buying at a guaranteed price raised the whole market.

The ruling, which may be appealed, could have ramifications for India, which has made similar arguments to China.

At a meeting of the WTO's agriculture committee on Wednesday, the United States and Canada rejected India's claim that its market price support for pulses was 1.5% of the value of production, saying that it was actually 31% to 85%, far above allowed limits.

Newsletter

Price of goats has gone up due to lack of supply in Kannivadi goat market

As farmers are not keen to sell the goats at the Kannivadi goat market, the arrival of goats has come down for the last...

Tomato prices fall sharply in Udumalpet - produce indiscriminately thrown on the road

Tomato prices were sold at Rs 200 per kg a few months ago. Now that the price of tomatoes has fallen drastically due to...

Tomatoes sold at Rs 6 per kg in Palladam - Farmers put veil on their heads and express anguish

Farmers in Tirupur district are suffering as tomatoes were procured at just Rs 6 per kg at the Palladam uzhavar santhai....

TNAU's Dept. of Plant Pathology hosts one-day training on 'Spawn Production and Mushroom Cultivation' in Coimbatore

Over a 100 beneficiaries from Kongunadu Arts and Science College in Coimbatore participated in the training which was pr...

Coimbatore TNAU observes Parthenium Awareness Week

Dr.M.K.Kalarani, Director (Crop Management), TNAU, Coimbatore has inaugurated the Parthenium awareness campaign at TNAU...

TNAU conducts Training on Preparation of instant Foods

Two days training on “Preparation of instant Foods” will be held at Centre for Post Harvest Technology, Agricultural...