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The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1 , Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1
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The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Mar 27, 2015

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Page 1: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

The Doha Development Agenda

Yvan Decreux1, Lionel Fontagné2

WTO, November 2, 2010

1: CEPII, ITC2: CEPII, University Paris 1

Page 2: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

July 2008 package

Based on two different studies1. Decreux, Y. & Fontagné, L. (2009). Economic Impact of

potential outcome of the DDA, CEPII Research Report 2009-01More comprehensive: includes trade facilitation

2. Decreux, Y. (2009). Effets d’un accord commercial multilatéral sur la base des propositions de décembre 2008, Report for the French Government

More recent:• Includes precisions added in the December 08 package (anti-

concentration clause and other elements related to sensitive products)• Some technical improvements• More sector details in agriculture

Page 3: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Downloadable

Both studies downloadable here:https://sites.google.com/site/ydecreux/

Page 4: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Subjects covered

• Agriculture• NAMA• Services• Trade facilitation

Page 5: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Agriculture

• Domestic support: mostly the US and EFTA• Export subsidies– US, EU– Agreement found long ago

• Tariffs: EU, EFTA, Japan

Page 6: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

NAMA

• Tariffs only• Most efforts to be made by developing

countries (despite special and differential treatment)

• But many are exempt of actual tariff reductions: Small and Vulnerable Economies, LDCs

Page 7: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Export subsidies

• Not really damaging in a deterministic world (stable prices and production), except for countries strongly specialised in agriculture

• The world is not deterministic, especially in agriculture

• Export subsidies (and tariffs) used to moderate internal instability, to the expense of other countries

• Early agreement to phase out all export subsidies by 2013

Page 8: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Modelling

• Based on the Mirage model (CEPII) + MAcMap data (ITC, CEPII)

• Some data missing (historical AMS for instance) → relied on INRA work (J-C Bureau, J-P Butault) for static impact

• Inflation and growth: all commitments (except de minimis) expressed in LCU

Page 9: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Inflation issue (illustrated)

Page 10: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Inflation issue (continued)

• Not taking it into account leads to– Overestimate the effect of export subsidy

suppression– Underestimate the effect of domestic support

reduction

• Overall, broadly neutral on agricultural production as a whole for the EU, but significant differences at the product level (milk, sugar)

Page 11: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Tariff reductions

• Agriculture: tiered formulas– Sensitive products (tariff-rate quotas)– Special products– Tariff escalation issue– Tropical products

• NAMA: Swiss formulas– Sensitive products for developing countries– Anti-concentration clause

Page 12: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Implementation

• Formulas applied to bound tariffs, at the HS6 level (MAcMap-HS6 2004)

• Impact on applied tariffs• Aggregated at the sector and region level

Page 13: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Other subjects

• Services– Developed and emerging countries, on a free basis– Much less quantified at this stage

• Trade facilitation– Potential source of significant gains– Not really a negotiation issue

Page 14: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Mirage

• Computable General Equilibrium Model of the World economy

• Sequential dynamics setting– Capital accumulation– Exogenous labour, population and TFP growth

• Exogenous labour supply & unemployment• Based on GTAP, MAcMap and other data

sources (ILO, IMF, ...)

Page 15: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Scenarios

• Goods: December 08 proposals• Services:– Study 1: 3% cut for country participating in the

specific negotiations on services– Study 2: 10% cut of the estimated ad-valorem

equivalent of barriers to services trade, all countries except Sub-Saharan Africa and Rest of the World (mostly non-WTO members) → really optimistic

Page 16: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

World welfare

Page 17: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Welfare: industrialized regions

Page 18: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Welfare: Asia

Page 19: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Welfare: Latin America

Page 20: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Welfare losses

Page 21: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Sources of gains / losses

• Allocation efficiency: gains especially generated on high tariffs

• Terms of trade: balance of concessions & preference erosion

• Capital accumulation

Page 22: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Employment in agricultural sectors

Page 23: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

NAMA exports (selected, bn USD)

Page 24: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

NAMA production (selected, bn USD)

Page 25: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Trade facilitation• Based on estimates of time spent to export and import, by

Minor and Tsigas• Time spent at the port supposed to partially converge to

the median performance, for all countries over that median• No reduction of transport cost assumed• Expressed as an iceberg cost

1. Minor P. & Tsigas M. 2008. “Impacts of Better Trade Facilitation in Developing Countries, Analysis with a New GTAP Database for the Value of Time in Trade”, GTAP 11th Conference, Helsinki.

2. USAID 2007. “Calculating Tariff Equivalents for Time in Trade”, March

Page 26: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Trade facilitation impact

• Adds almost 100 bn USD gain per year (from 68 bn to 167 bn)

• Especially favorable to developing countries, in particular Sub-Saharan Africa

• Lack of a clear commitment by all partners to let trade facilitation benefits be an outcome of Doha negotiations

Page 27: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Limitations of the methodology

• Actual impacts of export subsidies not properly measured in a deterministic framework

• Preference erosion may be overestimated: rules of origin actually reduce current preference benefits + importance of the EU in Sub-Saharan Africa tend to decrease more quickly than projected

• Impact on poverty and inequality not assessed• Possible impact of trade competition on

productivity not accounted for

Page 28: The Doha Development Agenda Yvan Decreux 1, Lionel Fontagné 2 WTO, November 2, 2010 1: CEPII, ITC 2: CEPII, University Paris 1.

Conclusion

• Balanced proposal, employment in agriculture rises in developing countries

• Concern on preference erosion• Conservative estimates: benefits expected to

be at least as large as the ones mentioned• Current situation corresponds to a non-

cooperative equilibrium