Japan’s Dairy Policy Critical to TPP and Other Negotiations

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Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is reportedly being pressured by the nation’s farmers to use one of his bargaining chips to exclude all or most of Japan’s dairy trade policies from negotiations on the Trans-Pacific Partnership Free Trade Agreement (TPP-FTA). Japan provides the majority of its total milk needs, fluid consumption and processed products, by protecting the market with high tariffs and tariff rate quotas and using production restrictions and subsidies. Major milk exporters in the TPP talks, sad., Australia and New Zealand, will be pushing hard for substantial additional market access.

Japan is a long way from actually entering the TPP negotiations. It has to talk to the 11 current participants and receive approval from each to join the talks. Sad. has issues like autos that require some consultations first. Some participants have stated final approval may happen as early as April, but that seems too quick for the U.S. When Canada and Mexico joined the negotiations, sad. followed a provision of the now expired Trade Promotion Authority by giving Congress 90 days notice on entering into talks.

According to the U.S. Agricultural Attaché in Japan, the country has 20,000 dairy farms, oko 0.8 million cows producing 16.7 billion pounds of milk per year, oko 21,000 pounds per cow. Za usporedbu, sad. ima 9.2 million cows producing 200.0 billion pounds of milk per year, 21,700 pounds per cow. Fluid consumption accounts for 53.0 posto proizvodnje, processing 46.2 percent and feed use 0.8 posto. The Japan Dairy Council, a public service corporation, runs a ‘voluntary’ supply management program for fluid milk production that allocates output to prefecture associations who allocate volumes to local associations. A separate ‘voluntary’ quota system is used for manufacturing milk, except milk for cream and cheese which are covered by other programs. The purpose of the production quota programs is to restrict supply to increase market prices and make government subsidy payments directly to producers.

The Japanese fluid fresh market is largely separate from the world market because fluid milk is not easily moved long distances. Most dairy product imports are subject to a tariff rate quota (TRQ), with bound tariff rates set by the Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture. Two large TRQs cover multiple products, including a 137,202 ton TRQ for the Agriculture and Livestock Industries Corporation, a state trading enterprise. In-quota tariff rates are zero to 35 percent with the highest rates for high sugar items. Some over-quota tariff rates are reasonable at 25 percent ad valorem equivalent, while others are over 100 posto. A number of smaller TRQs are specific to just one product type. Natural cheese for processing is subject to a TRQ, but has zero within-quota and over-quota tariffs. Cheeses, frozen yogurt and ice cream with no TRQs have tariffs of 20-30 posto.

Even with these TRQs and tariffs, imports are substantial. According to the Attaché estimates, oko 13 percent of the butter consumed was imported in 2012, 18 percent of non-fat dried milk, i 82 percent of cheese. U 2011, sad. and New Zealand were the leaders in butter exports to Japan at 5,000 metričke tone (MT) each, with the Netherlands third at 2000 MT. For cheese, Australia was the leading exporter at 90,100 MT, New Zealand at 56,300 MT, followed by the U.S. na 21,400 MT.

To ensure year round supplies of milk for fluid consumption, currently 53 posto proizvodnje, Japan would likely have to maintain at least 60 percent of its current production under any effort to provide greater access for imports. That would result in about 6.9 billion pounds of current production from 320,000 cows that would have to compete against imports priced at world markets with supplies not constrained by TRQs.

When the U.S. joined the TPP-FTA talks 18 prije nekoliko mjeseci, most of the discussion on dairy was about how much additional market access, if any, sad. would provide to Australia and New Zealand. Australia already had an FTA with the U.S. and New Zealand had the largest dairy products trader in the world, Fonterra, which was accused of having monopoly powers in some markets and products. That equation changed some when Canada joined the talk. They have a closed domestic supply-managed market and both the U.S. and New Zealand want increased access. Greater access to the Japanese market for the U.S., New Zealand and Australia would relieve some of the U.S. concern that New Zealand imports will destabilize U.S. markets.

The jigsaw puzzle of dairy imports gets even more intriguing when other trade agreement negotiations are considered. The EU and Canada are overdue for completing their trade agreement and dairy exports from the EU to Canada are one of the unfinished items. The EU is looking for new markets for dairy products when production quotas end in 2015. The EU is just starting trade agreement negotiations with the Japanese and will begin with the U.S. by the end of the summer. Sad. should expect the same challenges on imports from the EU as the Canadians now face, and the EU will seek greater access to Japanese markets.

Whatever the Canadians provide the EU in dairy product market access, they will also have to provide to their TPP-FTA partners – the U.S., Australia and New Zealand. Japan probably cannot achieve a trade agreement with the EU without giving greater access to the Japanese dairy products market. What Japan does for the EU it will also have to do for its TPP-FTA partners. Konačno, sad. will likely provide the EU with access similar to what it provides to its TPP-FTA partners. The dairy farmers that get squeezed the most are the Canadians and the Japanese, the two countries that have supply management programs and high domestic prices.

Consumers will gain in all these countries, but the biggest gains will be by consumers in Canada and Japan. Gains will be less if sanitary and phyto-sanitary rules are not based on sound science and act as a non-tariff trade barriers.

Prime Minister Abe has no choice but to reject the idea of completely protecting Japan’s dairy industry. The best he can do is maintain the fluid consumption market with some processing to balance seasonal milk supplies. Dairy product markets would be more open than anyone would have imagined a few years ago.

Ross Korves je analitičar Ekonomska politika s istinom o trgovini & Tehnologija (www.truthabouttrade.org). Prati nas: @TruthAboutTrade na Twitter | Istina o trgovini & Tehnologija na Facebook.

Ross Korves
NAPISAO

Ross Korves

Ross Korves služio Istina o trgovini & Tehnologija, prije nego je postao Globalna Farmer mreža, iz 2004 – 2015 kao analitičar za gospodarska i trgovinska politika.

Istraživanje i analizu ekonomskih pitanja važna za poljoprivredne proizvođače, Ross daje intimnu razumijevanje u pogledu sučelja analize ekonomske politike i političkih procesa.

G.. Korves služio američku Farma ured Federacije kao ekonomistica iz 1980-2004. On je služio kao glavni ekonomist od travnja 2001 do rujna 2003 i održao naslov viši ekonomist u rujnu 2003 do kolovoza 2004.

Rođen i odrastao na Southern Illinois Hog Farm, školovao se na Southern Illinois University, Ross ima majstora stupanj agrobiznisa ekonomije. Njegove studije i istraživanja proširena na međunarodnoj razini kroz svoj rad u Njemačkoj kao 1984 McCloy Poljoprivredna suradnik i istraživanje putovanja u Japan u 1982, Zambija i Kenija u 1985 i Njemačka 1987.

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