Tag Archive | "free trade agreement"

Colombia: Police Crackdown on Campesino Protest


Members of a passion fruit producers' alliance near Buga, Colombia.  Photo Charlotte Kesl (World Bank)

Members of a passion fruit producers’ alliance near Buga, Colombia.
Photo Charlotte Kesl (World Bank)

Colombian police forces violently repressed a campesino protest in Colombia’s north-east yesterday. For the past eight days, more than 2,000 small-scale farmers in the municipality of Tibú have been demanding the gradual substitution of “illegal” crops for sustainable production projects in the Zona de Reserva Campesina.

The crops were outlawed as a result of the Colombia-United States Free Trade Agreement, which came into effect in May 2012.

Since its inception, the FTA has incurred the wrath of small farmers and producers in the region who found themselves on the losing side thanks to the subsequent eradication of subsidies and phasing out of crops which were not patented, and therefore deemed illegal under the accord. The agreement meant that overnight, produce upon which the  communities had long been dependent was outlawed.

César Ruiz, head of the Campesino Reserve Zone, has stated that the campesinos would like to see the “immediate suspension of the eradication of illicit crops” so as to ease the whole process.

The farmers hope to meet with the government to address their demands – the document outlining them was signed by more than 3,000 local small-scale producers.

The protesters are also asking for better infrastructure for the area including better communication routes, improved aqueducts, and, more generally, better standards of living. They expect to meet with government officials next Wednesday.

Local farmers have long been subject to attempted evictions by the army, police, and riot squads, often on the receiving end of tear gas, rubber bullets, and stun bombs. In the ten months leading up to the signing of the FTA last year, it is believed some 104 labour and human rights activists were murdered by paramilitaries and death squads, largely as a result of their opposition to the Agreement.

Posted in News From Latin America, Round Ups Latin AmericaComments (0)

Colombia: Free Trade Agreement Signed with South Korea


Santos and Myung-bak in Seoul, back in 2011. (Photo: César Carrión - SIG)

Santos and Myung-bak in Seoul, back in 2011. (Photo: César Carrión – SIG)

Colombia and South Korea signed free trade agreement yesterday, 22nd February, pending congressional approval in both countries. The agreement will eliminate 96% of bilateral commercial tariffs and should become effective by the end of 2013.

The terms of the agreement eliminate 96.1% on tariffs exported from Colombia to South Korea and 96.7% of tariffs on goods imported into Colombia from South Korea over the next decade.

Trade between the two countries increased fourfold between 2002-2011 and was worth US$1.8bn last year, the majority of which was derived from Colombian imports from South Korea. Colombia mainly imports technological items and machinery goods from South Korea in exchange for metals, coal, and coffee. Yesterday’s agreement is the result of four years of bilateral trade negotiations.

Although an opposition block in Colombia, comprised mainly of workers’ unions, has encouraged congress to reject the agreement, approval is expected. In a public statement the group said that the terms of the agreement will be, “especially detrimental for national interests. The automotive, auto parts, household appliance, electronics, petro-chemical, and textile industries will be put to ruin, because they will have to compete under unequal conditions with South Korea’s powerful industry and big official subsidies.”

Colombian trade minister Sergio Diaz-Granados responded that the country already has free trade agreements in place with other countries and that the new accord with South Korea has the potential to greatly benefit domestic industry. He acknowledged, however, that although the agreement opens up invaluable opportunities for Colombia within the vast Asian market, local industry will have to increase productivity and effectiveness to compete with new foreign competition.

 

 

Posted in News From Latin America, Pages Only (Don't Select), Round Ups Latin AmericaComments (0)

Mexico and Costa Rica Agree to Bolster Free Trade Agreement


CentralAmericaMap

photo courtesy of Wikipedia

Presidents Enrique Peña Nieto of Mexico and Laura Chinchilla of Costa Rica promised yesterday to boost bi-lateral relationships. This is the first official act of Mexico’s newly-elected president since he took office in December of 2012.

The accord hopes to strengthen commercial relations, cooperation, and investments. In particular it aims to address those affairs that come under the 1994 Free Trade Agreement (TLC).

Costa Rica is Mexico’s number one trading partner in Central America, and Mexico represents the third largest source of direct foreign investment in the capital, San José. Since 1994, trade between the two countries has increased at a rate of 12% per annum.

Furthermore, in an address to Costa Rica’s Legislative Assembly, President Peña Nieto urged approval and adoption of an entirely new Free Trade Agreement between Mexico and Central America. This, he believes, will strengthen trade between the respective countries and enhance competitiveness in the region.

Chinchilla has stated that the agreement will be ratified by the Costa Rican Congress in March. She affirmed that, “at this moment in time, Congress is debating an agreement that not only expands commercial relations between Costa Rica and Mexico, but also between the whole of Central America and Mexico”.

Meanwhile, Peña Nieto has promised to continue financial support for the construction of a new bridge linking Costa Rica with Panamá. Costa Rica has also sought the cooperation of Mexico in its archeological endeavours. Currently it is attempting to claim World Heritage status for its indigenous giant stone spheres. Peña Nieto appears keen to meet Costa Rica’s requests, and has publicly endorsed his interest in fostering closer relationships between all Latin American countries.

In addition, both heads of state have since agreed to the exchange of information as regards liquified gas, natural gas, and geothermal energy.

Posted in News From Latin America, Round Ups Latin AmericaComments (0)

‘Made in America’: The US-Colombia Free Trade Agreement


Emergency Rally for Human Rights in Colombia (Photo: mar is sea Y)

At the Summit of the Americas in April, US president Barack Obama announced that a free trade agreement with the host country, Colombia, would go into effect on the 15th May 2012, months earlier than expected. The agreement, originally signed in 2006, has stretched over two US administrations, reputedly due to Colombia’s notoriously poor record on workers rights, with the highest level of trade union deaths worldwide.

During his 2008 presidential campaign, Obama publicly opposed a bilateral agreement in a televised debate against John McCain, vowing that he would not push the deal forward until he was “certain they are not killing union leaders.” Four years later, in the face of mounting economic pressure, the Democrats have dismissed previous qualms, seizing the opportunity to intensify trade and investment, on the grounds that Colombia has made “historic progress in workers protections and human rights.”

For Angela María Orozco, a former Colombian minister of trade, the postponement of the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) is due largely to the “extreme polarity of party politics” in the US; as well as to “Colombia’s delay in negotiating the deal.”

Figures reveal that violence against unionists is slowly being curbed in what is considered to be South America’s most pro-US nation. But, with 40 trade unionists killed in the last year alone, 60% of the total global figure according to the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC), exercising labour rights in Colombia is still a highly precarious act.

Agricultural Exports 

Over the past decade, improved security and foreign investment have bolstered the Colombian economy, which has an expected growth rate of 4.7% in the next year, according to IMF figures. The US has, however, lost US$1bn in agricultural exports to Colombia over a two-year period due to regional accords and international competition.

Total US agricultural exports to Colombia plummeted from US$1.8bn in 2008 to US$827m in 2010, while Argentina’s agricultural exports to Colombia rose from US$457m in 2008 to $1bn in 2010, according to a report by the US Senate foreign relations committee. Colombia currently applies tariff protections on all agricultural produce, including some of over 100%. The FTA will provide duty-free access on 77% of all agricultural products, accounting for 52% of US exports to Colombia.

Farm workers carry sacks of coffee beans in Colombia's southwestern Cauca department. (Photo:Neil Palmer (CIAT))

In the short term, Orozco predicts, “displaced employment” is probable. But, she argues, “in the medium and long term, this will mean greater competitiveness for the country and will bring in foreign investment, both from the US and from other countries which have trade agreements with Colombia.”

In October, Obama stated that the implementation of the agreement “will significantly boost exports that bear the proud label ‘Made in America’, support tens of thousands of good-paying American jobs and protect labour rights, environmental and intellectual property.”

The ratification of the FTA is a victory for Obama, and for advocates of the belief that foreign trade can prop up the US economy in the face of rising protectionism across party lines. But the economic benefits of the removal of trade tariffs are reported to be “negligible” for the country, according to a federal agency estimate in 2007, with an increase in gross domestic product of US$14.4bn, or approximately 0.1%.

Moreover, the Andean Trade Promotion and Drug Eradication Act (ATPDEA), a trade preference system designed to promote alternatives to illegal drug production, already boasts Colombian exports.

Many US exports to Colombia, on the other hand, are subject to duties as high as 35%, which has caused the US business community to argue that the FTA would put US producers on a level playing field, granting them equal access to Colombian markets.

At a time when Latin America is deepening regional integration, cultivating strong ties with Colombia is seen as a strategic move on the part of the US government. One which, undoubtedly, bears domestic political currency in the lead up to the 2012 presidential elections.

Colombia might also thank China for the ratification of the agreement. Evidence from the US Senate foreign relations committee forecasts that China, already Colombia’s second largest trading partner, will oust the US if an agreement is not implemented.

Obama’s support for the measures has provoked outrage among his political base, including labour groups who fear that foreign competition will lead to unemployment back home. According to US union leader Richard Trumka, the signing of the agreement is “deeply disappointing and troubling” since it “perpetuates a destructive economic model that expands the rights and privileges of big businesses and multinational corporations at the expense of workers, consumers, and the environment.”

Violence and Impunity

Since 1991, Colombia’s National Trade Union School (ENS) estimates there have been 2,245 killings, 3,400 threats and 138 enforced disappearances of trade unionists in the country. Impunity in these cases is over 90%. The Attorney General’s Office, which oversees the prosecution of such crimes, has opened investigations into more than 1,300 cases of anti-union violence. However, of the 298 cases of trade unionist murders between 2002 and 2004 under investigation, only four have resulted in a sentence, that is to say, just over 1.3%.

Human Rights March against the violence in Bogotá 2009 (Photo courtesy Nuevo Arco Iris)

According to Luis Celis, the political coordinator of NGO Nuevo Arco Iris, the high level of violence is attributed to the “affiliation of local governments, armed forces and police with the paramilitaries.” Moreover, the persistence of the armed conflict and territorial struggles are also contributive factors.

In response to increasing pressure from the US, the Colombian government has launched a new Labour Ministry to oversee the Action Plan Related to Labour Rights, initiated in April 2011.

For Orozco, the trade agreement has prompted measures which will ensure a “greater transparency and flexibility in administrative procedures.”

But, Celis argues, institutional impunity is still entrenched in the system and continues to “generate a logic of violence. The government needs to send out a message that trade unionists’ crimes will not go unpunished, strengthening the physical, political and judicial protection of trade unionists,” if this is to change.

“The aim is to reduce the death toll to zero,” says Celis. Such was the case in Guatemala, leading up to the ratification of the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) in 2006. But since its implementation, trade union violence has skyrocketed and corporate rights remain prioritised above labour concerns.

Human rights activists have argued that while the Action Plan requires Colombia to create new programmes nominally dedicated to protecting unionists, it sets no benchmarks for reducing the homicide rate. They have petitioned accordingly for a number of guarantees built into the agreement, including a mechanism which would void the agreement in the event that violence escalates again.

The US government has refused to meet with the request. But, in an attempt to fend off opposition, the Obama administration has established various programmes by which workers, displaced by foreign competition, are offered retraining schemes and financial aid.

Harmonising Intellectual Property

Besides the controversial lack of union safeguards, the FTA also demands that Colombia abide by US intellectual property legislation.

The copyright bill Lleras 2.0 was pushed through Congress in just 18 days, the shortest period of time on record for a piece of legislation to be passed in Colombia. Critics have challenged the legislation on the grounds that it concentrates on importing homogenised US-style cyber enforcement procedures, while failing to provide protections and limitations for producers and consumers.

In response, a group of international academics have sent a letter to the Colombian legislature, asking them to recalibrate the balance between rights holders and other citizens by introducing flexible limitations and exceptions into the national law. Sean Flynn, a US expert in intellectual property, considers Colombia to be a “starting point in the global ramping up of intellectual property protections through trade agreements” which will lead to a “harmonisation of US norms.”

Encoded in FTAs are regulations which concentrate solely on obligations with regard to proprietor rights, while failing to safeguard other interests that include free expression, access to educational materials and technological innovation, as enshrined in the US Fair Use system.

Intellectual property governs creativity, free expression and innovation, that is to say, domestic policies. According to Flynn, a “one-size-fits-all intellectual property protection law” is likely to harm recipient countries developmentally and hamper economic growth, as well as market opportunities for US pharmaceutical companies and internet service providers.

Regional Alternatives

The revival of support for free trade, initiated by the Bush administration in 2006, comes at a time when both Democrats and right-wing Republicans have adopted anti-trade positions, albeit on different grounds.

Such agreements, which eliminate tariffs and other policies protecting domestic produce, are generally considered to benefit developing nations by creating a common market which jumpstarts industry and reduces poverty. But it is equally clear from recent studies that such deals are also liable to create “enclave economies,” the benefits of which are confined to the international sector and do not translate into growth and prosperity, as is the case with NAFTA in Mexico.

While FTAs continue to require developing countries to eliminate or reduce protection on agricultural and manufacturing exports, they perpetuate an economic model that plays straight into the hand of multinational corporations at the expense of local workers, thus reinforcing US dependency.

Latin America’s internal trade accounts for only 22% of its total commerce. But the increasing presence of Mercosur and the Community of Latin American States and the Caribbean (CELAC), recently created in response to the global economic crisis, is gradually shifting the regional economic landscape. Such blocs offer less rigid, regional alternatives in the face of deepening trade imbalance with the US, carving out a space for burgeoning economies to compete on a level playing field.

“The current commercial networks in Latin America offer enormous opportunities for increasing manufactured exports and added value, since they are the primary consumers of Colombian products,” says Orozco. “Creating a cohesive value chain within the hemisphere” is a priority for the immediate future.

Click here to find out what Argentines think about free trade agreements between Latin American countries and the US.

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