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HIGHLIGHT

2013 Report

The Rise of the South: Human Progress in a Diverse World is available for free downloading

G8 should scrap farm subsidies: Lord Paul

The Economic Times

SHANTINIKETAN(WB): NRI industrialist Lord Swraj Paul on Thursday said G8 countries should abolish subsidies to their farmers in order to stop undermining the interests of farmers in developing countries like India.

"We are of the opinion that the G8 countries should do away with subsidies to their farmers," Lord Paul, who is heading a four-member delegation of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association to this university township, said here.

Reluctance to reduce, much less abolish subsidies by countries has become an obstacle to reaching a global trade agreement as part of the World Trade Organisation (WTO).

In 2005, the United Nations Human Development Report had said that the basic problem to be addressed in the WTO negotiations on agriculture can be summarised in three words: "Rich country subsidies."

Although the rich countries (G8 members Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, the UK and the US) had promised to cut farm concessions at the Doha round of WTO talks launched in 2001, subsidies have since steadily grown, the UNHDR has noted.

Lord Paul, whose Caparo group is setting up a plant in Singur to supply components to Tata Motors' Nano, said he was in West Bengal to see how the state could be brought closer to the UK. The ties should include culture, besides trade and investment.

"We would like to see India prosper. West Bengal has a good agricultural base and we would like to support it," he said.

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2013 Report

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