US must make first move to jump-start Doha — EU

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LONDON: The European Union cannot make more concessions on farm trade to restart stalled world trade talks and the United States must make the first move, the EU’s new trade chief said on Monday.The ball was not in the EU’s hands in the Doha trade talks, Trade Commissioner Karel de Gucht said. “We are not responsible for what is presently happening,” he said, speaking   at the London School  of  Economics.

“In the negotiations in 2008, we have put on the  table quite some breakthroughs with respect to agriculture.  We cannot go further. We simply wouldn’t have political backing to go further, certainly not for market  access,”  he  said.

While ruling out more concessions on opening access to the EU’s agricultural markets, de Gucht was not quite so definitive on the issue of high EU subsidies that other exporters and developing countries say distort markets in farm trade.

“Some claim that eventually on subsidies we could do something at the last night (of the negotiations) …, but that certainly would make a major political problem. So we are not going to move at this moment in time,” he said.

World leaders have called for a Doha agreement this year but de Gucht said there was a “complete contradiction” between leaders’ public statements and what happened around the negotiating  table.

“There has to come a move. It primarily has to come from the United States,” he said.

“They should make an opening and at least say what they want. But they don’t, they are in fact silent,” he said.

“We are really stuck,” said de Gucht, a former Belgian foreign minister who was named trade commissioner last November.

The Doha round talks were launched in late 2001 to open up global commerce and help poor countries prosper through trade, but negotiations have stalled since ministers failed to clinch a breakthrough in July 2008.

Most other WTO members say the United States is not really committed to the talks. Washington says it is trying to advance the talks but  China, India,   Brazil and other emerging economies are unwilling to offer enough to sell a deal to voters.

De Gucht said the EU’s efforts to include issues such as labour rights often complicated the bloc’s negotiations with other countries on bilateral trade pacts. — Reuters