A WTO dairy ruling has possible implications for the EU sugar sector

The WTO ruling on Canada's domestic support measures in the dairy sector, seeking to restrict cross subsidisation of exports would appear to carry important implications for the Brazilian and Australian challenges to the EU sugar regime. The WTO Appellate Body said milk sales by dairy farmers to processors of 'commercial export milk' were made at a price below their cost of production and therefore financed by the higher prices dairy farmers received from their sales at the price fixed by Canada for the domestic market. The Appellate body had earlier ruled that the subsidy effect should be judged by comparison with farmers' cost of production not by comparing export and domestic milk prices. The key to the decision was the assessment that Canadian government action is instrumental in providing a significant percentage of producers with the resources that enable them to sell 'commercial export milk' at below the costs of production. Significantly the Appellate body ruled that in such cases the burden of proof rested with the country seeking to refute the claim that it was exceeding export subsidy commitments rather than the countries bringing the complaint. Comment: This WTO Appellate Body finding would appear to have a direct relevance to the relationship between the intervention price for 'A' and 'B' quota sugar in the EU and the sale price of 'C' sugar exported to world markets without export refunds. It would appear to increase the prospects of a finding in favour of Brazil and Australia in their current challenge to the EU sugar regime.

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Main Author: Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
Format: News Item biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation 2003
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/52431
http://agritrade.cta.int/Back-issues/Agriculture-monthly-news-update/2003/February-2003
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-524312022-11-29T17:48:00Z A WTO dairy ruling has possible implications for the EU sugar sector Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation The WTO ruling on Canada's domestic support measures in the dairy sector, seeking to restrict cross subsidisation of exports would appear to carry important implications for the Brazilian and Australian challenges to the EU sugar regime. The WTO Appellate Body said milk sales by dairy farmers to processors of 'commercial export milk' were made at a price below their cost of production and therefore financed by the higher prices dairy farmers received from their sales at the price fixed by Canada for the domestic market. The Appellate body had earlier ruled that the subsidy effect should be judged by comparison with farmers' cost of production not by comparing export and domestic milk prices. The key to the decision was the assessment that Canadian government action is instrumental in providing a significant percentage of producers with the resources that enable them to sell 'commercial export milk' at below the costs of production. Significantly the Appellate body ruled that in such cases the burden of proof rested with the country seeking to refute the claim that it was exceeding export subsidy commitments rather than the countries bringing the complaint. Comment: This WTO Appellate Body finding would appear to have a direct relevance to the relationship between the intervention price for 'A' and 'B' quota sugar in the EU and the sale price of 'C' sugar exported to world markets without export refunds. It would appear to increase the prospects of a finding in favour of Brazil and Australia in their current challenge to the EU sugar regime. The WTO ruling on Canada's domestic support measures in the dairy sector,... 2003 2015-01-09T14:07:30Z 2015-01-09T14:07:30Z News Item CTA. 2003. A WTO dairy ruling has possible implications for the EU sugar sector. Agritrade, February 2003. CTA, Wageningen, The Netherlands. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/52431 http://agritrade.cta.int/Back-issues/Agriculture-monthly-news-update/2003/February-2003 en Agritrade Open Access Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation Agritrade
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description The WTO ruling on Canada's domestic support measures in the dairy sector, seeking to restrict cross subsidisation of exports would appear to carry important implications for the Brazilian and Australian challenges to the EU sugar regime. The WTO Appellate Body said milk sales by dairy farmers to processors of 'commercial export milk' were made at a price below their cost of production and therefore financed by the higher prices dairy farmers received from their sales at the price fixed by Canada for the domestic market. The Appellate body had earlier ruled that the subsidy effect should be judged by comparison with farmers' cost of production not by comparing export and domestic milk prices. The key to the decision was the assessment that Canadian government action is instrumental in providing a significant percentage of producers with the resources that enable them to sell 'commercial export milk' at below the costs of production. Significantly the Appellate body ruled that in such cases the burden of proof rested with the country seeking to refute the claim that it was exceeding export subsidy commitments rather than the countries bringing the complaint. Comment: This WTO Appellate Body finding would appear to have a direct relevance to the relationship between the intervention price for 'A' and 'B' quota sugar in the EU and the sale price of 'C' sugar exported to world markets without export refunds. It would appear to increase the prospects of a finding in favour of Brazil and Australia in their current challenge to the EU sugar regime.
format News Item
author Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
spellingShingle Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
A WTO dairy ruling has possible implications for the EU sugar sector
author_facet Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
author_sort Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
title A WTO dairy ruling has possible implications for the EU sugar sector
title_short A WTO dairy ruling has possible implications for the EU sugar sector
title_full A WTO dairy ruling has possible implications for the EU sugar sector
title_fullStr A WTO dairy ruling has possible implications for the EU sugar sector
title_full_unstemmed A WTO dairy ruling has possible implications for the EU sugar sector
title_sort wto dairy ruling has possible implications for the eu sugar sector
publisher Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
publishDate 2003
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/52431
http://agritrade.cta.int/Back-issues/Agriculture-monthly-news-update/2003/February-2003
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