Indian Minister of Commerce and Industry Kamal Nath claimed on Friday that
India will not move in the agricultural negotiations here unless the developed
countries set a definite date for elimination of all forms of export subsidies
in the agriculture sector.
He said in a press release that there would be no movement as far as India
was concerned in the area of industrial tariffs, either, without the flexibility
in tariff reduction commitments that were required to protect domestic
industries in India.
Nath stressed that India is standing firm on the issues of interest to it in
the key sectors of agricultural and non-agricultural market access.
In order to safeguard the interests of Indian agriculture in the ongoing Doha
Round of negotiations on agriculture during the ongoing Sixth Ministerial
Conference of the WTO, the G-20 -- of which India is a founder member -- has
also sought elimination of all forms of export subsidies by a credible end date,
he said.
He added that under the Special & Differential Treatment provisions for
developing countries, the July Framework of 2004 provides that developing
countries will continue to profit from provisions that allow subsidies for
marketing and transport of exported goods for a reasonable period even after all
agriculturalexport subsidies have been phased out.
On industrial tariff negotiations, Nath said he had made it amply clear
during Green Room discussions that it would not be possible for India to move
forward in the negotiations without theflexibility that developing countries
need to protect their domestic industries.
He said "this is absolutely vital for countries like India in order to be
able to safeguard the interests of small and medium enterprises which provide
livelihood to millions of industrial workers."