Well well well - here it is: The AoA. I have completely
and unabashedly taken this from another site. I figure since this
is
a public document there could hardly be an intellectual, proprietary, copy
nor any other rights what-so-ever claimed on it. And if there is...well,
like Dr. Kevorkian said "Just let them try me for murder if they want".
I took it from the ITL (International Trade Law) site some time ago.
I have since tried going back to those sites but could never connect.
No idea if they died or what...anyway they live on here so I hope you can
make use of it!
NOTE: This was produced in 1993 while people were still using the acronym
GATT. I have no idea if it has changed but by using the Guide
to the Agreement on Agriculture, it would seem that very little, if
anything, has changed.
SPS
TRIPs TRIMs
DUMPING
ACTUAL
AGREEMENTS COVER
AGREEMENT ON AGRICULTURE
Members,
Having decided to establish a basis for initiating a process
of reform of trade in agriculture in line with the objectives of the negotiations
as set out in the Punta del Este Declaration;
Recalling that the long-term objective as agreed at the Mid-Term
Review "is to establish a fair and market-oriented agricultural trading
system and that a reform process should be initiated through the negotiation
of commitments on support and protection and through the establishment
of strengthened and more operationally effective GATT rules and disciplines";
Recalling further that "the above-mentioned long-term objective
is to provide for substantial progressive reductions in agricultural support
and protection sustained over an agreed period of time, resulting in correcting
and preventing restrictions and distortions in world agricultural markets";
Committed to achieving specific binding commitments in
each of the following areas: market access; domestic support; export competition;
and to reaching an agreement on sanitary and phytosanitary issues;
Having agreed that in implementing their commitments on
market access, developed country Members would take fully into account
the particular needs and conditions of developing country Members by providing
for a greater improvement of opportunities and terms of access for agricultural
products of particular interest to these Members, including the fullest
liberalization of trade in tropical agricultural products as agreed at
the Mid-Term Review, and products of particular importance to the diversification
of production from the growing of illicit narcotic crops;
Noting that commitments under the reform programme should
be made in an equitable way among all Members, having regard to non-trade
concerns, including food security and the need to protect the environment;
having regard to the agreement that special and differential treatment
to developing countries is an integral element of the negotiations, and
taking into account the possible negative effects of the implementation
of the reform programme on least- developed and net food-importing developing
countries;
Hereby agree, as follows:
Part I
Article 1 - Definition of Terms
In this Agreement, unless the context otherwise requires:
-
(a) "Aggregate Measurement of Support" and "AMS" mean the annual level
of support, expressed in monetary terms, provided for an agricultural product
in favour of the producers of the basic agricultural product or non-product-specific
support provided in favour of agricultural producers in general, other
than support provided under programmes that qualify as exempt from reduction
under Annex 2 to this Agreement, which is:
-
(i) with respect to support provided during the base period, specified
in the relevant tables of supporting material incorporated by reference
in Part IV of a Member's Schedule; and
-
(ii) with respect to support provided during any year of the implementation
period and thereafter, calculated in accordance with the provisions of
Annex 3 of this Agreement and taking into account the constituent data
and methodology used in the tables of supporting material incorporated
by reference in Part IV of the Member's Schedule;
-
(b) "basic product" in relation to domestic support commitments is defined
as the product as close as practicable to the point of first sale as specified
in a Member's Schedule and in the related supporting material;
-
(c) "budgetary outlays" or "outlays" include revenue foregone;
-
(d) "Equivalent Measurement of Support" means the annual level of support,
expressed in monetary terms, provided to producers of a basic agricultural
product through the application of one or more measures, the calculation
of which in accordance with the AMS methodology is impracticable, other
than support provided under programmes that qualify as exempt from reduction
under Annex 2 to this Agreement, and which is:
-
(i) with respect to support provided during the base period, specified
in the relevant tables of supporting material incorporated by reference
in Part IV of a Member's Schedule; and
-
(ii) with respect to support provided during any year of the implementation
period and thereafter, calculated in accordance with the provisions of
Annex 4 of this Agreement and taking into account the constituent data
and methodology used in the tables of supporting material incorporated
by reference in Part IV of the Member's Schedule;
-
(e) "export subsidies" refer to subsidies contingent upon export performance
including the export subsidies listed in Article 9 of this Agreement;
-
(f) "implementation period" means the six-year period commencing in the
year 1995, except that, for the purposes of Article 13, it means the nine-year
period commencing in 1995;
-
(g) "market access concessions" include all market access commitments undertaken
pursuant to this Agreement;
-
(h) "Total Aggregate Measurement of Support" and "Total AMS" mean the sum
of all domestic support provided in favour of agricultural producers, calculated
as the sum of all aggregate measurements of support for basic agricultural
products, all non-product-specific aggregate measurements of support and
all equivalent measurements of support for agricultural products, and which
is:
-
(i) with respect to support provided during the base period (i.e., the
"Base Total AMS") and the maximum support permitted to be provided during
any year of the implementation period or thereafter (i.e., the "Annual
and Final Bound Commitment Levels"), as specified in Part IV of a Member's
Schedule; and
-
(ii) with respect to the level of support actually provided during any
year of the implementation period and thereafter (i.e., the "Current Total
AMS"), calculated in accordance with the provisions of this Agreement,
including Article 6, and with the constituent data and methodology used
in the tables of supporting material incorporated by reference in Part
IV of the Member's Schedule;
-
(i) "year" in (f) above and in relation to the specific commitments of
a Member refers to the calendar, financial or marketing year specified
in the Schedule relating to that Member.
Article 2 - Product Coverage
This Agreement applies to the products listed in Annex 1 to this
Agreement, hereinafter referred to as agricultural products.
Part II
Article 3 - Incorporation of Concessions and Commitments
1. The domestic support and export subsidy commitments in Part
IV of each Member's Schedule constitute commitments limiting subsidization
and are hereby made an integral part of the GATT 1994.
2. Subject to the provisions of Article 6 of this Agreement, a
Member shall not provide support in favour of domestic producers in excess
of the commitment levels specified in Section I of Part IV of its Schedule.
3. Subject to the provisions of paragraphs 2(b) and 4 of Article
9 of this Agreement, a Member shall not provide export subsidies listed
in paragraph 1 of Article 9 in respect of the agricultural products or
groups of products specified in Section II of Part IV of its Schedule in
excess of the budgetary outlay and quantity commitment levels specified
therein and shall not provide such subsidies in respect of any agricultural
product not specified in that Section of its Schedule.
Part III
Article 4 - Market Access
1. Market access concessions contained in Schedules relate to
bindings and reductions of tariffs, and to other market access commitments
as specified therein.
2. Members shall not maintain, resort to, or revert to any measures
of the kind which have been required to be converted into ordinary customs
duties1, except
as otherwise provided for in Article 5 and Annex 5 hereof.
Article 5 - Special Safeguard Provisions
1. Notwithstanding the provisions of Article II:1(b) of
the GATT 1994, any Member may take recourse to the provisions of paragraphs
4 and 5 below in connection with the importation of an agricultural product,
in respect of which measures referred to in paragraph 2 of Article 4 have
been converted into an ordinary customs duty and which is designated in
its Schedule with the symbol "SSG" as being the subject of a concession
in respect of which the provisions of this Article may be invoked, if:
-
(i) the volume of imports of that product entering the customs territory
of the Member granting the concession during any year exceeds a trigger
level which relates to the existing market access opportunity as set out
in paragraph 4 below; or, but not concurrently:
(ii) the price at which imports of that product may enter the
customs territory of the Member granting the concession, as determined
on the basis of the c.i.f. import price of the shipment concerned expressed
in terms of its domestic currency, falls below a trigger price equal to
the average 1986 to 1988 reference price2
for the product concerned.
2. Imports under current and minimum access commitments established
as part of a concession referred to in paragraph 1 above shall be counted
for the purpose of determining the volume of imports required for invoking
the provisions of sub-paragraph 1(i) and paragraph 4, but imports under
such commitments shall not be affected by any additional duty imposed under
either paragraph 4 or paragraph 5 below.
3. Any supplies of the product in question which were en
route on the basis of a contract settled before the additional duty is
imposed under sub-paragraph 1(i) above and paragraph 4 below shall be exempted
from any such additional duty provided that they may be counted in the
volume of imports of the product in question during the following year
for the purposes of triggering the provisions of sub-paragraph 1(i) in
that year.
4. Any additional duty imposed under sub-paragraph 1(i)
above shall only be maintained until the end of the year in which it has
been imposed, and may only be levied at a level which shall not exceed
one-third of the level of the ordinary customs duty in effect in the year
in which the action is taken. The trigger level shall be set according
to the following schedule based on market access opportunities defined
as imports as a percentage of the corresponding domestic consumption3
during the three preceding years for which data are available:
-
(a) where such market access opportunities for a product are less
than or equal to 10 per cent, the base trigger level shall equal 125 per
cent;
-
(b) where such market access opportunities for a product are greater
than 10 per cent but less than or equal to 30 per cent, the base trigger
level shall equal 110 per cent;
-
(c) where such market access opportunities for a product are greater
than 30 per cent, the base trigger level shall equal 105 per cent.
In all cases the additional duty may be imposed in any year where the absolute
volume of imports of the product concerned entering the customs territory
of the Member granting the concession exceeds the sum of (x) the base trigger
level set out above multiplied by the average quantity of imports during
the three preceding years for which data are available and (y) the absolute
volume change in domestic consumption of the product concerned in the most
recent year for which data are available compared to the preceding year,
provided that the trigger level shall not be less than 105 per cent of
the average quantity of imports in (x) above.
5. The additional duty imposed under sub-paragraph 1(ii) above
shall be set according to the following schedule:
-
(a) if the difference between the c.i.f. import price of the shipment
expressed in terms of the domestic currency (hereinafter referred to as
the "import price") and the trigger price as defined under that sub- paragraph
is less than or equal to 10 per cent of the trigger price, no additional
duty shall be imposed;
-
(b) if the difference between the import price and the trigger price
(hereinafter referred to as the "difference") is greater than 10 per cent
but less than or equal to 40 per cent of the trigger price, the additional
duty shall equal 30 per cent of the amount by which the difference exceeds
10 per cent;
-
(c) if the difference is greater than 40 per cent but less than
or equal to 60 per cent of the trigger price, the additional duty shall
equal 50 per cent of the amount by which the difference exceeds 40 per
cent, plus the additional duty allowed under (b);
-
(d) if the difference is greater than 60 per cent but less than
or equal to 75 per cent, the additional duty shall equal 70 per cent of
the amount by which the difference exceeds 60 per cent of the trigger price,
plus the additional duties allowed under (b) and (c);
-
(e) if the difference is greater than 75 per cent of the trigger
price, the additional duty shall equal 90 per cent of the amount by which
the difference exceeds 75 per cent, plus the additional duties allowed
under (b), (c) and (d).
6. For perishable and seasonal products, the conditions set out
above shall be applied in such a manner as to take account of the specific
characteristics of such products. In particular, shorter time periods under
paragraph 1(i) and paragraph 4 may be used in reference to the corresponding
periods in the base period and different reference prices for different
periods may be used under paragraph 1(ii).
7. The operation of the special safeguard shall be carried
out in a transparent manner. Any Member taking action under paragraph 1(i)
above shall give notice in writing, including relevant data, to the Committee
on Agriculture as far in advance as may be practicable and in any event
within 10 days of the implementation of such action. In cases where changes
in consumption volumes must be allocated to individual tariff lines subject
to action under paragraph 4, relevant data shall include the information
and methods used to allocate these changes. A Member taking action under
paragraph 4 shall afford any interested Members the opportunity to consult
with it in respect of the conditions of application of such action. Any
Member taking action under paragraph 1(ii) above shall give notice in writing,
including relevant data, to the Committee on Agriculture within 10 days
of the implementation of the first such action or, for perishable and seasonal
products, the first action in any period. Members undertake, as far as
practicable, not to take recourse to the provisions of paragraph 1(ii)
where the volume of imports of the products concerned are declining. In
either case a Member taking such action shall afford any interested Members
the opportunity to consult with it in respect of the conditions of application
of such action.
8. Where measures are taken in conformity with paragraphs
1 through 7 above, Members undertake not to have recourse, in respect of
such measures, to the provisions of Article XIX:1(a) and XIX:3 of the GATT
1994 or paragraph 17 of the Agreement on Safeguards.
9. The provisions of this Article shall remain in force for the
duration of the reform process as determined under Article 20.
Part IV
Article 6 - Domestic Support Commitments
1. The domestic support reduction commitments of each Member
contained in Part IV of its Schedule shall apply to all of its domestic
support measures in favour of agricultural producers with the exception
of domestic measures which are not subject to reduction in terms of the
criteria set out in this Article and in Annex 2 to this Agreement. The
commitments are expressed in terms of Total Aggregate Measurement of Support
and "Annual and Final Bound Commitment Levels".
2. In accordance with the Mid-Term Review Agreement that
government measures of assistance, whether direct or indirect, to encourage
agricultural and rural development are an integral part of the development
programmes of developing countries, investment subsidies which are generally
available to agriculture in developing country Members and agricultural
input subsidies generally available to low-income or resource poor producers
in developing country Members shall be exempt from domestic support reduction
commitments that would otherwise be applicable to such measures, as shall
domestic support to producers in developing country Members to encourage
diversification from growing illicit narcotic crops. Domestic support meeting
the criteria of this paragraph shall not be required to be included in
a Member's calculation of its Current Total AMS.
3. A Member shall be considered to be in compliance with
its domestic support reduction commitments in any year in which its domestic
support in favour of agricultural producers expressed in terms of Current
Total AMS does not exceed the corresponding annual or final bound commitment
level specified in Part IV of the Member's Schedule.
4.
-
(a) A Member shall not be required to include in the calculation
of its Current Total AMS and shall not be required to reduce:
-
(i) product-specific domestic support which would otherwise be required
to be included in a Member's calculation of its Current AMS where such
support does not exceed 5 per cent of that Member's total value of production
of a basic product during the relevant year; and
-
(ii) non-product-specific domestic support which would otherwise
be required to be included in a Member's calculation of its Current AMS
where such support does not exceed 5 per cent of the value of that Member's
total agricultural production.
-
(b) For developing country Members, the de minimis percentage under
this paragraph shall be 10 per cent.
5.
-
(a) Direct payments under production-limiting programmes shall
not be subject to the commitment to reduce domestic support if :
-
(i) such payments are based on fixed area and yields; or
-
(ii) such payments are made on 85 per cent or less of the base level
of production; or
-
(iii) livestock payments are made on a fixed number of head.
-
(b) The exemption from the reduction commitment for direct payments
meeting the above criteria shall be reflected by the exclusion of the value
of those direct payments in a Member's calculation of its Current Total
AMS.
Article 7 - General Disciplines on Domestic Support
1. Each Member shall ensure that any domestic support measures
in favour of agricultural producers which are not subject to reduction
commitments because they qualify under the criteria set out in Annex 2
to this Agreement are maintained in conformity therewith.
2.
-
(a) Any domestic support measure in favour of agricultural producers,
including any modification to such measure, and any measure that is subsequently
introduced that cannot be shown to satisfy the criteria in Annex 2 to this
Agreement or to be exempt from reduction by reason of any other provision
of this Agreement shall be included in the Member's calculation of its
Current Total AMS.
-
(b) Where no Total AMS commitment exists in Part IV of a Member's
Schedule, the Member shall not provide support to agricultural producers
in excess of the relevant de minimis level set out in paragraph
4 of Article 6.
Part V
Article 8 - Export Competition Commitments
Each Member undertakes not to provide export subsidies otherwise
than in conformity with this Agreement and with the commitments as specified
in that Member's Schedule.
Article 9 - Export Subsidy Commitments
1. The following export subsidies are subject to reduction
commitments under this Agreement:
-
(a) The provision by governments or their agencies of direct subsidies,
including payments-in-kind, to a firm, to an industry, to producers of
an agricultural product, to a co- operative or other association of such
producers, or to a marketing board, contingent on export performance.
-
(b) The sale or disposal for export by governments or their agencies
of non- commercial stocks of agricultural products at a price lower than
the comparable price charged for the like product to buyers in the domestic
market.
-
(c) Payments on the export of an agricultural product that are financed
by virtue of governmental action, whether or not a charge on the public
account is involved, including payments that are financed from the proceeds
of a levy imposed on the agricultural product concerned or on an agricultural
product from which the exported product is derived.
-
(d) The provision of subsidies to reduce the costs of marketing
exports of agricultural products (other than widely available export promotion
and advisory services) including handling, upgrading and other processing
costs, and the costs of international transport and freight.
-
(e) Internal transport and freight charges on export shipments,
provided or mandated by governments, on terms more favourable than for
domestic shipments.
-
(f) Subsidies on agricultural products contingent on their incorporation
in exported products.
2.
-
(a) Except as provided in sub-paragraph (b), the export subsidy
commitment levels for each year of the implementation period, as specified
in a Member's Schedule, represent with respect to the export subsidies
listed in paragraph 1 of this Article:
-
(i) in the case of budgetary outlay reduction commitments, the maximum
level of expenditure for such subsidies that may be allocated or incurred
in that year; and
-
(ii) in the case of export quantity reduction commitments, the maximum
quantity of an agricultural product, or group of such products, in respect
of which such export subsidies may be granted in that year.
-
(b) In any of the second through fifth years of the implementation
period, a Member may provide export subsidies listed in paragraph 1 above
in a given year in excess of the corresponding annual commitment levels
in respect of the products or groups of products specified in Part IV of
the Member's Schedule, provided that:
-
(i) the cumulative amounts of budgetary outlays for such subsidies,
from the beginning of the implementation period through the year in question,
does not exceed the cumulative amounts that would have resulted from full
compliance with the relevant annual outlay commitment levels specified
in the Member's Schedule by more than 3 per cent of the base period level
of such budgetary outlays;
-
(ii) the cumulative quantities exported with the benefit of such
export subsidies, from the beginning of the implementation period through
the year in question, does not exceed the cumulative quantities that would
have resulted from full compliance with the relevant annual quantity commitment
levels specified in the Member's Schedule by more than 1.75 per cent of
the base period quantities;
-
(iii) the total cumulative amounts of budgetary outlays for such
export subsidies and the quantities benefiting from such export subsidies
over the entire implementation period are no greater than the totals that
would have resulted from full compliance with the relevant annual commitment
levels specified in the Member's Schedule; and
-
(iv) the Member's budgetary outlays for export subsidies and the
quantities benefiting from such subsidies, at the conclusion of the implementation
period, are no greater than 64 per cent and 79 per cent of the 1986-1990
base period levels, respectively. For developing country Members these
percentages shall be 76 and 86 per cent, respectively.
3. Commitments relating to limitations on the extension of the scope
of export subsidization are as specified in Schedules.
4. During the implementation period developing country
Members shall not be required to undertake commitments in respect of the
export subsidies listed in sub-paragraphs (d) and (e) of paragraph 1 above
provided that these are not applied in a manner that would circumvent reduction
commitments.
Article 10 - Prevention of Circumvention of Export Subsidy
Commitments
1. Export subsidies not listed in Article 9(1) of this
Agreement shall not be applied in a manner which results in, or which threatens
to lead to, circumvention of export subsidy commitments; nor shall non-commercial
transactions be used to circumvent such commitments.
2. Members undertake to work toward the development of
internationally agreed disciplines to govern the provision of export credits,
export credit guarantees or insurance programmes and, after agreement on
such disciplines, to provide export credits, export credit guarantees or
insurance programmes only in conformity therewith.
3. Any Member which claims that any quantity exported in
excess of a reduction commitment level is not subsidized must establish
that no export subsidy, whether listed in Article 9 or not, has been granted
in respect of the quantity of exports in question.
4. Members donors of international food aid shall ensure:
-
(a) that the provision of international food aid is not tied directly
or indirectly to commercial exports of agricultural products to recipient
countries;
-
(b) that international food aid transactions, including bilateral
food aid which is monetised, shall be carried out in accordance with the
FAO "Principles of Surplus Disposal and Consultative Obligations" including,
where appropriate, the system of Usual Marketing Requirements (UMRs); and
-
(c) that such aid shall be provided to the extent possible in fully
grant form or on terms no less concessional than those provided for in
Article IV of the Food Aid Convention 1986.
Article 11 - Incorporated Products
In no case may the per unit subsidy paid on an incorporated agricultural
primary product exceed the per unit export subsidy that would be payable
on exports of the primary product as such.
Part VI
Article 12 - Disciplines on Export Prohibitions and Restrictions
1.Where any Member institutes any new export prohibition
or restriction on foodstuffs in accordance with paragraph 2(a) of Article
XI of the GATT 1994, the Member shall observe the following provisions:
-
(i) the Member instituting the export prohibition or restriction
shall give due consideration to the effects of such prohibition or restriction
on importing Members' food security;
-
(ii) before any Member institutes an export prohibition or restriction,
it shall give notice in writing, as far in advance as practicable, to the
Committee on Agriculture comprising such information as the nature and
the duration of such measure, and shall consult, upon request, with any
other Member having a substantial interest as an importer with respect
to any matter related to the measure in question. The Member instituting
such export prohibition or restriction shall provide, upon request, such
a Member with necessary information.
2. The provisions of this Article shall not apply to any developing
country Member, unless the measure is taken by a developing country Member
which is a net-food exporter of the specific foodstuff concerned.
Part VII
Article 13 - Due Restraint
During the implementation period, notwithstanding the provisions of
the GATT 1994 and the Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures
("Subsidies Agreement"):
1. Domestic support measures that conform fully to the
provisions of Annex 2 to this Agreement shall be:
-
(a) non-actionable subsidies for purposes of countervailing duties4;
-
(b) exempt from actions based on Article XVI of the GATT 1994 and
Part III of the Subsidies Agreement; and
-
(c) exempt from actions based on non-violation nullification or
impairment of the benefits of tariff concessions accruing to another Member
under Article II of the GATT 1994, in the sense of Article XXIII:1(b) of
the GATT 1994.
2. Domestic support measures that conform fully to the provisions
of Article 6 of this Agreement including direct payments that conform to
the requirements of paragraph 5 thereof, as reflected in each Member's
Schedule, as well as domestic support within de minimis levels and in conformity
with paragraph 2 of Article 6, shall be:
-
(a) exempt from the imposition of countervailing duties unless a
determination of injury or threat thereof is made in accordance with Article
VI of the GATT 1994 and Part V of the Subsidies Agreement, and due restraint
shall be shown in initiating any countervailing duty investigations;
-
(b) exempt from actions based on Article XVI:1 of the GATT 1994
or Articles 5 and 6 of the Subsidies Agreement, provided that such measures
do not grant support to a specific commodity in excess of that decided
during the 1992 marketing year; and
-
(c) exempt from actions based on non-violation nullification or
impairment of the benefits of tariff concessions accruing to another Member
under Article II of the GATT 1994, in the sense of Article XXIII:1(b) of
the GATT 1994, provided that such measures do not grant support to a specific
commodity in excess of that decided during the 1992 marketing year.
3. Export subsidies that conform fully to the provisions of Part
V of this Agreement, as reflected in each Member's Schedule of Commitments,
shall be:
-
(a) subject to countervailing duties only upon a determination of
injury or threat thereof based on volume, effect on prices, or consequent
impact in accordance with Article VI of the GATT 1994 and Part V of the
Subsidies Agreement, and due restraint shall be shown in initiating any
countervailing duty investigations; and
-
(b) exempt from actions based on Article XVI of the GATT 1994 or
Articles 3, 5 and 6 of the Subsidies Agreement.
Part VIII
Article 14 - Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures
Members agree to give effect to the Agreement on Sanitary and
Phytosanitary Measures.
Part IX
Article 15 - Special and Differential Treatment
1. In keeping with the recognition that differential and
more favourable treatment for developing country Members is an integral
part of the negotiation, special and differential treatment in respect
of commitments shall be provided as set out in the relevant provisions
of this Agreement and embodied in the Schedules of concessions and commitments.
2. Developing countries shall have the flexibility to implement
reduction commitments over a period of up to 10 years. Least developed
country Members shall not be required to undertake reduction commitments.
Part X
Article 16 - Least-developed and Net Food-Importing Developing
Countries
1. Developed country Members shall take such action as
is provided for within the framework of the Decision on Measures Concerning
the Possible Negative Effects of the Reform Programme on Least-developed
and Net Food-Importing Developing Countries.
2. The Committee on Agriculture shall monitor, as appropriate,
the follow-up to this Decision.
Part XI
Article 17 - Committee on Agriculture
A Committee on Agriculture shall be established.
Article 18 - Review of the Implementation of Commitments
1. Progress in the implementation of commitments negotiated
under the Uruguay Round reform programme shall be reviewed by the Committee
on Agriculture.
2. The review process shall be undertaken on the basis
of notifications submitted by Members in relation to such matters and at
such intervals as shall be determined, as well as on the basis of such
documentation as the WTO Secretariat may be requested to prepare in order
to facilitate the review process.
3. In addition to the notifications to be submitted under
paragraph 2, any new domestic support measure, or modification of an existing
measure, for which exemption from reduction is claimed shall be notified
promptly. This notification shall contain details of the new or modified
measure and its conformity with the agreed criteria as set out either in
Article 6 or in Annex 2 to this Agreement.
4. In the review process Members shall give due consideration
to the influence of excessive rates of inflation on the ability of any
Member to abide by its domestic support commitments.
5. Members agree to consult annually in the Committee on
Agriculture with respect to their participation in the normal growth of
world trade in agricultural products within the framework of the commitments
on export subsidies under this Agreement.
6. The review process shall provide an opportunity for
Members to raise any matter relevant to the implementation of commitments
under the reform programme as set out in this Agreement.
7. Any Member may bring to the attention of the Committee
on Agriculture any measure which it considers ought to have been notified
by another Member.
Article 19 - Consultation and Dispute Settlement
The provisions of Articles XXII and XXIII of the GATT 1994, as
elaborated and applied by the Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing
the Settlement of Disputes, shall apply to consultations and the settlement
of disputes under this Agreement.
Part XII
Article 20 - Continuation of the Reform Process
Recognizing that the long-term objective of substantial progressive
reductions in support and protection resulting in fundamental reform is
an ongoing process, Members agree that negotiations for continuing the
process will be initiated one year before the end of the implementation
period, taking into account:
-the experience to that date from implementing the reduction commitments;
-the effects of the reduction commitments on world trade in agriculture;
-non-trade concerns, special and differential treatment to developing
country Members, and the objective to establish a fair and market-oriented
agricultural trading system, and the other objectives and concerns mentioned
in the preamble to this Agreement; and
-what further commitments are necessary to achieve the above mentioned
long-term objectives.
Part XIII
Article 21 - Final Provisions
1. The provisions of the GATT 1994 and of other Multilateral
Trade Agreements in Annex 1A to the WTO shall apply subject to the provisions
of this Agreement.
2. The Annexes to this Agreement are hereby made an integral
part of this Agreement.
ANNEX 1
PRODUCT COVERAGE
1. This Agreement shall cover the following products:
(i) HS Chapters 1 to 24 less fish and fish products, plus
(ii) HS Code 29.05.43 (mannitol)
HS Code 29.05.44 (sorbitol)
HS Heading 33.01 (essential oils)
HS Headings 35.01 to 35.05 (albuminoidal substances, modified starches, glues)
HS Code 38.09.10 (finishing agents)
HS Code 38.23.60 (sorbitol n.e.p.)
HS Headings 41.01 to 41.03 (hides and skins)
HS Heading 43.01 (raw furskins)
HS Headings 50.01 to 50.03 (raw silk and silk waste)
HS Headings 51.01 to 51.03 (wool and animal hair)
HS Headings 52.01 to 52.03 (raw cotton, waste and cotton carded or combed)
HS Heading 53.01 (raw flax)
HS Heading 53.02 (raw hemp)
2. The foregoing shall not limit the product coverage of the Agreement
on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures.
ANNEX 2
DOMESTIC SUPPORT: THE BASIS FOR EXEMPTION FROM THE REDUCTION COMMITMENTS
1. Domestic support policies for which exemption from the reduction
commitments is claimed shall meet the fundamental requirement that they
have no, or at most minimal, trade distortion effects or effects on production.
Accordingly, all policies for which exemption is claimed shall conform
to the following basic criteria:
-
(i) the support in question shall be provided through a publicly-
funded government programme (including government revenue foregone) not
involving transfers from consumers; and,
-
(ii) the support in question shall not have the effect of providing
price support to producers;
plus policy-specific criteria and conditions as set out below.
Government Service Programmes
2. General services
Policies in this category involve expenditures (or revenue foregone)
in relation to programmes which provide services or benefits to agriculture
or the rural community. They shall not involve direct payments to producers
or processors. Such programmes, which include but are not restricted to
the following list, shall meet the general criteria in paragraph 1 above
and policy-specific conditions where set out below:
-
(i) research, including general research, research in connection
with environmental programmes, and research programmes relating to particular
products;
-
(ii) pest and disease control, including general and product-specific
pest and disease control measures, such as early warning systems, quarantine
and eradication;
-
(iii) training services, including both general and specialist training
facilities;
-
(iv) extension and advisory services, including the provision of
means to facilitate the transfer of information and the results of research
to producers and consumers;
-
(v) inspection services, including general inspection services and
the inspection of particular products for health, safety, grading or standardization
purposes;
-
(vi) marketing and promotion services, including market information,
advice and promotion relating to particular products but excluding expenditure
for unspecified purposes that could be used by sellers to reduce their
selling price or confer a direct economic benefit to purchasers; and
-
(vii) infrastructural services, including: electricity reticulation,
roads and other means of transport, market and port facilities, water supply
facilities, dams and drainage schemes, and infrastructural works associated
with environmental programmes. In all cases the expenditure shall be directed
to the provision or construction of capital works only, and shall exclude
the subsidized provision of on-farm facilities other than for the reticulation
of generally-available public utilities. It shall not include subsidies
to inputs or operating costs, or preferential user charges.
3. Public stockholding for food security purposes5
-
Expenditures (or revenue foregone) in relation to the accumulation and
holding of stocks of products which form an integral part of a food security
programme identified in national legislation. This may include government
aid to private storage of products as part of such a programme.
-
The volume and accumulation of such stocks shall correspond to predetermined
targets related solely to food security. The process of stock accumulation
and disposal shall be financially transparent. Food purchases by the government
shall be made at current market prices and sales from food security stocks
shall be made at no less than the current domestic market price for the
product and quality in question.
4. Domestic food aid6
-
Expenditures (or revenue foregone) in relation to the provision of domestic
food aid to sections of the population in need.
-
Eligibility to receive the food aid shall be subject to clearly-defined
criteria related to nutritional objectives. Such aid shall be in the form
of direct provision of food to those concerned or the provision of means
to allow eligible recipients to buy food either at market or at subsidized
prices. Food purchases by the government shall be made at current market
prices and the financing and administration of the aid shall be transparent.
5. Direct payments to producers
Support provided through direct payments (or revenue foregone,
including payments in kind) to producers for which exemption from reduction
commitments is claimed shall meet the basic criteria set out in paragraph
1 above, plus specific criteria applying to individual types of direct
payment as set out in paragraphs 6 to 13 below. Where exemption from reduction
is claimed for any existing or new type of direct payment other than those
specified in paragraphs 6 to 13, it shall conform to criteria (ii) to (v)
of paragraph 6 in addition to the general criteria set out in paragraph
1.
6. Decoupled income support
-
(i) Eligibility for such payments shall be determined by clearly-
defined criteria such as income, status as a producer or landowner, factor
use or production level in a defined and fixed base period.
-
(ii) The amount of such payments in any given year shall not be
related to, or based on, the type or volume of production (including livestock
units) undertaken by the producer in any year after the base period.
-
(iii) The amount of such payments in any given year shall not be
related to, or based on, the prices, domestic or international, applying
to any production undertaken in any year after the base period.
-
(iv) The amount of such payments in any given year shall not be
related to, or based on, the factors of production employed in any year
after the base period.
-
(v) No production shall be required in order to receive such payments.
7. Government financial participation in income insurance and income
safety-net programmes
-
(i) Eligibility for such payments shall be determined by an income
loss, taking into account only income derived from agriculture, which exceeds
30 per cent of average gross income or the equivalent in net income terms
(excluding any payments from the same or similar schemes) in the preceding
three-year period or a three-year average based on the preceding five-year
period, excluding the highest and the lowest entry. Any producer meeting
this condition shall be eligible to receive the payments.
-
(ii) The amount of such payments shall compensate for less than
70 per cent of the producer's income loss in the year the producer becomes
eligible to receive this assistance.
-
(iii) The amount of any such payments shall relate solely to income;
it shall not relate to the type or volume of production (including livestock
units) undertaken by the producer; or to the prices, domestic or international,
applying to such production; or to the factors of production employed.
-
(iv) Where a producer receives in the same year payments under this
paragraph and under paragraph 8 below (relief from natural disasters),
the total of such payments shall be less than 100 per cent of the producer's
total loss.
8. Payments (made either directly or by way of government financial
participation in crop insurance schemes) for relief from natural disasters
-
(i) Eligibility for such payments shall arise only following a formal
recognition by government authorities that a natural or like disaster (including
disease outbreaks, pest infestations, nuclear accidents, and war on the
territory of the Member concerned) has occurred or is occurring; and shall
be determined by a production loss which exceeds 30 per cent of the average
of production in the preceding three-year period or a three year average
based on the preceding five-year period, excluding the highest and the
lowest entry.
-
(ii) Payments made following a disaster shall be applied only in
respect of losses of income, livestock (including payments in connection
with the veterinary treatment of animals), land or other production factors
due to the natural disaster in question.
-
(iii) Payments shall compensate for not more than the total cost
of replacing such losses and shall not require or specify the type or quantity
of future production.
-
(iv) Payments made during a disaster shall not exceed the level
required to prevent or alleviate further loss as defined in criterion (ii)
above.
-
(v) Where a producer receives in the same year payments under this
paragraph and under paragraph 7 above (income insurance and income safety-net
programmes), the total of such payments shall be less than 100 per cent
of the producer's total loss.
9. Structural adjustment assistance provided through producer retirement
programmes
-
(i) Eligibility for such payments shall be determined by reference
to clearly-defined criteria in programmes designed to facilitate the retirement
of persons engaged in marketable agricultural production, or their movement
to non-agricultural activities.
-
(ii) Payments shall be conditional upon the total and permanent
retirement of the recipients from marketable agricultural production.
10. Structural adjustment assistance provided through resource retirement
programmes
-
(i) Eligibility for such payments shall be determined by reference
to clearly-defined criteria in programmes designed to remove land or other
resources, including livestock, from marketable agricultural production.
-
(ii) Payments shall be conditional upon the retirement of land from
marketable agricultural production for a minimum of 3 years, and in the
case of livestock on its slaughter or definitive permanent disposal.
-
(iii) Payments shall not require or specify any alternative use
for such land or other resources which involves the production of marketable
agricultural products.
-
(iv) Payments shall not be related to either the type or quantity
of production or to the prices, domestic or international, applying to
production undertaken using the land or other resources remaining in production.
11. Structural adjustment assistance provided through investment
aids
-
(i) Eligibility for such payments shall be determined by reference
to clearly-defined criteria in government programmes designed to assist
the financial or physical restructuring of a producer's operations in response
to objectively demonstrated structural disadvantages. Eligibility for such
programmes may also be based on a clearly-defined government programme
for the reprivatization of agricultural land.
-
(ii) The amount of such payments in any given year shall not be
related to, or based on, the type or volume of production (including livestock
units) undertaken by the producer in any year after the base period other
than as provided for under (v) below.
-
(iii) The amount of such payments in any given year shall not be
related to, or based on, the prices, domestic or international, applying
to any production undertaken in any year after the base period.
-
(iv) The payments shall be given only for the period of time necessary
for the realization of the investment in respect of which they are provided.
-
(v) The payments shall not mandate or in any way designate the agricultural
products to be produced by the recipients except to require them not to
produce a particular product.
-
(vi) The payments shall be limited to the amount required to compensate
for the structural disadvantage.
12. Payments under environmental programmes
-
(i) Eligibility for such payments shall be determined as part of
a clearly-defined government environmental or conservation programme and
be dependent on the fulfilment of specific conditions under the government
programme, including conditions related to production methods or inputs.
-
(ii) The amount of payment shall be limited to the extra costs or
loss of income involved in complying with the government programme.
13. Payments under regional assistance programmes
-
(i) Eligibility for such payments shall be limited to producers
in disadvantaged regions. Each such region must be a clearly designated
contiguous geographical area with a definable economic and administrative
identity, considered as disadvantaged on the basis of neutral and objective
criteria clearly spelt out in law or regulation and indicating that the
region's difficulties arise out of more than temporary circumstances.
-
(ii) The amount of such payments in any given year shall not be
related to, or based on, the type or volume of production (including livestock
units) undertaken by the producer in any year after the base period other
than to reduce that production.
-
(iii) The amount of such payments in any given year shall not be
related to, or based on, the prices, domestic or international, applying
to any production undertaken in any year after the base period.
-
(iv) Payments shall be available only to producers in eligible regions,
but generally available to all producers within such regions.
-
(v) Where related to production factors, payments shall be made
at a degressive rate above a threshold level of the factor concerned.
-
(vi) The payments shall be limited to the extra costs or loss of
income involved in undertaking agricultural production in the prescribed
area.
ANNEX 3
DOMESTIC SUPPORT: CALCULATION OF AGGREGATE MEASUREMENT OF SUPPORT
1. Subject to the provisions of Article 6, an Aggregate Measurement
of Support (AMS) shall be calculated on a product-specific basis for each
basic product (defined as the product as close as practicable to the point
of first sale) receiving market price support, non-exempt direct payments,
or any other subsidy not exempted from the reduction commitment ("other
non-exempt policies"). Support which is non-product specific shall be totalled
into one non-product-specific AMS in total monetary terms. 2. Subsidies
under paragraph 1 shall include both budgetary outlays and revenue foregone
by governments or their agents.
3. Support at both the national and sub-national level
shall be included.
4. Specific agricultural levies or fees paid by producers
shall be deducted from the AMS.
5. The AMS calculated as outlined below for the base period
shall constitute the base level for the implementation of the reduction
commitment on domestic support.
6. For each basic product, a specific AMS shall be established,
expressed in total monetary value terms.
7. The AMS shall be calculated as close as practicable to the
point of first sale of the product concerned. Policies directed at agricultural
processors shall be included to the extent that such policies benefit the
producers of the basic products.
8. Market price support: market price support shall be calculated
using the gap between a fixed external reference price and the applied
administered price multiplied by the quantity of production eligible to
receive the applied administered price. Budgetary payments made to maintain
this gap, such as buying-in or storage costs, shall not be included in
the AMS.
9. The fixed external reference price shall be based on the years
1986 to 1988 and shall generally be the average f.o.b. unit value for the
product concerned in a net exporting country and the average c.i.f. unit
value for the product concerned in a net importing country in the base
period. The fixed reference price may be adjusted for quality differences
as necessary.
10. Non-exempt direct payments: non-exempt direct payments
which are dependent on a price gap shall be calculated either using the
gap between the fixed reference price and the applied administered price
multiplied by the quantity of production eligible to receive the administered
price, or using budgetary outlays.
11. The fixed reference price shall be based on the years 1986
to 1988 and shall generally be the actual price used for determining payment
rates.
12.Non-exempt direct payments which are based on factors
other than price shall be measured using budgetary outlays.
13. Other non-exempt policies, including input subsidies
and other policies such as marketing cost reduction measures: the value
of such policies shall be measured using government budgetary outlays or,
where the use of budgetary outlays does not reflect the full extent of
the subsidy concerned, the basis for calculating the subsidy shall be the
gap between the price of the subsidised good or service and a representative
market price for a similar good or service multiplied by the quantity of
the good or service.
ANNEX 4
DOMESTIC SUPPORT: CALCULATION OF EQUIVALENT MEASUREMENT OF SUPPORT
1. Subject to the provisions of Article 6, equivalent measurements
of support shall be calculated in respect of all products where market
price support as defined in Annex 3 exists but for which calculation of
this component of the AMS is not practicable. For such products the base
level for implementation of the domestic support reduction commitments
shall consist of a market price support component expressed in terms of
equivalent measurements of support under paragraph 2 below, as well as
any non-exempt direct payments and other non-exempt support, which shall
be evaluated as provided for under paragraph 3 below. Support at both national
and sub-national level shall be included.
2. The equivalent measurements of support provided for
in paragraph 1 shall be calculated on a product-specific basis for all
products as close as practicable to the point of first sale ("basic products")
receiving market price support and for which the calculation of the market
price support component of the AMS is not practicable. For those basic
products, equivalent measurements of market price support shall be made
using the applied administered price and the quantity of production eligible
to receive that price or, where this is not practicable, on budgetary outlays
used to maintain the producer price.
3. Where products falling under paragraph 1 above are the
subject of non-exempt direct payments or any other product-specific subsidy
not exempted from the reduction commitment, the basis for equivalent measurements
of support concerning these measures shall be calculations as for the corresponding
AMS components (specified in paragraphs 10 to 13 of Annex 3).
4. Equivalent measurements of support shall be calculated
on the amount of subsidy as close as practicable to the point of first
sale of the product concerned. Policies directed at agricultural processors
shall be included to the extent that such policies benefit the producers
of the basic products. Specific agricultural levies or fees paid by producers
shall reduce the equivalent measurements of support by a corresponding
amount.
ANNEX 5
SPECIAL TREATMENT UNDER ARTICLE 4:2
Section A
1. The provisions of Article 4:2 of this Agreement shall
not apply with effect from the entry into force of this Agreement to any
primary agricultural product and its worked and/or prepared products ("designated
products") in respect of which the following conditions are complied with
(hereinafter referred to as "special treatment"):
(a) imports of the designated products comprised less than 3
per cent of corresponding domestic consumption in the base period 1986-1988
("the base period");
(b) no export subsidies have been provided since the beginning
of the base period for the designated products;
(c) effective production restricting measures are applied
to the primary agricultural product;
(d) such products are designated with the symbol "ST-Annex
5" in Section IB of Part I of a Member's Schedule annexed to the Uruguay
Round (1994) Protocol as being subject to special treatment reflecting
factors of non-trade concerns, such as food security and environmental
protection; and
(e) minimum access opportunities in respect of the designated
products correspond, as specified in Section IB of Part I of the Schedule
of the Member concerned, to 4 per cent of base period domestic consumption
of the designated products from the beginning of the first year of the
implementation period and, thereafter, are increased by 0.8 per cent of
corresponding domestic consumption in the base period per year for the
remainder of the implementation period.
2. At the beginning of any year of the implementation period a Member
may cease to apply special treatment in respect of the designated products
by complying with the provisions of paragraph 6 below. In such a case,
the Member concerned shall maintain the minimum access opportunities already
in effect at such time and increase the minimum access opportunities by
0.4 per cent of corresponding domestic consumption in the base period per
year for the remainder of the implementation period. Thereafter, the level
of minimum access opportunities resulting from this formula in the final
year of the implementation period shall be maintained in the Schedule of
the Member concerned.
3. Any negotiation on the question of whether there can
be a continuation of the special treatment as set out in paragraph 1 above
after the end of the implementation period shall be completed within the
time-frame of the implementation period itself as a part of the negotiations
set out in Article 20 of this Agreement, taking into account the factors
of non-trade concerns.
4. If it is agreed as a result of the negotiation referred
to in paragraph 3 above that a Member may continue to apply the special
treatment, such Member shall confer additional and acceptable concessions
as determined in that negotiation.
5. Where the special treatment is not to be continued at
the end of the implementation period, the Member concerned shall implement
the provisions of paragraph 6 below. In such a case, after the end of the
implementation period the minimum access opportunities for the designated
products shall be maintained at the level of 8 per cent of corresponding
domestic consumption in the base period in the Schedule of the Member concerned.
6. Border measures other than ordinary customs duties maintained
in respect of the designated products shall become subject to the provisions
of Article 4:2 of this Agreement with effect from the beginning of the
year in which the special treatment ceases to apply. Such products shall
be subject to ordinary customs duties, which shall be bound in the Schedule
of the Member concerned and applied, from the beginning of the year in
which special treatment ceases and thereafter, at such rates as would have
been applicable had a reduction of at least 15 per cent been implemented
over the implementation period in equal annual instalments. These duties
shall be established on the basis of tariff equivalents to be calculated
in accordance with the guidelines prescribed in the attachment hereto.
Section B
7. The provisions of Article 4:2 of this Agreement shall
also not apply with effect from the entry into force of this Agreement
to a primary agricultural product that is the predominant staple in the
traditional diet of a developing country Member and in respect of which
the following conditions, in addition to those specified in paragraph 1(a)
through 1(d) above, as they apply to the products concerned, are complied
with:
-
- minimum access opportunities in respect of the products concerned, as
specified in Section IB of Part I of the Schedule of the developing country
Member concerned, correspond to 1 per cent of base period domestic consumption
of the products concerned from the beginning of the first year of the implementation
period and are increased in equal annual instalments to 2 per cent of corresponding
domestic consumption in the base period at the beginning of the fifth year
of the implementation period. From the beginning of the sixth year of the
implementation period, minimum access opportunities in respect of the products
concerned correspond to 2 per cent of corresponding domestic consumption
in the base period and are increased in equal annual instalments to 4 per
cent of corresponding domestic consumption in the base period until the
beginning of the tenth year. Thereafter, the level of minimum access opportunities
resulting from this formula in the tenth year shall be maintained in the
Schedule of the developing country Member concerned.
-
- appropriate market access opportunities have been provided for in other
products under this Agreement.
8. Any negotiation on the question of whether there can be a continuation
of the special treatment as set out in paragraph 7 above after the end
of the tenth year following the beginning of the implementation period
shall be initiated and completed within the time-frame of the tenth year
itself following the beginning of the implementation period.
9. If it is agreed as a result of the negotiation referred
to in paragraph 8 above that a Member may continue to apply the special
treatment, such Member shall confer additional and acceptable concessions
as determined in that negotiation.
10. In the event that special treatment under paragraph
7 above is not to be continued beyond the tenth year following the beginning
of the implementation period, the products concerned shall be subject to
ordinary customs duties, established on the basis of a tariff equivalent
to be calculated in accordance with the guidelines prescribed in the attachment
hereto, which shall be bound in the Schedule of the Member concerned. In
other respects, the provisions of paragraph 6 above shall apply as modified
by the relevant special and differential treatment accorded to developing
country Members under this Agreement.
Attachment to Annex 5
Guidelines for the Calculation of Tariff Equivalents for the Specific Purpose
Specified in Paragraphs 6 and 10 of this Annex
1. The calculation of the tariff equivalents, whether expressed
as ad valorem or specific rates, shall be made using the actual difference
between internal and external prices in a transparent manner. Data used
shall be for the years 1986 to 1988. Tariff equivalents:
-
(i) shall primarily be established at the four-digit level of the
HS;
-
(ii) shall be established at the six-digit or a more detailed level
of the HS wherever appropriate;
-
(iii) shall generally be established for worked and/or prepared
products by multiplying the specific tariff equivalent(s) for the primary
agricultural product(s) by the proportion(s) in value terms or in physical
terms as appropriate of the primary agricultural product(s) in the worked
and/or prepared products, and take account, where necessary, of any additional
elements currently providing protection to industry.
2. External prices shall be, in general, actual average c.i.f. unit
values for the importing country. Where average c.i.f. unit values are
not available or appropriate, external prices shall be either:
-
(i) appropriate average c.i.f. unit values of a near country; or
-
(ii) estimated from average f.o.b. unit values of (an) appropriate
major exporter(s) adjusted by adding an estimate of insurance, freight
and other relevant costs to the importing country.
3. The external prices shall generally be converted to domestic
currencies using the annual average market exchange rate for the same period
as the price data.
4. The internal price shall generally be a representative
wholesale price ruling in the domestic market or an estimate of that price
where adequate data is not available.
5. The initial tariff equivalents may be adjusted, where necessary,
to take account of differences in quality or variety using an appropriate
coefficient.
6. Where a tariff equivalent resulting from these guidelines
is negative or lower than the current bound rate, the initial tariff equivalent
may be established at the current bound rate or on the basis of national
offers for that product.
7. Where an adjustment is made to the level of a tariff
equivalent which would have resulted from the above guidelines, the Member
concerned shall afford, on request, full opportunities for consultation
with a view to negotiating appropriate solutions.
Endnotes
1. These measures include quantitative
import restrictions, variable import levies, minimum import prices, discretionary
import licensing, non-tariff measures maintained through state trading
enterprises, voluntary export restraints and similar border measures other
than ordinary customs duties, whether or not the measures are maintained
under country-specific derogations from the provisions of the GATT 1947,
but not measures maintained under balance-of-payments provisions or under
other general, non-agriculture-specific provisions of the GATT 1994 or
of the other Multilateral Trade Agreements in Annex 1A to the WTO.
2. The reference price used to invoke
the provisions of this sub-paragraph shall, in general, be the average
c.i.f. unit value of the product concerned, or otherwise shall be an appropriate
price in terms of the quality of the product and its stage of processing.
It shall, following its initial use, be publicly specified and available
to the extent necessary to allow other Members to assess the additional
duty that may be levied.
3. Where domestic consumption is not
taken into account, the base trigger level under (a) below shall apply.
4. "Countervailing duties" where referred
to in this Article are those covered by Article VI of the GATT 1994 and
Part V of the Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Duties.
5. For the purposes of paragraph 3
of this Annex, Governmental stockholding programmes for food security purposes
in developing countries whose operation is transparent and conducted in
accordance with officially published objective criteria or guidelines shall
be considered to be in conformity with the provisions of this paragraph,
including programmes under which stocks of foodstuffs for food security
purposes are acquired and released at administered prices, provided that
the difference between the acquisition price and the external reference
price is accounted for in the AMS.
6. For the purposes of paragraphs 3
and 4 of this Annex, the provision of foodstuffs at subsidized prices with
the objective of meeting food requirements of urban and rural poor in developing
countries on a regular basis at reasonable prices shall be considered to
be in conformity with the provisions of this paragraph.
W3 since October 3 1993.