International
OECD says agriculture export competition will intensify, with rising share of trade by developing countries
By Finfacts Team
Jun 21, 2005, 15:22

Global competition between exporters of wheat, rice, oilseeds, sugar and livestock is expected to intensify over the next ten years in both developed and developing countries, according to the OECD’s latest Agricultural Outlook – produced for first time in collaboration with the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

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Women farmers transplanting rice in India (Photo: FAO)

Stiffer competition, combined with higher productivity, will result in a further drop in real prices for most basic food commodities. Farmers will thus have to make continued efforts to improve efficiency. Policy reforms could help improve agricultural markets, the Outlook adds.

With increasing export supplies by low cost non-OECD countries and a continued high degree of protection in many of the OECD markets, rising demand growth in developing countries will result in an increase in their share of the global trade in farm products.

The report estimates that total world cereal output will increase by over one percent annually with most of the growth occurring in the non-OECD area. Although increasing imports by China and other Asian countries could drive nominal prices higher in the near term, international wheat prices are expected to fall in real terms by around 11% over the next 10 years. However, in a rebound from recently low levels, world rice prices are expected to increase in real terms over the projection period, reversing the downward trend of the past 30 years.

With the growing integration of China and India in global markets, small shocks to either demand or supply in these large countries could lead to substantial external effects on other countries. Similarly, conditions in the key emerging suppliers, particularly in South America, will be increasingly critical to the evolution of world markets. With rapidly increasing production and trade of livestock products, the incidence of animal disease outbreaks is also an important source of uncertainty surrounding the projections.

Increasing concentration and globalisation in the food industry, and the growing role of product standards, are likely to exert an increasing influence on production and trade.

Some shift in OECD farm support

Coinciding with the release of the Outlook, the OECD is also publishing its latest Agricultural Policies: Monitoring and Evaluation report which includes a first assessment of the implementation of the Common Agricultural Policy in the 10 new member states that joined the European Union in 2004. It finds that:

  • Enlargement has increased the diversity of EU farm structures.
  • Although enlargement brought in large amounts of land and labour, the value of agricultural production increased by less than 10 percent.
  • Farm income in new Member States is likely to increase significantly over the medium term.
  • Levels of support in new member states were estimated to be well below levels of the existing 15 EU countries in 2004, but given the relatively small addition their agricultural sectors make to the EU, average support to farmers across the newly enlarged EU relative to farm receipts was reduced by one percentage point only.

The US, EU and other rich countries increased subsidies to farmers by 12 percent to $112 billion in 2004 as prices for grains fell.

Tariffs and other trade restrictions provided additional agriculture assistance valued at $167 billion, the OECD said. The combined total of $279 billion represented 30 percent of farmers' income in the 30 OECD countries.

The report nevertheless welcomes the move to payments that are less linked to specific commodities in many countries.

REPORTS:

THE G8 SUMMIT JULY 6/8

1) G8, the challenge of global poverty and contradictions of anti-globalisation : How can support for free trade access for developing countries to rich country markets be reconciled with supporting import restrictions to help workers in the rich countries who are at risk of losing their jobs because of globalisation?

2) 70% of tariffs paid by Developing Countries are to other ones
3 ) UN sees gains on poverty worldwide, but huge gaps remain
4 ) Developing countries’ goods trade share surges to 50-year peak

5 ) OECD: Aid to Developing Countries rises to highest ever level
6 ) US accounts for
1/3 of annual remittances to Developing Countries of $100bn
7 ) World Bank says Developing Countries' aid $20bn short
8 ) World Bank issues Africa Development Indicators 2005 and IMF cautions on impact of aid
9 ) Report: Pro-Poor Growth in the 1990s: Lessons and Insights from 14 Countries
10 ) Gates Foundation announces 43 research projects to discover new ways to fight disease in poorest countries
11 ) EU CAP policy and resistance to reform



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