Reviewing Agricultural Trade Policies
To Promote Intra-OIC Agricultural Trade
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2.4. Conclusions and Lessons Learned
10% of the world population living in low income countries and producing 4% of world
agricultural output is facing a fierce competition in this sector’s global trade resulting in their
share being only 7% in global agricultural exports (World Bank, 2018). Middle and high income
countries realize the lion share of the global agricultural production, supporting and protecting
their agriculture in order to increase agricultural exports, since their comparative advantages
lay in industry and service sectors.
A symposium jointly organized byWTO Agriculture and Commodities Division together with the
Institute for Training and Technical Cooperation concluded that there is a need for regulated
and increased trade, to improve global welfare by helping the producers while addressing the
challenges of sustainably providing food to the growing global population.
Between 2008-2016, the world’s total agricultural exports grew by 2.35% annually. While
ASEAN’s and NAFTA’s growth rates have been 3.95% and 2.37% respectively, the Rest of the
World composing of low and lower middle income, developing countries mostly recorded the
highest growth rate of 4.23%. Since OIC member countries are largely in this group
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, and most
of them rely heavily on agriculture, the need for increasing their exports is a crucial issue thus
this report’s aim of policy recommendations for intra-OIC trade in agricultural products.
Reference to the economic performance of countries is particularly important since agriculture
is directly impacting food security and actually 21 member states of OIC figure among LDC
(United Nations, 2018).
Some global trends which came out of the analysis above need to be particularly taken into
consideration for those policy recommendations. Those are:
The trading blocs have a tendency to leave the raw material exports to the Rest of the
World while continuing increasingly to export processed and higher value added
agricultural food products. A similar tendency is visible for Fish products.
The global agricultural exports are concentrating on the top 5 products and on the
developing world markets.
With regard to tariff protection, two groups come out of the analysis: the group of
NAFTA and EU-28, with a tariff protection around 5% to third countries and the group
of MERCOSUR; ASEAN and OIC with almost two folds of tariff protection. It should be
noted that the first group constitute mostly of developed, industrialized countries, the
second of developing countries. The fact that the second group’s agricultural tariffs are
higher may seem paradoxical since their comparative advantages are mostly in
agriculture. However, the agricultural trade policies applied by the first group, based on
the strategic importance argument of the sector have been successful in increasing
productivity and providing strong competitiveness to those countries. Non-Tariff
Barriers are also used to that end by both groups. Today, the comparative advantages of
the second group are not enough to compensate the difference in productivity and the
first group continues to have leading roles in world agricultural trade. Thus low and
middle income countries should focus on increasing their agricultural productivity
while designing appropriate agricultural trade policies to keep up with the competition
of the developed countries in export markets.
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Bahrain, Brunei Darussalam, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and UAE from the OIC Arab group are high income economies but
with a very low agricultural production and exports.