The Wait Is Over: Congress Awards Free Trade Agreements
The Wait Is Over: Congress Awards Free
Trade Agreements, Ignoring Workers' Plight
As
COHA previously reported, the free trade agreements (FTAs)
with South Korea, Panama, and particularly Colombia were
overwhelmingly approved, but not without controversy by U.S.
legislature, as several Democratic lawmakers and labor
unions staunchly opposed the passage of these agreements.
Their opposition was based on the claim that workers’
rights would not be adequately protected under the new
system. On October 12, 2011, the U.S. Senate passed the
long-awaited deals through a rare display of bipartisanship
with a 83-15 vote for the U.S.-South Korean measure, a much
closer 66-33 vote for the trade arrangements
with Colombia, and a 77-22 vote for the FTA with
Panama.
Of the three accords, the U.S.-Colombia trade
agreement was attacked the most, even though Panama, the
region’s quintessential corrupt society, should have drawn
much more negative attention than it did from U.S. policy
makers. Right after President George W. Bush backed a trade
pact with the South American country in 2006, ranking
Democrats like Sen. Harry M. Reid (D-NV) highlighted
Colombia’s deplorable human rights and labor rights
records and the fact that U.S. workers would be hit hardest
in the all but certain event that textile jobs and other
factory jobs would be outsourced to any of these countries.
Coincidentally, President Obama proposed the USD 447 billion
American Jobs Act that was projected at eventually
generating new U.S. jobs, but was convincingly stalled in
Congress.
This analysis was prepared by COHA Research
Fellow Robert Valencia.
To read the full article, click
here .
Free Trade’s Not So
Free: The Panamanian Case
Eight years after
Panama’s original free trade agreement (FTA) negotiations
were carried out, October 12, 2011 witnessed the approval by
the Houses with relatively little opposition from either the
Democrats or Republicans. Both countries hailed the passing
of the agreement with enthusiasm, and calls for continued
economic progress and integration have resulted from the
now-ratified agreement. Panama’s development in recent
years has been all but unprecedented. In comparison to its
regional neighbors, including El Salvador, Honduras, and
Guatemala, which have undergone pandemic violence and
relentless economic and social chaos in recent years,
Panama’s evolution has proven to be stable and productive,
if driven by unhesitating corruption. This
expensively-bought stability has prompted the U.S. to
negotiate an FTA with Panama since 2003 out of the certain
knowledge that so much would illicitly be earned by so few.
There was no mystery that the Panamanian FTA with the U.S.
would be passed by a definitive vote. Previous FTA pacts
between the U.S. and such Latin American countries as Peru
and Chile have exposed the susceptibility of countries with
small and fragile markets. Panama will be no exception to
this rule and stands to have its own economy significantly
warped and reorganized by its FTA once it becomes
operational.
According to financial figures drawn up by
the U.S. Commerce and State Departments, the Panama FTA
would generally tend to be beneficial to U.S. trade while
proving detrimental to certain sectors of Panama’s
economy. Currently, twenty-seven percent of all Panamanian
imports come from the U.S., with these being limited to
consumer goods and agricultural products. With the
ratification of the FTA, tariffs on eighty-seven percent of
all U.S-made goods heading for Panama will be removed
immediately and the rest will be phased out over a ten-year
period. The FTA also opens Panama’s service and financial
sectors to U.S. investment firms and corporations. In
contrast to the apparent advantages the U.S. will now
receive, Panama is scheduled to obtain limited benefits from
the FTA other than those derived from its small agricultural
export sector, the products of which will enter the U.S.
free of all excises. Overall, as demonstrated above,
Washington is destined to be the primary benefactor from the
FTA.
This analysis was prepared by COHA Staff.
To
read the full article, click here .
COHA in the
Public Arena (October 10-14)
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