Five WTO nations allege India provides excessive market support to wheat, rice

Published 2024년 11월 12일

Tridge summary

Five World Trade Organization (WTO) members, including Argentina, Australia, Canada, Ukraine, and the US, have accused India of providing excessive market support for wheat and rice, allegedly distorting global trade. They claim that India's market price support for rice exceeded 87% of the value of production in 2021-23. India plans to respond at a formal WTO forum and has invoked the Peace Clause to defend its excess support measures for rice farmers. The country also seeks amendments to the food subsidy cap formula and has called on WTO members to address the public food stockpile issue.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Five WTO members - Argentina, Australia, Canada, Ukraine and the US - have alleged that India provides excessive market support to wheat and rice which distorts global trade. In a communication of the World Trade Organization (WTO), these countries claimed that India's apparent MPS (market price support) for rice appears to have been over 87 per cent of the value of production (VoP) in each of the two covered years (2021-23) for which India has notified data to the multi-lateral body. "India appears to be providing significant market price support, both in terms of absolute value and as a percentage of the value of production, for rice and wheat," according to the communication of these countries submitted to the WTO's Committee on Agriculture. An Indian official said that the country will suitably respond to this at a formal forum. The communication said that India's most recent domestic support notification covered more than USD 60.5 billion in "trade-distorting" domestic ...
Source: WTOCenter

Would you like more in-depth insights?

Gain access to detailed market analysis tailored to your business needs.
By clicking “Accept Cookies,” I agree to provide cookies for statistical and personalized preference purposes. To learn more about our cookies, please read our Privacy Policy.