Showing posts with label cotton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cotton. Show all posts
By Catherine Kent
  
In 2002, Brazil received a favorable judgment before the World Trade Organization on the claim that the United States’s cotton subsidies violate WTO principles of fair trade by placing downward pressure on the world price. Brazil resolved to waive sanctions on the U.S. and instead receive yearly payments. The U.S. has responded by continuing its violations, and to use even more U.S. taxpayer money to do so. So what’s the problem? Aside from these harmful international effects, the cotton subsidies are part of a farm bill that take up a large amount of U.S. taxpayer dollars that could arguably be used more effectively elsewhere; the temporary deal that President Obama struck with Brazil in the beginning of October cost $300 million. Rather than reform the practice of subsidizing cotton farmers that benefits so few at the expense of so many, the U.S. would sooner pay MORE to continue this practice. 

U.S. cotton subsidies, created as part of a temporary form of relief for farmers during the Great Depression, have far surpassed their intended function. It has essentially become a permanent law, and the well-meaning subsidies that once made sense as necessary aid have morphed into a massive spending bill that drains billions of taxpayer dollars into the farming industry. Since the 1930’s, cotton subsidies have been steadily increasing as part of the farm bill, in the form of federally subsidized farmers’ insurance to protect farmers against the loss of crop or income. These subsidies have allowed the U.S. cotton market to distort the international cotton trade and harm the naturally alive cotton industries of other nations.