Efforts to free up global trade and extend the benefits of globalisation to the world's poorest countries have yet again stumbled against a feud over the depth of cuts that should be applied to EU agricultural tariffs and US farm subsidies.
The difference this time is that, rather than laying the blame on each other (EurActiv 26/07/06), the EU and the US are pointing the finger at India and Brazil's flat refusal to budge on opening-up their markets to industrial goods and services.
While developing countries – excluded from the closed-door talks between the 'big four' in Postdam – are deeply critical of rich country subsidies for agricultural production, which allows them to dump their products on developing country markets, they are also starting to mark their distance from Brazil and India, which they fear are ignoring their key concerns.
Talks will now move back to the WTO in Geneva, among all 150 members, but optimism is at an all-time low.



