NCC Responds to WTO Ruling

On November 19, the World Trade Organization’s Dispute Settlement Body issued a formal ruling on the August 2009 Arbitration Panel finding in the case brought against the U.S. credit export guarantee program and portions of the U.S. cotton programs. The ruling allows Brazil to impose $147 million annually in countermeasures related to the U.S. cotton program. The National Cotton Council’s official response is listed below.

Today, the World Trade Organization’s (WTO) Dispute Settlement Body officially recognized the August 2009 Arbitration Panel finding in the case brought by Brazil against the U.S. export credit guarantee program and portions of the U.S. cotton program.

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Under the ruling, Brazil can impose up to $147 million annually in countermeasures related to the U.S. cotton program. The amount of countermeasures Brazil may impose due to the U.S. export credit guarantee program will vary from year to year based on a formula established by the Panel. The U.S. has provided data to Brazil that will enable them to make the necessary calculations. Brazil has previously implied that it will be entitled to over $650 million in retaliation for the export credit guarantee program, bringing total countermeasures of more than $800 million. Earlier in November, Brazil published a list of 222 items being considered for additional duties.

NCC President Mark Lange stated, “Although commonly referred to as the cotton case, the U.S. export credit guarantee program accounts for a large amount of the total damage award claimed by Brazil. The countermeasures related to the cotton portion of this dispute are only $147 million annually, they are fixed, and they are well below what Brazil sought.” Lange noted.

In September, the Council joined 34 other agricultural organizations in a letter to USTR urging the United States to seek a new WTO compliance panel to update the ruling on the GSM-102 export credit guarantee program. The Council believes the WTO’s decision does not reflect changes made to the GSM-102 program since 2005. Additionally, the ruling does not appreciate the market and policy changes for U.S. cotton since 2005.

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“It is astonishing to think to that anyone would conclude today that U.S. cotton production is damaging Brazilian cotton interests,” stated NCC Chairman Jay Hardwick of Newellton, LA. Hardwick stated that “world cotton production data continue to demonstrate that the U.S. cotton program cannot be damaging Brazil’s or any other country’s interests. U.S. cotton production in 2008 was more than 45 percent below the 2005 level while combined production in Brazil, China and India increased more than 20 percent since 2005. If there is surplus cotton damaging the interests of Brazil, it certainly did not come from growers in the United States. The U.S. share of world cotton production has declined to 12% of total world cotton production – an eight percentage point decline since 2005 and the lowest since 1983.”

Chairman Hardwick stated, “The Council will continue to work with USTR, USDA and Congress to ensure that the many changes previously made to the U.S. cotton program and the export credit guarantee program are fully understood and considered by the WTO.”

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Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

It seems that Brazil considers U.S. cotton interests as an easy target. After all, we’re supporting and bowing to just about everybody these days. I guess they think it’s worth a try.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I say we should discontinue any trade with Brazil. We don’t need anything they have.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

Yes I agree with the last comment.Cut off all imports from Brazil into the United States,and do no trading with them at all,on any items at all.Then maybe they will rethink what they have done to us Cotton producers in the U.S.I’m not sure what all they export into the U.S.,but when you get in their billfolds it might wake them up.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I wonder how much bowing the bully crooks on Wall Street did as they ripped off countless Americans.

Lesson learned: You catch more flies with honey

Our country will be fine once we get our already over-inflaed ego in check. As for the WTO decision, why should tax payers susbsidize the farming industry among other things. It’s time to let go of Big Brother’s hand and get things done on our own.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

In retaliation embargo all agricultural chemicals and equipment to this country. John Deere and Monsanto and others could bring them around if we did this.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

It seems the current defense of the WTO decision in the USA is that US cotton production is no longer affecting the world market. Be that as it may, the decision is based on the past not the situation today. The panel has established that the US applied illegal subsidies in the past, and for this there is a fine or penalty to be paid. For the future the market will evaluate if the current subsidies continue to violate WTO rules. For the time being Brazil is requiring restitution for the past.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

Comments from “Clean up mess and move” on on Nov. 25 and Anonymous on Nov. 26. I bet these anonymous were too scared to print there names. Really not cotton producers in USA, probably Brazil.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

If the US is guilty of anything it is guilty of providing the foundation and finances for the technolology that enables Brazil and the rest of the worlds cotton producing nations to be as competitive/productive as they are. We don’t owe Brazil anything.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

It seems that Brazil considers U.S. cotton interests as an easy target. After all, we’re supporting and bowing to just about everybody these days. I guess they think it’s worth a try.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I say we should discontinue any trade with Brazil. We don’t need anything they have.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

Yes I agree with the last comment.Cut off all imports from Brazil into the United States,and do no trading with them at all,on any items at all.Then maybe they will rethink what they have done to us Cotton producers in the U.S.I’m not sure what all they export into the U.S.,but when you get in their billfolds it might wake them up.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I wonder how much bowing the bully crooks on Wall Street did as they ripped off countless Americans.

Lesson learned: You catch more flies with honey

Our country will be fine once we get our already over-inflaed ego in check. As for the WTO decision, why should tax payers susbsidize the farming industry among other things. It’s time to let go of Big Brother’s hand and get things done on our own.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

In retaliation embargo all agricultural chemicals and equipment to this country. John Deere and Monsanto and others could bring them around if we did this.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

It seems the current defense of the WTO decision in the USA is that US cotton production is no longer affecting the world market. Be that as it may, the decision is based on the past not the situation today. The panel has established that the US applied illegal subsidies in the past, and for this there is a fine or penalty to be paid. For the future the market will evaluate if the current subsidies continue to violate WTO rules. For the time being Brazil is requiring restitution for the past.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

Comments from “Clean up mess and move” on on Nov. 25 and Anonymous on Nov. 26. I bet these anonymous were too scared to print there names. Really not cotton producers in USA, probably Brazil.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

If the US is guilty of anything it is guilty of providing the foundation and finances for the technolology that enables Brazil and the rest of the worlds cotton producing nations to be as competitive/productive as they are. We don’t owe Brazil anything.