Oxfam has long
argued that US cotton subsidies damage lives and livelihoods of smallholder
farmers in developing countries at a high cost to American taxpayers(see also
this study).
Unfortunately, subsidies for US cotton producers included in the Senate Farm
Bill proposal continues this trend rather than reverses
it.
In 2002, Brazil,
joined by Chad, Burkina
Faso, Benin, Mali, and Senegal (C4+1), brought actions against US cotton
subsidies in the WTO. These nations claimed that as a result of cotton programs
in the United States, especially programs that paid American cotton farmers to
increase production as market prices went down, the market was rigged against
producers in other nations that counted on an unbiased market. In 2009, Brazil
won a case in the WTO equivalent of trial against US cotton subsidies. As a
result, the US government—taxpayers—now make annual payments to subsidize the
Brazilian cotton industry at a level of almost $150M per year. The payments are
intended to be made until US cotton subsidies are removed.
In 2011 and
2012, National Cotton Council worked with Congress to draft a cotton subsidy
program for the industry that they claim will resolve the distortion that led to
losing the WTO case in the first place. Their proposal is called the Stacked
Income Protection Plan (STAX). In general, STAX
provides insurance against even modest losses of revenue resulting from poor
harvests or low prices. With highly subsidized producer premiums, it is
taxpayers who are on the hook.
Will this
readjustment of the cotton program satisfy the complaints of Brazil and the West
African cotton producers? Not according to Brazil: In a recent
letter to Congress, Robert Azevedo, Brazil’s Representative to the WTO,
wrote, “From the data we analyzed… the STAX proposal would likely result in the
highest level of trade distortion of all the proposals examined by us. … In our
view, no farm program can be WTO-compliant and cover ‘shallow losses’—thereby
insulating farmers from market forces—to the extent foreseen in the
aforementioned NCC proposal.”
Making matters
worse, in a sleight of hand that may seem innocuous, the STAX program will fall
under a section of the Farm Bill that will shield cotton from payment
limitations, conservation compliance rules, and the individual producer
transparency that is required for farmers growing corn, soybeans, or any of the
other “program” crops supported through Farm Bill spending. Shielded from these
requirements and safeguards, cotton producers basically get a free pass from the
oversight and responsibility that comes with other
subsidies.
At the House
Agriculture field hearing held in Dodge City on April 20, Little River, KS
farmer Kendall Hodgson said that
he “would ask the Committee to be mindful of WTO compliance. We like to think of
ourselves as a nation that follows the law. We stand to lose more by
noncompliance than to gain. I understand the realities of the Brazilian threat
of a WTO suit concerning our cotton program and our subsequent payments to
Brazil to keep that suit from happening but this is something of a black eye for
our farm programs that only invite criticism from our detractors.” Hodgson, a
diversified farmer, reminded legislators that when cotton violates trade
agreements, it jeopardizes markets for all producers.
The proposal put
forth by the National Cotton Council—and adopted by the Senate Agriculture
Committee—has no intention of correcting the wrongs created by earlier cotton
programs. In fact, on top of shunning any kind of accountability to resource
protection and to taxpayers, the current proposal makes no modification to the
worst component of trade distortion: the marketing loan program. And farmers
like Kendall Hodgson in Kansas, and cotton farmers in West Africa will continue
to be at risk because the cotton industry refuses to play
fair. This blog is
written by Jim French. He is a farmer who works on agriculture policy issues for
Oxfam America. |