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The Sixth WTO Ministerial Conference
Hong Kong, China, 13 to 18 December 2005.
Dhaka to press hard for free market
access
Bss, Dhaka
The Daily Star,
12-12-2005
Commerce Minister Altaf
Hossain Chowdhury said the least developed countries (LDCs) as a
group and Bangladesh in particular are expecting to gain quota
and duty-free market access to developed countries at the Hong
Kong World Trade Organisation (WTO) ministerial conference.
Speaking at a press conference before leaving for the WTO
conference yesterday Altaf said he feared agriculture might be
'the making or breaking issue' at the conference.
Commerce Secretary Faruq Ahmad Siddiqi and other senior
officials were present at the press meeting.
The commerce minister said the WTO policymakers have agreed
in principle with the LDCs' demand for quota and duty-free trade
access to the market of the developed countries. The issue is
expected to be passed for implementation at the Hong Kong
conference.
"We are now demanding similar access of LDCs' products to the
market of large, advanced and matured developing economies," he
said while explaining Bangladesh's negotiating position in the
148-nation Hong Kong global trade forum.
Altaf Hossain is leading an 18-member delegation to the
conference which includes representatives from the private
sector, NGOs and the civil society.
Bangladesh has formulated a 13-point negotiating position for
the conference which includes free movement of workers to the
market of the advanced economies.
The minister said Bangladesh is also pressing for trade
remedial measures and a compensatory mechanism for the LDCs if
their exports face erosion due to preference.
It might be done with a deep cut in tariffs by the developed
countries reducing the competitiveness of the exports of the
poorer countries who enjoy generalised system of preference (GSP)
facilities.
He said the subsidy issue on agriculture will not affect
Bangladeshi farmers. Bangladesh is not providing any subsidies
to agriculture but it is helping a small number of farmers with
rebates on inputs like electricity or some other small financial
supports such as handling charges.
The subsidy issue is going to be the burning point for the
major economies like the United States of America (USA),
European Union (EU), Japan and developing economies like Korea,
India, Mexico and China.
A triangular confrontation is likely to occur between the
USA, the EU and the developing countries now known as G-20.
Bangladesh will take a serious stand on preferential,
compensatory and transitional measures in case of a deep cut in
agricultural subsidies by larger economies which may push food
grains and cotton prices high in the international market.
He said it would be necessary because a price rise of food
grain and cotton will enlarge the country's import bills. It
will also erode the competitiveness of apparels in the global
market.
The commerce minister said Bangladesh will also push for
safeguards and commitments from the developed and developing
countries that they will not impose anti-dumping and
countervailing measures on LDCs exports.
Altaf said he held consultations with business leaders, NGOs
and civil society leaders in the preparatory stage of the Hong
Kong ministerial conference.
The Bangladesh delegation will put up a harmonised stance
reflecting the overall interest of the country at the WTO
conference, he observed.
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