MIAMI BEACH - The “least known international organization in the world” may be criticized by U.S. agricultural leaders for failing to promote more trade, but it has nearly 40 years of success in stimulating trade between countries, the group’s deputy director-general said today. William B. Kelly, a former U.S. government trade official who holds the No. 2 job in the Geneva based General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), ad dressed the annual meeting of the National Council of Farmer Cooperatives. Conceding that GATT and other trade negotiations “have not benefitted agricultural trade to the same extent as trade in the in dustrial products,” Kelly noted that it nevertheless has allowed a tenfold increase in U.S. com gluten feed exports to the European Community and an increase of nearly 25 times in soybeans and products to the EC in the last 25 years. What Kelly called the “major deficiencies” in agricultural trade rules negotiated by the govern ments of major trading nations are one of the principal reasons for U.S. advocacy of a new round of GATT official says rules of ag trading to be liberalized negotiations expected this fall. Kelly reported to the farmer cooperative leaders, many of whom are major agricultural exporters, that a preparatory committee holds its first formal meeting next week in Geneva to work on recommendations for the negotiations to a meeting of trade ministers in September. Agricultural negotiations are likely to begin next year. “Progress in the liberalization of agricultural trade is regarded as an essential element” if the new negotiations are to perserve the international trading system, Kelly said, but the prospects for success are uncertain. “lf domestic agricultural programs continue to be given priority over trade liberalization,” he noted, “basic changes will be extremely difficult.” However, in better times “and a non-election year, significant results are possible, perhaps even probable.” Kelly described the work of the GATT Committee on Trade in Agriculture for the past three years in defining approaches to negotiation of rules for trading in farm products. The committee has suggested two approaches for one of the most difficult issues whether and under what circumstances countries would be permitted to continue subsidizing agricultural exports. One, Kelly said, would improve GATT’s rules by achieving agreement on how existing GATT provisions are interpreted. Because those provisions now are subject to a wide difference in Heflin says ag spending cuts could be devastating MIAMI BEACH - The Gramm- Rudman deficit reduction bill could become the “farm assistance reduction bill,” Sen. Howell T. Heflin (D-AL) warned the National Council of Farmer Cooperatives here. Spending cuts required by Gramm-Rudman, he said, could have “a devastating effect on a whole lot of programs. It might do just what a lot of us fought to prevent in the farm bill the steady reduction of target prices.” Heflin observed that, “Over time, agriculture could face a lot of cutting,” because the Gramm- ENGINE OVERHAUL Allen H. Mate Inc. 1 ■■ Farm Drainage & Soil Conservation... 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PA. 17517 PH: 215 ' 267 :*®0® \/ 717-738-3794 V interpretation, confrontations such domestic agricultural producers, as those between the U.S. and the he suggested, they also worry European Community over wheat about “the political acceptance by flour and pasta have arisen. taxpayers of the increasingly huge The other, perhaps more dif- economic burdens” of subsidizing ficult to achieve, would “prohibit agricultural exports, all export subsidies subject to That has, at least, led to the carefully-defined exceptions.” recognition that “the present While most countries are subject situation cries out for im to political pressures to protect provement,” Kelly said. Rudman bill has the same five year span as the just-passed farm bill. “We may recognize that we will need additional revenue,” he said. But he added, “I hope that we can adopt an alternative approach” to the budget reduction mechanisms now being implemented. 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