Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2011-09-12-Speech-1-069-875"

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"en.20110912.20.1-069-875"2
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". For nine years, industrialised, emerging and developing nations have been haggling over further liberalisation of world trade in the Doha Round. The EU is showing the most willingness to compromise in the current negotiations: thus, 64% of the concessions in the agricultural sector came from Brussels. In exchange, the EU can expect only 8% of the profits. The United States will contribute a mere 6%, but can expect 13% of the profits. The biggest winner is Brazil – with absolutely no concessions, this emerging economy will profit all the more from the opening up of the markets in the other WTO states. There is clear inequality here. When making its generous concessions, the EU must not forget its own farmers. European farmers need support and protection in order to survive. It would be better to rely on regional self-sufficiency than indirectly to support the big farms in Brazil."@en1

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