Goal of stability proves elusive in olive oil accord
The first International Agreement on Olive Oil and Table Olives
was signed in 1959. The International Olive Oil Council is responsible for the
application of the Agreement, the objectives of which are to issue information
on demand and supply, provide member countries with technical assistance aimed
at improving production, manage promotion funds, and, in accordance with the
Codex Alimentarius Commission, standardize technical specifications.
The negotiation of international agreements for staple products
is usually an extremely laborious procedure, full of obstacles, and very trying
on the patience and good intentions of the parties concerned. Despite the active
participation of international bodies which, for decades, have endeavoured to
promote international trade and stabilize the prices of raw materials, the
results are disappointing. The parties concerned rarely succeed in overcoming
their differences, and discussions often come to nothing.
These observations are confirmed in a report published by the
UNCTAD Secretariat in 1985. The report acknowledges that staple-product
agreements have tailed in a number of areas and stresses that in developing
countries virtually no progress has been made toward such long-term objectives
as increasing export revenues, providing stiffer competition, and setting up
systems to cope with slumps in demand.
Therefore, the fact that the International Agreement on Olive
Oil has been in effect for so long is somewhat surprising. Moreover, the Fourth,
and current, Agreement, signed in 1986, was negotiated in a very short time, as
opposed to, say, the Cocoa Agreement, which was signed in extremis in July 1986,
after five attempts at negotiations.
The difficulty is due mainly to the absence of economic clauses
and to the fact that olive oil is produced and consumed in a limited geographic
area. It has long been the conviction of the parties concerned that quota
restrictions and price regulation on the international market make it difficult
to solve the problems, particularly since olive harvests are extremely variable:
a good harvest is often followed by one or more years of moderate or poor
harvests; and in some cases - roughly once every five years - there is either an
exceptionally good or an exceptionally bad harvest. These fluctuations affect
oil prices, revenues, and trade considerably. It is in the interest of producer
and consumer countries to keep well informed on market trends so they can act
accordingly.
Recently, neo-liberal economists have questioned both the
economic clauses contained in the agreements and the concept of market
stabilization, and have advised compensatory mechanisms (STABEX, the IMF
compensatory facilities). Some of them, including Michel Rocard, the former
French Minister of Agriculture, consider that measures should be taken to
increase the supply and regulate production, and that temporary aid should be
given to countries where export revenues have witnessed a sharp drop.
The salient feature of the olive oil market is that it is
geographically limited to the Mediterranean region, where most of the production
is also consumed. The parties to the Agreement (Algeria, EEC-in its members'
names, Egypt, Libya, Morocco, Tunisia, Turkey, Yugoslavia) provide almost 95 per
cent of the world's olive oil production. Moreover, the EEC alone produces 83
per cent of the olive oil coming from the member countries of the International
Olive Oil Council. Since January 1986 (when Spain and Portugal entered the EEC),
the world's olive oil production has been even more concentrated in a single
economically integrated regional entity. This is reflected in the share of
member countries in the Council's budget, which is based on the net average
annual production and imports of olive oil and table olives during recent
campaigns. The EEC, signatory to the present Agreement on behalf of its 12
member countries, is the principal producer and importer, covering approximately
three-quarters of the Council's financial resources and promotion funds.
The volume of exports and imports among Council member countries
is minimal compared with trade within the Community. The risk of imbalance
between the EEC and the other parties to the Agreement therefore does exist and,
according to Alister MacIntyre, Deputy Secretary General of UNCTAD, efforts must
be made to harmonize the interests of all parties to the Agreement.
The current International Olive Oil Agreement has succeeded in
adapting to the changes in international olive oil economics by taking into
account the geographic and economic change that has taken place within the EEC
following the entry of Spain and Portugal. The title, "The 1986 International
Agreement on Olive Oil and Table Olives", reflects the extension of the area in
question, since it contains provisions on olive products other than oil. As
stressed by Mohammed Tazi (Morocco), who presided over the last United Nations
conference on olive oil, this is a "dynamic and evolutive" agreement.
Marie Annie
Bousquet