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Allgeier: Cotton Decision Should Be Part Of WTO Talks
"Our position on domestic support remains the same. There needs to be harmonizing cuts in support. If you are looking for a really permanent solution, the best way is to do it in a negotiation ... We think the best way is to complete the round by the end of 2006," said Allgeier, who spoke to reporters by conference call from Mombasa, Kenya, where he was attending a meeting of about 30 trade ministers. Allgeier also said the European Union should agree to bigger cuts in its subsidies during those negotiations because its subsidies are larger than those of the United States. "Our Congress rightly is insisting if we are going to cut domestic support, those with even higher domestic support should be doing the same," said Allgeier.
Both Senate Finance Chairman Grassley and ranking member Max Baucus, D-Mont., urged the cotton decision be addressed in the Doha Round negotiations as well. Grassley added that those countries supporting the WTO ruling should open up their markets to imports. "Those nations that are pursuing reduction of agricultural subsidies by developed nations through litigation need to realize that without increased access to agricultural markets in developed and developing countries alike, economic prosperity will elude them," Grassley said. Baucus also criticized the WTO decision as "overly broad, reaching into elements of U.S. farm policy that should have been beyond the scope of its review."
Not all members of Congress were critical of the WTO decision. Rep. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., Thursday praised it by saying "the WTO's decision tells us what we should have already known: U.S. agriculture subsidies are too high. Unfortunately, the last farm bill Congress passed reversed a trend of weaning agricultural growers off the federal dole. This decision is an opportunity for Congress to go back and fix our mistake." While Arizona is a major cotton-growing state, Flake's district is in Phoenix.