[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (1999, Book II)]
[November 5, 1999]
[Pages 1988-1992]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks in a Teleconference on Agricultural Issues With Rural Radio 
Stations in Hermitage
November 5, 1999

    The President. How are you doing?
    Stewart Doan. Fine, sir. Welcome back down 
to Arkansas.
    The President. Nice to hear your voice, Stewart.

[Mr. Doan of the Arkansas Radio Network began 
the conference by listing American farmers' problems, including low 
commodity prices, high production costs, reduction in exports juxtaposed 
with a rise in imports, and the growing number of farmers exiting the 
business. He asked what incentives existed for crop growers to stay in 
farming for the next century.]

    The President. Well, let me say first of all, I think we've got to 
change the '95 farm bill. When the Republican Congress passed it at the 
end of the session, they did it in such a way that I had to sign it, 
because otherwise we

[[Page 1989]]

would have been left with the 1948 law, which was even worse. But the 
problem is, it has no safety net that's adjustable to the conditions. 
And I think that's very important to change.
    And while it is true that we have put a ton of money into emergency 
payments to farmers the last 2 years, it's basically given out under the 
distribution system of the existing law, which means some really big 
farmers get it even if they don't plant and don't need the money, and 
they get a windfall; and then some of the family farmers that are 
actually out there really killing themselves every year, in spite of all 
the money we're spending, are not adequately compensated.
    So I think--you know, I think it's a mistake. And I think that it's 
because--I frankly believe that the majority in Congress is not as 
sensitive as they should be to the existence of family farmers and 
individual farmers, and less concerned if we have more of a corporate 
structure. I think that's a mistake. I think, on the concentration 
issues, I think they all ought to be looked at. And if they're not 
legal, I think they ought to be moved against. But under our system, I 
have to be very careful as President, legally, not to comment on 
specific potential violations of the antitrust laws.
    And the reason we had a decline in markets is because the American 
economy was booming and the Asian economy collapsed, and the Russian 
economy collapsed. I believe the markets will pick up now, as Asia's 
economy picks up and as Europe's picks up. But we're going to have this 
World Trade Organization meeting in Seattle, Washington, next month. And 
I think it's very important that we start a new trade round, and that 
agriculture be at the center of it, because we've always known if we got 
a fair shot to sell our products around the world, we could outcompete 
anybody.
    And I think in the short run, we've got to fix the farm bill to deal 
with emergencies. In the longer run, we've got to have more markets. And 
that's what I'm going to be working on.
    Mr. Doan. Thank you sir.

[National Association of Farm Broadcasters president Mike Adams noted that many farmers prefered to see markets in 
Cuba opened. He asked if the President was in favor of lifting the 
embargo on Cuba.]

    The President. Well, I'm not in favor of a total lift of the 
embargo, because I think that we should continue to try to put pressure 
on the Castro regime to move more toward 
democracy and respect for human rights. And it's the only nondemocracy 
in our whole hemisphere.
    And let me say, I have bent over backwards to try to reach out to 
them, and to try to provide more opportunities for person-to-person 
contacts, to get better transfer of medicine into Cuba, and all kinds of 
other things. And every time we do something, Castro shoots planes down and kills people illegally, or puts 
people in jail because they say something he doesn't like. And I almost 
think he doesn't want us to lift the embargo, because it provides him an 
excuse for the failures, the economic failures of his administration.
    Now, on the other hand, there is consideration being given in the 
Congress to broad legislation which would permit us to, in effect, not 
apply sanctions and embargoes to food or medicine. And under the right 
circumstances, I could support that. And it had broad bipartisan 
support. My understanding is that it has been held up in the Congress 
because Senator Helms and others don't want us 
to sell any food to Cuba. But under the right circumstances, a general 
policy which permitted me to--which basically said it is the general 
policy of the United States not to include food and medicine in 
embargoes, but under emergencies they could be--I could support that 
kind of legislation. And I think that would provide a lot of relief to 
the farmers.
    But it would have to be written in the proper way. And I have worked 
with both Republicans and Democrats on that. But it's my understanding 
that Cuba is the very issue that's preventing it from being passed in 
the Congress today.
    Mr. Adams. Thank you, sir.
    The President. Let me--if I could just follow up on the question. We 
supported lifting sanctions against Pakistan and India and reforming the 
sanctions law. And we have sold a great deal of corn to Iran, for 
example. And before the Ayatollah took over, in my State sometimes we 
sold as much as 25 percent of our rice crop over there. So it's a big 
issue with me, and I'll do what I can to help. We're for sanctions 
reform in the right kind of way, to basically exempt food and medicine 
from sanctions.

[Price Allan of Kentucky Ag Net described the 
effect of the President's proposed 55 cent tobacco tax on rural 
communities in Kentucky and the

[[Page 1990]]

Southeast and asked the President to discuss his plans to compensate 
tobacco growers.]

    The President Well, first of all, the last increase, pursuant to the 
settlement that the tobacco companies made with the States, didn't have 
any protections for tobacco farmers at all. And I thought it was wrong. 
And that's because we couldn't get Congress to ratify and participate in 
the settlement.
    Let me remind you, when I became President, I said I would keep the 
tobacco support program. I said--I did what I could to increase the 
domestic content, to protect American tobacco sales in the American 
market. And I always said that the tobacco farmers had to be taken care 
of in any tobacco settlement.
    So we had, in our proposal--you said you had losses of $300 million. 
We had, I think, $5 billion in support to tobacco farmers and tobacco 
communities, to help to deal with the adverse impact of any increase in 
the price. And, you know, it sounds funny--since I've been so strong for 
increasing the price, because I want to reduce teen smoking, and I want 
funds to pay for health programs related to cigarette-related illnesses 
and to discourage young people from smoking--but I never would sanction 
a price increase of the kind that you have already experienced under the 
settlement between the States and the tobacco companies, without a huge 
increase in the investment in tobacco farmers and families and tobacco 
communities. I think that it's wrong to do that.
    The tobacco farmers didn't do anything wrong. We ought to be paying 
for major transition assistance and other kinds of economic development 
and support to the tobacco farmers and to the communities in which they 
live. So under my plan, you'd get something like $5 billion, which would 
be much more than the short-term economic damage, to create a whole 
different future and to actually compensate for the actual out-of-pocket 
losses.
    Mr. Allan. Thank you, sir.
    Bill Ray. Mr. President, Bill Ray here at Kill 
Devil Hills, North Carolina.
    The President. Hi, Bill.

[Mr. Ray of the Agrinet Farm Radio Network asked 
the President for suggestions on giving American food producers better 
access to Japanese and European markets.]

    The President. Well, I think there are two things we have to do. I 
think the most important thing we can do is to get the Europeans and the 
Japanese to agree to include broad agricultural talks in a new trade 
round to be completed within 3 years. That is, we need a global opening 
of markets. And as the economy recovers in Asia and in Europe and 
elsewhere, we will see an increase in food consumption and an increase 
in the capacity to buy American food. So I think the most important 
thing is that we've got to have a real broad trade round.
    Then the second thing I think is quite important is that we bargain 
very tough with the Europeans and the Japanese in our bilateral 
relations. You know, they're always wanting to sell things to the United 
States, and they're always wanting to close their markets to our food 
products.
    Mr. Ray. Exactly.
    The President. Now, we've had some real success in opening Japan to 
specific food products, particularly. But the biggest problem, frankly, 
is the trade barriers and, specifically, tariffs on farm products. 
Worldwide, the average tariff on farm products is 50 percent. In the 
United States, the average is less than 10 percent. So I think we just 
have to tell people, ``Look, we've tried to give you access to our 
markets, but you've got to give us access to yours.'' We have to have 
better parity here. And if we can get it, then we can do fine.
    Now, in a lot of places--you know, a lot of these other countries, 
their farmers are just as strong politically as our farmers are. And 
they're not as strong agriculturally. But there is a way for them to get 
the benefits of being able to sell their products in our markets, which 
the Japanese plainly do and the Europeans do. And they ought to give us 
a chance to sell into theirs.
    And that's why I wanted to host this meeting at the World Trade 
Organization, and why we want to kick off this trade deal, because I 
think that the biggest advantage, not just for farmers but for all of 
America, out of new trade talks is the advantage we'd have in greater 
agricultural sales.
    Mr. Ray. Thank you, Mr. President.
    Mr. Allan. Mr. President, may I follow up 
with a question to that?
    The President. Sure.
    Mr. Allan. Looking to the WTO talks in 
Seattle, there are reports that Charlene Barshefsky is prepared to offer 
up the program crops, such

[[Page 1991]]

as peanuts, sugar, and tobacco, and their support quotas, in return for 
foreign countries removing their tariffs and subsidies. Is that 
currently the game plan? And if so, what suggestions do you have for 
farmers that will be affected if that happens?
    The President. To the best of my knowledge, there has been no pre-
existing offer like that put on the table. If there was one, they'd have 
to discuss it with me first, and I--then I'd be glad to answer that 
question.
    But I--to the best of my knowledge, there has been no decision to do 
that yet, because neither the Secretary of Agriculture nor I have been consulted on that. And I just don't 
believe some position of that magnitude would be taken without prior 
consultation with us. And it wouldn't hold water if we didn't agree.
    Mr. Allan. Thank you, sir.

[Mr. Doan asked if the issues of genetically 
modified organisms (GMO's) and overly hormone-treated beef were 
discussed when the President met with the European Commission President 
Romano Prodi.]

    The President. Yes. Yes, and let me tell you where we are on that.
    Let's talk about the GMO's first. We told--we have repeatedly told 
the Europeans, and the whole world, that the United States has prided 
itself on having not only the cheapest but the safest food supply in the 
world, and that we never want to sell anything to our people, much less 
to anybody else, that isn't safe; that we have confidence in the finding 
of our Food and Drug Administration that these foods are safe. And if we 
didn't believe that, we wouldn't be selling them, and we certainly 
wouldn't be eating them.
    And one of the big problems is--and the Europeans recognize this, by 
the way--one of the big problems they have is that there is no 
equivalent organization to the American Food and Drug Administration, 
certainly in the European Union as a whole and, frankly, in individual 
European countries. So what we tried to do is get them not necessarily 
to agree with us on everything, but not to panic, and to make a 
commitment that this ought to be a decision made based on the science 
and the evidence, not on politics and fear; that, you know, the United 
States is not about to sell other people, or feed its own people, food 
that we think is dangerous. We would never, ever do that.
    And all these things have been reviewed by the appropriate 
authorities that we have reason to have confidence in. And they say that 
it cuts the cost of production and is perfectly safe. So what--our goal 
with the Europeans is to get them to commit unambiguously to making 
decisions with GMO's based on science.
    Now, with the beef, it's a different issue. We have a decision 
there, by the governing body of the WTO. We won, and they lost. They 
were all panicked, as you might understand, over their so-called mad cow 
problem. And as a result, it became an occasion to discriminate against 
our beef. It's just wrong.
    We've won two important agricultural cases, one involving beef, the 
other involving bananas, which are not produced in America but are owned 
by American companies. And the Europeans have to give us satisfaction. 
Once you play by the rules, you know--if we lose a case in the WTO to 
them, they expect us to honor the ruling. We have won not once, not 
twice, but three times, and they keep ignoring the rulings.
    And so all I can tell you is I've already imposed some sanctions and 
will impose more until we get satisfaction. We won the beef case, and 
we're entitled to the results of our victory. And you know, if they take 
us in here and they beat us fair and square, we've got to let them win.
    So we're in a real serious confrontation with the Europeans over the 
beef and banana issues. I think we'll prevail, and I think we'll prevail 
in fairly short order. Romano Prodi is a very 
able man, the new head of the European Union. He's a very serious 
person, and he has great potential for long-term leadership and 
partnership with the United States. And the other--he's got a whole 
crowd of immensely talented people in there. So I'm very hopeful we're 
finally going to get some good results.
    But anyway--the GMO's, we've got to give the Europeans a chance to 
look at it. But it's got to be done on a science basis, because you know 
yourself that I would never permit an American child to eat anything 
that I thought was unsafe. If we had any reason, based on our own 
scientific reviews, to question this, we would question it. So all we 
want the Europeans to do is to have the same kind of scientific 
approach. If we get there, we'll work through this GMO thing, and it'll 
all come out just fine.
    Mr. Doan. Thank you, sir.

[[Page 1992]]

[Mr. Adams asked the President if the lack of 
fast-track trading authority placed American negotiators at a 
disadvantage in the World Trade Organization talks in Seattle, WA, and 
if he would try again to obtain it before leaving office.]

    The President. The short answers are yes and yes, but we're not at 
too much of a disadvantage. That is, we can still negotiate, actually, 
because we have the WTO framework. We can still start a new trade round 
and bring it back to Congress. And it's 3 years down the road anyway.
    So to the extent that we're at any disadvantage, it's more 
psychological than anything else, because other countries traditionally 
have been far more protectionist than America, because we have a 
stronger economy, and we just tend to be more competitive, and we 
understand the benefits we get from open markets. So when we refuse to 
adopt fast track, it makes it easier for other countries to refuse to 
reduce their tariffs on farm products and to otherwise be more 
protectionist. So it's like a psychological advantage.
    But in the way the WTO system works, we'd launch this new trade 
round. It wouldn't have to be ratified for 3 years, or completed for 3 
years. So the fact that we don't have the fast-track authority right now 
is not a big problem there. It's a bigger problem in our efforts to 
develop a Free Trade Area of the Americas and get our own neighbors to 
keep buying more and more of our products. And our trade has grown more 
with Latin America than with any other part of the world in the short 
run.
    So that's the real answer to that. We could still get a very good 
WTO deal without fast track, because we can't ratify for 3 years anyway.

[Mr. Allan asked the President how he would like 
farmers to remember his Presidency.]

    The President. Well, I want them to remember first of all that I 
turned the American economy around, and that until the collapse of the 
Asian economy, we had very, very good agricultural years, in the 
beginning of my administration. We had record exports, record farm 
income.
    I want them to remember that I had a special emphasis on rural 
development. I'm down in south Arkansas today at a tomato cooperative to 
try to emphasize the importance of having very, very strong co-ops of 
individual farmers, so that little guys can have a better chance to make 
a living; and that I've worked to try to find nonfarm sources of income 
to support farmers in small communities.
    I want them to remember that we did a really good job on increasing 
food safety and that that was good for marketing, because safe food 
sells, and that the food is safer now than it was when I took office.
    And I want them to remember that--I don't know yet if I'm going to 
succeed, but that I opposed the so-called freedom-to-farm concept 
without an adequate safety net for family farmers. I am--I think it does 
matter whether family farmers can make a living on the land. I don't 
think that America would be the same kind of country, and that rural 
America would have the same kind of character, if all the farmers of any 
size were corporate farms and individual family farms couldn't make it.
    So I hope I'll be remembered for the prosperity of the years before 
the Asian financial collapse, which I hope will return before I leave 
office; for a real emphasis on rural development; for an emphasis on 
food safety; and for a genuine concern for the family farmer.
    Secretary of Agriculture Daniel Glickman. 
Thank you, Mr. President.
    The President. Thank you.

Note: The President spoke at 1:07 p.m. by telephone from the Hermitage 
Tomato Cooperative. In his remarks, he referred to President Fidel 
Castro of Cuba. The transcript released by the Office of the Press 
Secretary also included the remarks of Stewart Doan, Mike Adams, Price 
Allan, and Bill Ray.