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The FTAA Is Dead. Brazil and Mercosur Have Buried It. PDF Print E-mail
2005 - November 2005
Written by Laura Carlsen   
Wednesday, 23 November 2005 13:13

Bush in anti-FTAA marchThe stage was set for a showdown. When the Bush cabinet announced intentions to revive the moribund Free Trade Area of the Americas at the Fourth Summit of the Americas in Mar del Plata, the countries of the Southern Common Market closed ranks to prevent it. What followed was a diplomatic melee that reflects not so much divisions within Latin America, as a growing resistance to the current free trade model throughout the developing world.

The November summit was officially billed as a forum to discuss employment, and the issue of creation of a Free Trade Area of the Americas was not even on the agenda.

However, well before landing in the Argentine beach town the Bush administration made clear its intentions to leave with a specific commitment to restart negotiations.

The U.S. government was determined to come out of the meeting with a revitalized FTAA because the administration feared that if the negotiations were left to languish, momentum could be lost for the initiative at a crucial time.

The FTAA was first launched by George W. Bush's father, but after ten years of inconclusive talks and significant differences between the countries, the goal of a hemisphere-wide NAFTA remained elusive.

Since the FTAA meeting in November of 2003, when the two co-chairs United States and Brazil failed to agree on a basic model, substantive talks have been suspended completely.

Against the backdrop of the upcoming December meeting of the World Trade Organization in Hong Kong , where disagreements similar to those that have held back the FTAA will be prominent, the United States wanted a formal statement of common purpose from its own hemisphere.

The administration has also presented its pro-business trade strategy as an essential pillar for democratization and freedom in developing countries. Latin America has been moving to the center-left recently and upcoming elections point to an even further shift left.

Venezuela's Hugo Chavez has become a lightning rod in the region for criticism of the Bush government, which flared after the invasion of Iraq. In this context, Washington hoped for a clear affirmation of loyalties among nations of the Americas .

These hopes were dashed in Mar del Plata. Despite the efforts of Mexico's President Vicente Fox to push through a commitment to FTAA talks, the 34 nations represented in the Organization of American States (OAS) failed to reach a consensus on renewed negotiations due to the firm resistance of the four nations of the Mercosur and Venezuela .

Given the impasse, in a last-ditch diplomatic move worked out after several presidents including Bush had already left the Summit, paragraph 19 of the final declaration split into two positions.

Twenty nine countries stood behind the resolution that they would "remain committed to the achievement of a balanced and comprehensive FTAA Agreement that aims at expanding trade flows ..." These nations resolved to "instruct our officials responsible for trade negotiations to resume their meetings, during 2006, to examine the difficulties in the FTAA process, in order to overcome them and advance the negotiations within the framework adopted in Miami in November 2003."

The second position, put forth by the four nations of Mercosur - Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay - plus Venezuela, states: "Other member states maintain that the necessary conditions are not yet in place for achieving a balanced and equitable free trade agreement with effective access to markets free from subsidies and trade-distorting practices, and that takes into account the needs and sensitivities of all partners, as well as the differences in the levels of development and size of the economies."

Mercosur's Position

The nations of the Mercosur took a stand against renewing FTAA talks to declare their opposition to free trade agreements along the NAFTA model that do not take into account the needs of developing countries while locking in competitive advantages for developed nations. Since the WTO meeting in Cancun in 2003 the focal point for Brazil has been the question of agricultural subsidies.

Brazil has called for elimination of all agricultural export subsidies in the United States and the European Union and a schedule for review and elimination of trade-distorting domestic subsidies. The United States has made it clear that it will not enter into a discussion of its agricultural subsidies in the FTAA, so Mercosur refused to agree to further negotiations.

Agricultural subsidies are not the only bone of contention. Other issues have also impeded progress and caused Mercosur members to question the long-term value of the FTAA. While the United States demands almost unhampered access to Latin American countries' markets, it maintains protectionist barriers in many of the same products exported by their countries, including sugar and textiles.

Unrestricted U.S. imports could destroy poor country sectors currently serving the domestic market. Intellectual property and the resulting barriers to access to life-saving medicines, government purchases, and investor guarantees are other areas that have been sticking points in negotiations and that are extremely sensitive to developing nations.

Both Brazil and Argentina announced before the summit that they did not want to discuss FTAA prior to the World Trade Organization meetings in December. Brazil, in particular, prefers the WTO for trade negotiations because there it can leverage the power it has built up since leading the still-strong Group of 20 developing countries at the WTO ministerial in Cancun in 2003.

Alliances with emerging economies of India, China, Africa, and Latin America gives Brazilian trade negotiators a far broader base to confront the United States and the European Union on subsidies. As it plans to stage its battle at the WTO, Brazil did not want its hands tied by a commitment to an FTAA.

Dead, Dying, or Reincarnated?

Many analysts on both the right and the left have insisted in the FTAA post mortem that the patient is not dead.

At a time when the Bush administration is encountering serious problems - from the illegal exposure of a CIA agent to mounting opposition to the war - the last thing needed was to present Mar del Plata as a defeat.

Although Secretart of State Condoleezza Rice was visibly upset at the refusal to commit to FTAA, the official U.S. press statement on the summit stressed agreement on a number of specific U.S. proposals and did not even mention the FTAA setback.

Despite Summit events, proponents cite the advance of bilateral free trade agreements as evidence that U.S. free trade strategy is still alive and kicking in Latin America . The model defined by NAFTA in 1992 continues to be the template for a growing number of free trade agreements.

Central American nations and the Dominican Republic have entered into a free trade agreement (CAFTA-DR) and the Andean nations are now in the fourteenth round of difficult negotiations. Chile signed the U.S.-Chile FTA two years ago.

They also point out that in Mar del Plata 29 countries called for FTAA talks in 2006, and only five cited a lack of adequate conditions for negotiations. But the numbers argument is fallacious and masks hard realities.

Calling for renewed talks is a far cry from agreeing with the FTAA model promoted by the United States and its free trade partners. In fact, many of the countries who called for talks to begin have had serious problems within their own bilateral negotiations due to differing views and a perceived U.S. intransigency.

Even Panama, whose government presented the text to continue negotiating the FTAA, has been at an impasse in bilateral FTA talks with the United States since January of 2005.

The sticking point is agriculture again - the demand of small Panamanian farmers to protect their internal markets from import surges in basic staple crops. Although this point is extremely important to the many smaller, largely rural-based economies of the continent, the United States has shown little flexibility.

Caribbean countries have also expressed major differences with the free trade model as expressed in the FTAA in other forums. The Caribbean Community (Caricom) has been concentrating its efforts on the World Trade Organization where it has received severe blows lately in banana and sugar rulings.

In response, many of its leaders have formulated demands to take into account developing countries' needs through exemptions and compensations that would go against the terms of a NAFTA-style FTAA.

Tens of thousands of protestors against CAFTA and AFTA have filled the streets in Costa Rica and Ecuador, and if Evo Morales wins the presidency in Bolivia's December elections, neither FTAA nor AFTA will have a prayer in that country.

The defeat of prospects for a hemisphere-wide agreement deals a heavy blow to Washington's commercial strategy in the region. Since its inception in 1994, the FTAA has constituted the most ambitious forum for imposing a very specific model of free trade, dictated by U.S. interests and those of its transnational companies.

Meanwhile, Latin American countries have expanded integration with Europe, and China has made major inroads into the region. What appeared a consensus among nations ten years ago has now become a focal point for deep-seated differences in perspectives on development and integration.

The death of the FTAA opens up room for the nations of the region to explore alternatives to a model that has lost support both among governments and civil society. Diversified trade, increased regional agreements, democratization, and policies oriented toward national development should be the guides along the new route.

Laura Carlsen is based in Mexico City where she directs the Americas Program of the International Relations Center, online at americas.irc-online.org.



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Comments (12)Add Comment
No FTAA ?
written by Guest, November 24, 2005

Therefore why should the US reduce their agriculture subsidies ?

You want an "FTAA" for agriculture but nor on industrialised goods and services.

Just as it pleases you.
The word reciprocity should not even be in your dictionary. So now you know why you have failed economically for the last 50 years and why your wealth inequality is so much higher than in developed nations. You want it all and give nothing.
Your minority elite is doing just that...with YOU !

talk about reciprocity...
written by Guest, November 24, 2005
LatAm countries cannot compete with the US in industry/technology... The US must be, what... 50 years ahead?
The only area in wich they can compete is agriculture.
The FTAA is meant to open the markets on everything except agriculture. Therefore LatAm would be screwed, because farm subsides in the US would remain and industries in LatAm will just disappear.
So, with FTAA, the US win on every possible area and LatAm gets f**ked on every possible area. And you have the nerve to talk about fairness and reciprocity!
God save Cháves, Evo Morales, Lula, Kirchner. Simon Bolívar would be proud of them.
\"You want it all and give nothing\"
written by Guest, November 24, 2005
Agriculture is the ONLY trade in wich latin american countries MIGHT stand a chance of competition.
And the FTAA includes EVERYTHING, EXCEPT AGRICULTURE, because Bush and Zoellick say so.
So, the ONLY thing that COULD come out of FTAA for Latin America is being denied. And then the guy above says "You want it all and give nothing".... meaning that Latin America wants all and gives nothing... now, what is wrong with that statement?
\"You want it all and give nothing\"
written by Guest, November 24, 2005
Agriculture is the ONLY trade in wich latin american countries MIGHT stand a chance of competition.
And the FTAA includes EVERYTHING, EXCEPT AGRICULTURE, because Bush and Zoellick say so.
So, the ONLY thing that COULD come out of FTAA for Latin America is being denied. And then the guy above says "You want it all and give nothing".... meaning that Latin America wants all and gives nothing... now, what is wrong with that statement?
\"You want it all and give nothing\"
written by Guest, November 24, 2005
Agriculture is the only trade in wich latin american countries MIGHT stand a chance of competition.
And the FTAA includes EVERYTHING, except agriculture, because Bush and Zoellick say so.
So, the ONLY thing that COULD come out of FTAA for Latin America is being denied. And then the guy above says "You want it all and give nothing".... meaning that Latin America wants all and gives nothing... now, what is wrong with that statement?
\"You want it all and give nothing\"
written by Guest, November 24, 2005
Agriculture is the ONLY trade in wich latin american countries MIGHT stand a chance of competition.
And the FTAA includes EVERYTHING, EXCEPT AGRICULTURE, because Bush and Zoellick say so.
So, the ONLY thing that COULD come out of FTAA for Latin America is being denied. And then the guy above says "You want it all and give nothing".... meaning that Latin America wants all and gives nothing... now, what is wrong with that statement?
\"You want it all and give nothing\"
written by Guest, November 24, 2005
Agriculture is the ONLY trade in wich latin american countries MIGHT stand a chance of competition.
And the FTAA includes EVERYTHING, EXCEPT AGRICULTURE, because Bush and Zoellick say so.
So, the ONLY thing that COULD come out of FTAA for Latin America is being denied. And then the guy above says "You want it all and give nothing".... meaning that Latin America wants all and gives nothing... now, what is wrong with that statement?
A correction please...
written by Guest, November 26, 2005
The FTAA Is Dead. Brazil and Mercosur Have Buried It.

I thought Brazil was in the Mercosur.
So Brazil killed one part and the others killed the what was left of the FTAA.

What a bummer.
f**k the United States of Amoeba
written by Guest, November 26, 2005
and its chimp leader, GW Bush!
FTAA Thriving!
written by Guest, November 29, 2005
Dead? Are you kidding?

Small business men in every country in Lat Am are looking for ways to circumvent mercosur and its policies. And were succeeding! Were doing it shipment by shipment, trade by trade and leaving chimps like Chavez in the dark. And guess what? There are more and more of us doing it! I say long live the Americans! They have the best markets in the world for our goods. What can Chavez really offer us? To steal our resources, thats what!! Why on earth would Venezuela need 100,000 guns unless they are planning a sweet little invasion of the Amazon region - you know they need more room (sounds like another socialist dictator of the 1930's - who is a great hero of Chavez I might add.)
Sign FTAA or not - some of us are making it a reality despite Chavez - vive la revolucion!
Look at the Author and the IRC
written by Guest, November 30, 2005
Laura Carlsen is a liberal writer and her IRC is not known as a pro-USA organization. It is easy to print nonsense in a foreign venue or a liberal blog rather than in real economic forums. Ms Carlsen mentions "from the illegal exposure of a CIA agent"..that is a false statement, a CIA agent must be an operative during the last five years to be illegally outed, Valerie Plame was never an operative, that has been made clear in even the liberal NYT. Is FTAA dead, maybe it is. So who will be Brazils savior now, China, Russia, Chavez. Brazil cannot stand alone, so who will they turn to? After Portugal it was England, followed by Germany and then the United States. Now the USA is evil so which new devil will Brazil make a pact with Russia or China. Good luck.
standing alone
written by Guest, December 21, 2005
brazil and any other nation, or community, can stand alone. maybe a little bit behind, technologically, no doubt. but what's the point of all this advancement when so many of the worlds population live in extreme poverty? humanity already possesses all the technology to enable it to live, if not happily, decently.
i'd rather see brazil not so high-tech but a fairer society, able to construct its life without the dictates of so well-intentioned foreigners
good luck!

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