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The
FTAA: A Recipe for Economic Disaster?
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As a result of vehement opposition from around Latin America,
the Bush administration’s efforts to draft and pass the
hemisphere-wide Free Trade Area of the Americas Agreement (FTAA)
have registered a mixed message among policy makers.
• Burgeoning South American unity continues to threaten U.S.
progress on the FTAA front, as regional leaders have
recognized many of the agreement’s potentially adverse
ramifications.
• Challenges to the FTAA crested in March of 2004, when
negotiations were suspended.
• After the defeat at Cancun, the Bush administration has
had some success in re-focusing its diplomatic efforts on a
“divide-and-conquer” strategy.
• With the passing of CAFTA, the administration was granted
a narrow opportunity for re-opening the door for FTAA
negotiations.
The pending - but currently floundering - Free Trade Area of
the Americas Agreement (FTAA) was launched at the Miami Summit
of the Americas in 1994 as a U.S.-led initiative to expand the
North American Free Trade Area Agreement (NAFTA). It was
designed to eliminate trade barriers among all nations in the
Western Hemisphere, except Cuba. Although only minimal
progress was made after the initial efforts to carry out the
plan in 1994, negotiations intensified at the Second Summit of
the Americas in Santiago, Chile in 1998. There, leaders agreed
that the FTAA would be “balanced, comprehensive, WTO-consistent
and would constitute a single undertaking.” The attendees
emphasized a need to consider the different levels of economic
development and the varying sizes of the economies within the
hemisphere. Additionally, the negotiators hoped to promote the
overall development of the region by raising living standards,
improving working conditions and better protecting the
environment. The crucial developments achieved at the 1998
Chile Summit allowed negotiations for the FTAA to progress
with a general framework for future discussions.
Another significant breakthrough occurred in 2001, when
negotiators agreed to increase the transparency of the process
by making the text of the FTAA publicly available. This proved
to be an important advancement in discussions, since wide
availability of the draft document would allow, and even
encourage, public feedback. At the Quebec City Summit of 2001,
negotiators formally issued the first draft of the FTAA,
setting a 2005 deadline for its ratification. Although 2001
brought the FTAA to the forefront of public attention, it also
spurred widespread opposition, characterized by
anti-globalization protests targeting the Quebec City
gathering.
The next major step in the FTAA negotiation process occurred
during the Miami Talks of 2003, where regional leaders broke
down the discussions into specific categories. The categories
spanned a wide range of topics and included, among others,
market access, agriculture, services, intellectual property
rights, subsidies and antidumping. Yet opposition surfaced
once more, both inside and outside the forum, as
anti-globalization protests rocked Quebec City once again.
Since then, both internal and external opposition have
threatened the progress of the FTAA as industrialized
countries, such as the U.S., and underdeveloped countries,
like many of those to be found in Latin America, continue to
clash over pivotal trade issues. While developed nations,
namely the U.S., advocate greater protection of intellectual
property rights and expanded trade in services to better
protect their economic interests, less developed nations have
concentrated on ending U.S. agricultural subsidies and freer
trade in farm produce. Both questions could have significant
consequences in Latin American countries since they can
neither afford to pay the royalties attached to intellectual
property rights, nor can they compete with U.S.
government-subsidized agricultural products.
While the U.S. has acted as the de facto spokesman for
servitor nations such as Chile and multiple Central American
countries in advocating ratification of the FTAA, Brazil
continues to challenge these efforts through its own perceived
role as a regional leader. Rather than succumbing to
Washington’s enticements, Brazil has used its political and
economic clout to thwart efforts to incorporate South America
into the FTAA. The emerging regional superpower has done so by
focusing much of its attention on MERCOSUR, a free trade
agreement among Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay, that
stands to expand further as some of its rapidly widening base
of associate members may become full members in the near
future. The 2004 agreement between MERCOSUR and the Andean
Community of Nations (CAN), comprised of Bolivia, Colombia,
Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela, to end all import tariffs among
member nations for the next fifteen years demonstrates the
strengthening bond between Latin American countries and the
growing influence of MERCOSUR as a regional power. This bond
created further obstacles for FTAA ratification at the 2003
World Trade Organization (WTO) meeting in Cancun, Mexico.
There, Argentina and Brazil led a group of developing nations
against the U.S. and its supporters in advancing an
alternative WTO agricultural proposal that called for more
concessions on subsidies from wealthier nations, without
requiring increased access to their own agricultural markets.
As a result of trade discrepancies, the Cancun talks
collapsed, and in 2004, FTAA negotiations were suspended,
spurring a division that has and will likely continue to
inhibit the Bush administration’s ratification efforts.
The True Implications of the FTAA
In a hemisphere characterized by disparate economies and
wide-ranging social and political inequalities, it is unlikely
that a free trade agreement could possibly provide balanced
advantages for every member nation. With the United States’
GDP already constituting 75 percent of the total goods and
services produced within the hemisphere, its natural capacity
to mobilize technological and capital resources already far
exceeds that of any other regional nation. As such, it is
unreasonable to expect that a country like Bolivia, for
example, whose economy amounts to only two percent of the
U.S.’, could effectively compete with and be held to the
same standards as its neighboring economic giants.
Although the optimistic goals set at the 1994 Miami Summit
would appear to benefit all related parties, otherwise
well-meaning efforts to incorporate a full range of free
market provisions have thus far failed to produce tangible
results. The Summit’s lack of commitment to promoting growth
in the hemisphere’s underdeveloped countries on equitable
terms became distinctly clear with the FTAA’s enforcement of
structural reforms tied to debt repayments. As many countries
within the hemisphere struggle to repay their debt, they must
also implement oftentimes ineffective and unrealistic
structural reforms that lending institutions like the World
Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) attach to loan
conditions. In many circumstances, these reforms only further
inhibit economic growth as the manifestations of an
incapacitating debt continue to worsen. When considering the
FTAA’s encouragement of these reforms it appears as though
the implementation of the agreement’s framework would likely
only worsen prospects for economic expansion. Rather than
investing in key areas like the environment, health care,
education and housing, member governments would have to divert
much of their resources toward debt repayment, spurring
further economic and social hardship.
In addition to the FTAA’s more austere debt payment
regulations, the agreement’s promotion of narrowly focused
corporate interests would also inhibit the growth of many
nations. The increased privatization and de-regulation
prejudice inherent in FTAA provisions would increasingly erode
public oversight of vital services by impairing governments
from setting standards for health, labor and the environment.
In effect, this would weaken governments’ ability to protect
their respective populations under public interest law.
Commitments generated by the FTAA to “liberalize services”
allow for this exclusion of public oversight of global
multinationals. The vague use of the term “services” would
enable the FTAA to mushroom its supervision of government
functions to apply to education, health care, environmental
services, energy and water utilities and postal services, to
name a few. This could result in the removal of national
licensing standards for medical, legal and other key
professional practices, allowing doctors licensed in one
country to practice in another, despite the fact that they may
have not received the same standardized training. This
imbalance is also likely to prompt a brain-drain to high
income and technologically advanced countries like the U.S.
from poor nations. Already, a large multinational corporation
(MNC), the United Postal Service (UPS), claims that government
subsidies to the Canadian Postal Service represent unfair
competition and a barrier to trade. Should the UPS efforts
prove successful, government intervention in any private
market may no longer be possible.
Furthermore, should the FTAA allow for the deregulation of
foreign investment, high costs inevitably will be inflicted on
the developing world. The interests of foreign MNC’s also
could clash with local economic development policies,
producing conflicts in a situation when large corporations
don’t necessarily tailor their investment or corporate
marketing strategies to local needs. A given government’s
ability to create a unified development strategy would thus be
significantly hindered as seen in the past in many Latin
American countries. Instead, many governments chose policies
that depress wages and worsen labor conditions and
environmental regulations as efforts to attract greater
international capital and corporate accounts.
Although publicizing the various drafts of the FTAA served as
a first-class public relations effort to appear to encourage
public feedback, negotiators failed to provide an effective
avenue for public input into the decision-making process. Many
hoped that the release of the FTAA drafts would enhance the
public’s sense of engagement, but the fact remains that the
majority of the FTAA’s provisions instead placed a greater
emphasis on corporate rather than public priorities.
A New Strategy for the Bush Administration: “Divide
and Conquer,” Beginning with Central America
Deepening South American unity and enlivened public engagement
over the U.S.’ assumption of regional dominance threaten to
challenge FTAA ratification. As noted by Rafael Mejía,
president of the powerful Society of Growers, "The United
States does not want to understand that it takes two countries
to negotiate." He added, "They make maximum demands,
but when we have made demands, they have not responded."
As a result of this growing opposition, the Bush
administration re-directed its diplomatic efforts toward
enacting the Central American Free Trade Area Agreement (CAFTA).
Although the House of Representatives passed CAFTA by the
closest of margins, 217 to 215, on July 28, 2005, it is
unlikely that Washington’s efforts to incorporate all of
South America into a free trade zone will prove equally
rewarding. Considering CAFTA’s narrow victory at such a high
price in terms of political pork, the negative domestic impact
of the trade dispute has achieved too much visibility to be
simply brushed under the rug.
As indicated by CAFTA’s ratification, instead of pushing for
the enactment of the FTAA, the Bush administration has
re-evaluated its strategy, now attempting to build up momentum
by establishing separate free trade agreements with the
different regions in the hemisphere through a “divide-
and-conquer” strategy. However, the administration has had
to reconsider its strategy to gain support not only from
countries outside of the U.S.’s political and economic
grasp, but back in Washington as well. With significant
opposition stemming from both Democrats and concerned
Republicans, in order to pass CAFTA, the White House had to
make considerable concessions, even to his own party
stalwarts, in order to ensure the few crucial votes that led
to CAFTA’s enactment.
In November 2004, the U.S. announced the beginning of
discussions for the Andean Free Trade Agreement (AFTA), which
would encompass Ecuador, Peru and Colombia, blatantly ignoring
uncooperative Venezuela’s role as a regional leader. The
Andean Community of Nations (CAN) retorted in July of 2005,
however, by appointing Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez as the
trade bloc’s chairman for a term of one year.
If the Bush administration sticks with its
“divide-and-conquer” strategy, the added momentum afforded
by CAFTA’s recent enactment in combination with the
potential ratification of AFTA would make re-opening
discussions for the FTAA possible, but by no means a slam
dunk.
This
analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Shana
Ramirez.
August
15, 2005
For
More Information
"Antecedents of
the FTAA Process." Official Website of the Free Trade
Area of the Americas.
"Free Trade Area of the Americas." Global Exhange. 2
August 2005. http://www.globalexchange.org/campaigns/ftaa/
"Free
Trade Area of the Americas." Wikipedia. 29 June 2005.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Trade_Area_of_the_Americas
Forero,
Juan. “Trade Pacts to the South Losing Appeal.” New
York Times. 30 June 2005.
The
Council on Hemispheric Affairs, founded in 1975, is an
independent, non-profit, non-partisan, tax-exempt research and
information organization. It has been described on the Senate
floor as being “one of the nation’s most respected bodies
of scholars and policy makers.” For more information, please
see our web page at www.coha.org; or contact our Washington
offices by phone (202) 223-4975, fax (202) 223-4979, or email
coha@coha.org.
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