Wheat and Barley Policies in Japan
By Hisao Fukuda, John Dyck, and Jim Stout
Outlook Report No. (WHS04I01) 21 pp,
November 2004
This report provides a detailed description and analysis of policies used by Japan to support its wheat and barley producers. Domestic policies include direct payments for production, subsidies to plant wheat and barley on diverted rice paddies, subsidized hazard insurance, and subsidies to increase farm size. At the border, a tariff-rate-quota is administered by a government state-trading enterprise, which applies markups to imported wheat prices when it sells the wheat inside Japan. The proceeds are used to fund the direct payments made to Japan's farmers. If Japan's policies were liberalized, production in Japan would fall, but consumers and taxpayers in Japan would reap large gains.
Keywords: Japan, wheat, barley, barley malt, policies, domestic support, trade, trade liberalization, state trading, quota, tariffs, AMS, aggregate measurement of support, ERS, USDA
In this report ... Chapters are
in Adobe Acrobat PDF format.
Updated date: November 2004
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