"WTO will convene in September and we expect it will engage on the issue of permanent solution on public stock holding for food security.
"There are proposals already there, there may be more proposals and we do believe that with focus and determination, we should be able to come to a satisfactory solution for public stock holding," a senior Commerce Ministry official said.
More From This Section
India, the official added, will continue with its stand on finding a permanent solution on the food grain stock pile issue, which according to New Delhi is pre-requisite for approving the trade facilitation agreement (TFA).
"India has placed all options before the WTO and things can be worked out within a month on the food security issue," the official added.
Commerce and Industry Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has said India will not compromise on the interest of poor farmers and consumers at the WTO and has sought complete resolution of the food grain stockpile issue, which is essential for unhindered implementation of the country's food security programme.
Justifying India's tough stand, which had led to collapse of the WTO Geneva talks on July 31, Sitharaman has said that without a permanent solution, public stock holding programmes in India and other developing countries will be hampered by the present ceiling on domestic support which is pegged at 10% of the value of production and is wrongly considered as trade-distorting subsidy to farmers under existing WTO rules.
India had decided not to ratify WTO's TFA, which is dear to the developed world, without any concrete movement in finding a permanent solution to its public food stock-holding issue for food security purposes.
India has asked the World Trade Organization (WTO) to amend the norms for calculating agri subsidies in order to procure food grains from farmers at minimum support price and sell that to poor at cheaper rates without attracting any penalty in the WTO.
The current WTO norms limit the value of food subsidies at 10% of the total value of food grain production. However, the support is calculated at the prices that are over two decades old.
India is asking for a change in the base year (1986-88) for calculating the food subsidies. It wants the change to current base year.
There are apprehensions that once India completely implements its food security programme, it could breach the 10 per cent cap. Breach of the cap may lead to imposition of hefty penalties if a member country drags India to the WTO.