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7. BANANA SPLITS: THE EUROPEAN & TRANS- ATLANTIC POLITICS OF BANANAS

7. BANANA SPLITS: THE EUROPEAN & TRANS- ATLANTIC POLITICS OF BANANAS 1. Why did the European Commission propose this kind of regulation? 2. How did the Council come to adopt the regulation? 3. The banana splits: An update 4. Why have the conflicts been so difficult to resolve?

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7. BANANA SPLITS: THE EUROPEAN & TRANS- ATLANTIC POLITICS OF BANANAS

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  1. 7. BANANA SPLITS: THE EUROPEAN & TRANS- ATLANTIC POLITICS OF BANANAS 1. Why did the European Commission propose this kind of regulation? 2. How did the Council come to adopt the regulation? 3. The banana splits: An update 4. Why have the conflicts been so difficult to resolve? 5. What does the outcome say about the EU & US trade policy processes? 6. International & regional trade politics: A short review

  2. HAS THE EU GONE BANANAS? ‘Anybody who argues that the best way to help a group of developing countries is for the EU to bear a consumer cost of at least $2bn, transfer $1bn to a few trading companies and provide a benefit of under $200m to the favoured countries has some screws missing’ Martin Wolf, ‘Going bananas’, Financial Times, 24 March 1999

  3. WHY DID THE COMMISSION PROPOSE THIS KIND • OF REGULATION? • The Commission ‘always makes proposals for which it • thinks it can find a majority in the Council’ • (Commissioner) - which, on this issue, was protectionist • To expose EU & ACP banana growers to unconstrained • competition with Latin Americans would have been to put • a ‘flyweight boxer’ in the same ring as a ‘heavyweight’ • (banana trading company representative) • Banana-growing locations were, moreover, mono- • structural economies in peripheral regions

  4. WHY DID THE COMMISSION PROPOSE THIS • KINDOF REGULATION? (Contd.) • This regulation had potential to create European bananas • ‘champions’ to compete with American MNCs • (was it strongly influenced by Geest?) • NB. (1) The policy coordination process in the • Commission failed to produce a consensus. The main • responsible DG (VI: Agriculture) made a proposal which • a majority of the Commissioners approved • NB. (2) The competent Council was the Agricultural • Council: A different council might have voted • a somewhat different regulation

  5. 2. HOW DID THE COUNCIL COME TO ADOPT THIS • REGULATION? • December 1992 • UK was the Council president & supported the regulation • The British minister put the regulation in a larger policy • ‘package’, in which opponents were offered concessions • on other - for them more important - issues. • Ministers for the regulation supported it more intensely • than opponents opposed it because, for them, • producers’ & regional policy interests were • involved as well as traders’

  6. ISSUES ON THE AGRICULTURAL COUNCIL AGENDA, SESSION OF DECEMBER 1992 1. Future of agri-monetary system (after 1992 EMS crisis) 2. Banana trade 3. Dairy quotas (especially the Italian) 4. Suckler cow & ewe premiums 5. Potatoes 6. NZ butter (!!) 7. Wine producers’ aids 8. Durum wheat 9. Extension of structural aids for eastern Germany 10.Virginia tobacco 11. Spanish, Portuguese transitional measures 12. Veterinary & plant health measures

  7. THE DUTCH BANANA VOTE: ONE ACCOUNT ‘A package was produced … In his wisdom, our Agricultural Minister decided that some items were more important than others & that bananas were not so important … The compensatory measures for farmers - the ‘switchover’ - was quite important for Dutch farmers, more important than bananas … The minister, despite having different instructions from the Dutch govt, decided that he had to go for it’ Official in the Dutch Trade Ministry, interview, March 1997

  8. THE BANANAS PACKAGE DEAL: ONE ANALYSIS ‘After a succession of compromise papers, bilateral discussions & new compromises, the final deal was struck by 12 exhausted ministers in ‘super-restricted’ session, deprived of sleep & their closest advisers … It is therefore no surprise that a number of details on what actually had been agreed remained hazy in the immediate aftermath of the Council … All in all, the package amounted to a typical EC compromise, based on damage limitation, fudge & sweeteners for all member states … This may be only way in which a common agricultural policy can function at all’ Agra Europe, English edition, 18 December 1992

  9. 2. HOW DID THE COUNCIL COME TO ADOPT THIS • REGULATION? (Contd.) • February 1993 • French & Spanish ministers threatened to try to • paralyze the Agricultural Council if the December • decision was revoked • Danish Council presidency switched to voting for • the regulation for fear that if regulation had failed, the • entire December package would have collapsed & • other current issues would not have been resolved

  10. 3. THE BANANA SPLITS: AN UPDATE • 1997 (Sep.): WTO panel declares regulation illegal • 1998 (June): EU adopts revised bananas regulation • 1998 (Sep.): US: new regulation WTO-incompatible • 1998 (Dec.): US threatens sanctions on EU exports if • EU does not change regulation again • 1999 (Jan): New WTO panel created to consider issue • 1999 (Mar.): US begins to impose trade sanctions on EU • 1999 (April): Panel decides regulation is still illegal • 1999-2000: EU & trading partners fail to agree • on revised tariff/quota system • 2000 (April): Congress votes to impose ‘carousel’ • sanctions on EU exports • 2000 (July): No EU Council QM for tariff-only • solution

  11. THE DANISH BANANA VOTE: ONE ACCOUNT ‘I can imagine that they were coerced … Otherwise they would have had to start all over again. The Agricultural Council always makes packages with something for every country; the whole package deal would have collapsed. The other ministers [supporting the bananas regulation] would have said: “The whole deal is off. We must start over again.”’ Official in the Dutch Trade Ministry, interview, March 1997

  12. 4. WHY HAVE THE CONFLICTS BEEN SO DIFFICULT • TO RESOLVE? • Issue involved two sets of concentrated, antagonistic • interests that had large stake in defence or defeat of • the regulation • These interests were able to ‘capture’ the political • process on both sides of the Atlantic, aided by: • 1. Mobilization of Congressional allies in the US; and • 2. EU decision-making rules that – normally - make • it hard to change policies once adopted • Decreasing preparedness of US & EU to exercise • self-restraint for any higher common good

  13. BANANA REPUBLIC? ‘For a small amount [sic] of money, Chiquita has been making US trade policy on this issue … It’s a classic case for [justifying] campaign finance reform … The level of legal corruption has been very extensive’ US trade policy official, interviewed on making of US banana trade policy, October 1999

  14. CHIQUITA AS A POLITICAL DONOR • 5th biggest corporate donor of ‘soft-money’ contributions in 1997-98 • 3rd biggest individual donors in same period • Biggest political donor in Ohio state • 11 Lindner family members made almost 1000 donations worth $1.6 mn from 1993 to 1998

  15. 5. WHAT DOES THE OUTCOME SAY ABOUT • THE EU & US POLICY PROCESSES? • EU • Who is in charge can be very important (policy • division of labour in Commission & Council) • Sectoral segmentation of process (no strong • coordinating organ) • Indispensability of issue-linkage for conflict- • resolution & unpredictability ofpolicy outcomes • Once adopted, policy may be hard to change

  16. 5. WHAT DOES THE OUTCOME SAY ABOUT • THE EU & US POLICY PROCESSES? • II. Washington • Money talks! • Congress matters a lot and increasingly! • Individual firms may wield strong influence! • (As they may do also in the EU) • Unpredictability of outcomes owing to linkage • of issue with Presidential affairs!

  17. BANANAS & BILL CLINTON’S ZIPPER PROBLEM ‘Senior European Commission officials say Mr Clinton’s concern with securing his defence in Congress torpedoed a deal late last year that would have prevented a subse- quent showdown over bananas in the WTO. They say the two sides’ negotiators had drafted a compromise. However the White House scotched the deal on the eve of the December 18 EU-US summit … because it had been rejected by Carl Lindner. Mr Clinton’s advisers are said to have judged that offending Mr Lindner could cause him to use his formidable lobbying power to swing impeachment votes against the president’. ‘Politicians unable to escape proceedings’, Financial Times, 12 February 1999

  18. INTERNATIONAL & REGIONAL TRADE POLITICS • I. Is the US willing & able to be stabilizing hegemonic power? • Less willing (NAFTA controversy > new Congressional • activism > FTA failures > trade liberalization projects • derailed) • Less able (both EU & Japan are increasingly willing to • say ‘no’ – through WTO, or in defiance of the WTO, • or - in Japan’s case – also in APEC)

  19. INTERNATIONAL & REGIONAL TRADE POLITICS • In the absence of a hegemonic power, can there be a • stable ‘condominium’ of great trading powers? • US-EU tandem worked fairly well in the past, • but ‘Battle of Seattle’ point to their declining • capacity to cooperate: • * Renewed Congressional trade policy activism • * National govts’ reassertion of trade policy • powers vis-à-vis the Commission in EU • Japan is still too much a ‘reactive state’ in • trade policy & East Asia still too disunited

  20. 6. INTERNATIONAL & REGIONAL TRADE POLITICS • Are there sufficiently strong international institutions to • keep the system stable? • Stronger WTO disputes procedure has worked well • But ‘great-power’ egoism (see banana splits!) threatens its authority • Great-power conflicts stymie new initiatives (eg. Seattle) • Membership expansion increases likelihood of • conflicts & difficulty of conflict-resolution

  21. 6. INTERNATIONAL & REGIONAL TRADE POLITICS • What drives formation of regional blocs? • Less the growth of cross-border exchange than • politics, in particular strategic/security concerns: • 1. EU: to banish war & resist Communism • 2. ASEAN: to banish war & resist Communism • 3. APEC: to create counterweight v. EU, to • integrate US in Asia-Pacific, strengthen GATT • 4. NAFTA: to lock in economic reforms (Mexico); • to assist in this process & stabilize Mexico (US) • But low volume of cross-border exchange may • put brake on integration (ASEAN example)

  22. 6. INTERNATIONAL & REGIONAL TRADE POLITICS • What determines success or ‘feasibility’ of integration? • Availability of benevolent hegemonic power? • - Single hegemonic power may not always be • necessary, or even be acceptable … • - Bigemony may work as well – or better (FGR in EU) • - Authority, legitimacy of hegemon may not be • read off from demographic, economic, military • capacity – history & memories are also crucial! • ‘Commitment institutions’ for enforcement? • - Distinguishing trait of EU, important motor • as well as ‘police’ of integration • - As much integration consequence as cause?

  23. 6. INTERNATIONAL & REGIONAL TRADE POLITICS • V. What determines success or ‘feasibility’ of integration? • (Contd.) • National governments’ economic difficulties? • - Will integration necessarily alleviate economic problems? • - Regardless, is it politically opportune? • - In EU at least, integration has tended to advance faster • in periods of economic expansion than in recessions, • which strengthen national protectionist reflexes • Mattli under-estimates role of ‘sense of community’ • (Cohen) buttressed by core of common cultural, • economic & political values?

  24. THE FUTURE OF GLOBALIZATION: A WARNING VOICE ‘The pressure for non-tariff barriers to imports in the US, such as quotas, has grown. Latent anti-free trade sentiment has only been suppressed by strong economic growth. If we had not had the surge of economic activity we have had in the US, the march towards increasing use of quotas would have continued. Cyclically adjusted protectionism is on the rise’ Alan Greenspan, chairman of the US Federal Reserve Bank, quoted in: ‘Critics of globalisation promised a hearing’, Financial Times, 28 August 2000

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