The document discusses reasons to support the DR-CAFTA agreement. It provides economic and political benefits of the agreement, such as opening new markets for US goods, leveling the playing field for trade, promoting labor protections and democracy, and bolstering critical industries like textiles. The agreement would help regional stability and security while creating economic opportunities.
The document discusses reasons to support the DR-CAFTA agreement. It provides economic and political benefits of the agreement, such as opening new markets for US goods, leveling the playing field for trade, promoting labor protections and democracy, and bolstering critical industries like textiles. The agreement would help regional stability and security while creating economic opportunities.
The document discusses reasons to support the DR-CAFTA agreement. It provides economic and political benefits of the agreement, such as opening new markets for US goods, leveling the playing field for trade, promoting labor protections and democracy, and bolstering critical industries like textiles. The agreement would help regional stability and security while creating economic opportunities.
The document discusses reasons to support the DR-CAFTA agreement. It provides economic and political benefits of the agreement, such as opening new markets for US goods, leveling the playing field for trade, promoting labor protections and democracy, and bolstering critical industries like textiles. The agreement would help regional stability and security while creating economic opportunities.
Collectively, DR-CAFTA is the second largest U.S. export market in Latin America and the United States 12 th largest export market worldwide in 2004. It is a larger market than Russia, India and Indonesia combined. Once in force, the DR-CAFTA will be the United States second largest FTA after our FTA with Canada and Mexico. 2. Leveling the Playing Field: New Opportunities for U.S. Workers and Farmers Through unilateral preference programs overwhelming approved by Congress, nearly 80% percent of DR-CAFTA imports and 99% of DR-CAFTA agricultural products already enter the United States duty-free. The agreement will lock in those benefits and expand on them. More importantly, DR-CAFTA will open their markets to our farm and industrial goods and services, eliminating high tariffs, tariff rate quotas and non-tariff barriers. 3. Strong Labor Protections and New Opportunities to Improve Working Conditions The constitutions and national laws of the six DR-CAFTA countries generally provide strong labor protections that largely recognize the International Labor Organizations four core principles. Indeed, their labor protections are largely in line with the labor laws in Morocco and J ordan, with which Congress overwhelmingly approved FTAs. The DR-CAFTA will promote economic opportunities and growth that are likely to be the most powerful catalysts for improved working conditions in a region where millions live on less than $2 a day. Through capacity-building and dispute settlement, the DR-CAFTA will also address the regions need for improved enforcement of its existing labor laws. 4. Textiles and Apparel: Critical Markets and Expanded Partnerships The DR-CAFTA countries are the United States largest market for U.S. apparel and yarn exports, and the second largest market for U.S. fabric exports. DR-CAFTA is critical to sustain and expand existing partnerships and to give U.S.-DR-CAFTA goods a competitive edge, particularly with the elimination of global quotas and increased competition from Asia, and to help support approximately 400,000 jobs in Central America and the Dominican Republic and 700,000 workers in the U.S. cotton, yarn, textile, and apparel sectors. 5. Bolstering Democracy and the Rule of Law DR-CAFTA will help promote stability and the United States own security in a region that was devastated by civil wars two decades ago. It will also promote new economic opportunities, providing needed alternatives to illegal narcotics activity or illegal immigration. 6. Sugar: Handled with Care
1211 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., Suite 801, Washington, D.C. 20036 www.uscafta.org Phone 202.659.5147 Fax 202.659.1347 DR-CAFTA balances important sensitivities, permitting very limited increased imports (equal to one days U.S. consumption), but allowing no change in the U.S. duty on sugar.
JUST THE FACTS ABOUT THE DR-CAFTA
On an economywide basis, the DR-CAFTA countries already represent Americas . . .
12 th largest export market worldwide in 2004. 2 nd largest export market in the region, after Mexico, in 2004. 6 th largest export growth market (based on the value of export growth, 2000-2004). largest potential new FTA partner in more than a decade.
On a state-by-state basis, the DR-CAFTA market in 2004 is . . .
Ranked among the top twelve export destinations worldwide for:
Florida-1 st
New Mexico-2 nd
North Carolina-2 nd
Mississippi-4 th
Alabama-5 th
Louisiana-5 th
Georgia-9 th
Hawaii-10 th
South Carolina-10 th
Oregon-11 th
Rhode Island-11 th
Pennsylvania-12 th
Texas-12 th
A top growth market for state exports, particularly the following states that have more than doubled their exports to the DR-CAFTA since 2000:
Hawaii-31,743% Oregon-1,500% Utah-412% New Mexico-409% Montana-277% Rhode Island-273% Delaware-183% Washington-183% North Carolina-167% Maine-166% Nevada-156% Idaho-130% Ohio-117% Alabama-100%
Ranked among the top twenty-five export destinations worldwide for thirty-five U.S. states in 2000: Alabama Arizona Arkansas California Connecticut Delaware
Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Iowa
Kentucky Louisiana Maine Michigan Mississippi Missouri
Nebraska New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina
Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina
Tennessee Texas Utah Virginia Wisconsin A key agricultural export market, including for the top-ten state agricultural exporters to the region: Louisiana Connecticut Tennessee California Texas Florida Georgia Massachusetts Minnesota Pennsylvania
Upon implementation of the DR-CAFTA . . .
U.S. agricultural exports to the DR-CAFTA are estimated to increase by nearly $900 million. Even under a static analysis, the International Trade Commission has estimated that U.S. exports worldwide will increase by $1.9 billion, more than with any recent FTA partner, including Australia. Sources: International Trade Administration of the U.S. Department of Commerce (1999-2004 data); International Trade Commission; American Farm Bureau Federation. 2
U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement A Foreign Policy Priority The U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) is a good opportunity for U.S. manufacturers, farmers and service providers, but it may be even more important from a foreign policy standpoint. A few issues to consider:
Economic Growth By enhancing opportunities for economic growth, the agreement will help provide jobs at all levels of the Central American and Dominican Republic economies, while providing governments with additional resources for much-needed education, health care, labor, environmental and basic infrastructure projects.
Democracy The countries of Central America and the Dominican Republic have made significant strides towards a more open and representative form of government in the last 10-15 years. However, these democracies are still in early stages. Expanded trade, and especially the disciplines that come with an agreement, support the institutional framework upon which functioning democracies depend.
Security Not long ago, most of Central America was locked in bitter civil wars - ideological struggles opposed to freedom and democracy in the region. Today, through a combination of U.S. assistance and a turn towards democratic and market reforms, Central America shows great hope. Having won the war, we must not lose the peace. Providing Central America and the Dominican Republic with a strategic economic partnership will help lock in these countries as important U.S. allies.
Migration The illegal entry of many thousands of nationals from these countries into the United States is a logistical and legal challenge to the U.S., a threat to security, and a serious drain on resources for the region. By providing economic opportunity at home, the DR-CAFTA can help ease pressures to emigrate. It can also facilitate better cooperation with the United States as it works to legalize and manage the movement of people.
Regional Integration - Together, the Central American countries are taking on a serious level of commitment to economic opening, in a way that emphasizes regional cooperation and integration. These elected democracies are moving down a path of democratic and economic reform and peaceful cooperation, a process this agreement is designed to facilitate. This is not a set of five bilateral trade agreements. Rather, it is a blueprint for economic cooperation and mutual growth among all the countries.
Narcotics Both the movement of illegal narcotics through the region and the involvement of nationals of these countries in the drug trade pose serious challenges for the United States. Again, a free trade agreement helps establish a cooperative framework in which other fronts such as narcotic interdiction can be constructively addressed, while providing the economic alternatives necessary to keep individuals away from illegal activity.
U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement: Creating Opportunities, Raising Living Standards, and Strengthening Democracy in Our Neighborhood
The U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) will create new commercial opportunities and expanded markets and help raise living standards and strengthen democracy in a region that is important not only because of its strategic proximity, but for the strong bonds of family and culture that join us together.
For two decades, the United States has unilaterally opened its markets to most goods from the Dominican Republic and Central America, as part of its broader Caribbean Basin initiatives. And it has done so with overwhelming bipartisan Congressional support.
In J uly 1983, 392 House members voted to approve the original Caribbean Basin Initiative. Only 18 House members voted against it.
On May 4, 2000, 309 House members, including 183 Republicans and 126 Democrats, voted in support of the Trade and Development Act of 2000, which further unilaterally opened the U.S. market to goods from Central America and the rest of the Caribbean Basin.
As a result of these and other programs, about 75 percent of Central American exports are duty-free. With the completion of the DR-CAFTA, Members of Congress will now have the opportunity to make that relationship reciprocal and approve an agreement that will not only further open U.S. markets, but will substantially open markets in the Dominican Republic and Central America for U.S. farm products, goods and services.
BIG OPPORTUNITIES: While the six democracies in Central America are relatively small countries, they represent a big market for U.S. goods and services.
These six countries already represent our 12 th largest export market, exceeding U.S. exports to such countries as Italy, Ireland, Brazil, Malaysia, Australia, and Hong Kong. It is already our 2 nd largest export market in Latin America (after Mexico).
U.S. products account for about 50 percent of their imports. Central America and the Dominican Republic area already important export markets for American electrical machinery, high technology, motor vehicles, chemicals, energy, food, agricultural products, paper, textiles and fertilizer.
MUCH MORE THAN TRADE: But this agreement is about much more than trade:
DR-CAFTA can help strengthen democracy and the rule of law in a region that was wrecked by civil war not that long ago. This is important for all Americans, but particularly the approximately 3 million who have emigrated from these countries and still have family living there.
DR-CAFTA can help promote economic development and the reduction of poverty in countries where many leave to come to the United States in search of new opportunities.
o For example, the World Bank reports that 63 percent of Hondurans and 50 percent of Nicaraguans live in poverty and 45 percent of Hondurans and 19 percent of Nicaraguans live in extreme poverty.
o Will an FTA with the United States cure these problems? Of course not. But it will be a force for positive change by generating new economic opportunities, new investment and new hope for the region. Expanded commercial relations with the United States based on growing trade and investment flows may be the most effective way for the United States to help these countries raise their standard of living.
o Additional support for regional capacity-building, including the rule of law, will also be critically important.
o The alternative not implementing the comprehensive and commercially meaningful DR-CAFTA is far worse, because it will signal that the status quo is acceptable. It would help perpetuate the poverty in much of a region where millions live on less than $2 a day.
DR-CAFTA also represents an example of how the United States can reach an FTA with six developing countries. It will build relationships that will be important not only as efforts at regional integration continue, but also for our interests at the WTO and our broader national interests.
U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement
Opening Markets for U.S. Agriculture
The U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) will provide new market opportunities for a wide range of U.S. agricultural products. The American Farm Bureau indicates that when fully implemented, the DR-CAFTA with just the five Central American countries could boost U.S. agricultural exports by approximately $900 million.
Over half of U.S. agriculture products will enter the Central American and Dominican Republic countries duty-free immediately upon implementation of the agreement, with most remaining duties on U.S. products phased out over 15 years.
Some of the most important U.S. exports to the region that can be expected to gain significantly from the DR-CAFTA include feed grains (currently valued at $166 million), wheat ($146 million), rice ($75 million), soybeans ($50 million), poultry ($38 million), pork ($16 million) and beef ($6 million).
Without implementation of the DR-CAFTA, U.S. agriculture will continue to be prejudiced by non-reciprocal trade. Currently, 99.9 percent of food and agriculture products from the Central American countries and the Dominican Republic receive duty-free treatment in the United States while U.S. farm exports face significant barriers in these nations.
In addition, important non-tariff issues, such as sanitary and phytosanitary measures, are being resolved. For example, these countries are moving toward recognizing our meat inspection system as equivalent for purposes of exporting to their markets. Implementation of the DR-CAFTA will provide an ongoing system for bilateral dispute settlement and, more importantly, dispute avoidance on these types of issues. The DR-CAFTA will also eliminate the use of export subsidies on agricultural trade within the region. However, the United States will preserve its right to respond to third countries that may use export subsidies within the Central American and Dominican Republic market to displace U.S. products while the United States works to eliminate the worldwide use of agriculture subsidies in the WTO negotiations.
U.S. agricultural exports can be expected to grow not only because of the direct effect of reduced tariffs and other restrictions, but also because of the economic growth that will occur as a result of the DR-CAFTA. As we have seen in other bilateral trade agreements that fully include agriculture, exports grow to the benefit of producers and consumers in all nations.
These six countries currently provide preferential access to other trading partners through various other free trade or preferential arrangements. As previously noted, the United States already provides preferential access to Central American and Dominican Republic food and agriculture products. It is time to allow U.S. agriculture producers to be on a level playing field with the agriculture producers of other nations.
U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement New Opportunities and Expanded Markets for U.S. Manufacturers
The U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) with Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua holds the promise of new opportunities and expanded markets for a wide array of U.S. manufacturing firms and their employees. Key opportunities that this agreement will provide are the following:
The agreement immediately and significantly expands duty-free market access for U.S. non-apparel industrial exports, while largely codifying the current duty-free market access that most Central American and Dominican Republic non-apparel industrial exports already enjoy to the U.S. market. In other words, U.S. access permanently improves, while Central Americas and the Dominican Republics access becomes permanent.
More than 80 percent of U.S. industrial exports can be sold duty-free into the six countries upon entry into force of the agreement. That is a substantial improvement over the 2001 average zero-duty access level of 70 percent of U.S. industrial exports.
Central American and Dominican Republic average applied industrial tariffs are 30 to 100 percent higher than U.S. applied industrial rates. Whereas U.S. rates average 3.6 percent, Guatemalas average applied industrial tariff is 7.1 percent, Honduras is 6.7 percent, El Salvadors is 6.5 percent, Nicaraguas is 4.9 percent, Costa Ricas is 4.6 percent and the Dominican Republics is 10.7 percent (2001 figures).
Major U.S. industrial sectors that are highly competitive will gain immediate duty-free treatment, including information technology, paper, a range of important chemicals and pharmaceuticals, and construction, agricultural, medical, and scientific equipment.
The industrial market access chapter is comprehensive, with no exemptions or exceptions. Tariffs on even the most sensitive items will be removed within 10 years.
The Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua will join the WTO Information Technology Agreement (ITA). Costa Rica and El Salvador already participate in the ITA.
About 99 percent of Central American non-apparel industrial exports will enter the U.S. market duty-free upon entry into force of the agreement. This is the same percentage of non-apparel industrial exports that already enters duty-free under the Caribbean Basin Initiative and the Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act. Existing U.S. duties on sensitive items like rubber footwear and canned tuna will be removed over 10 years.
U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement New Opportunities and Expanded Markets for U.S. Service Providers The U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) will open up new markets and opportunities for U.S. companies across a range of service industries. It will also serve to demonstrate to other developing countries, that commitments to liberalization and internal economic reform are necessary for economic development, higher standards of living, and global competitiveness.
The liberalization of cross-border trade and investment in services is particularly significant for the U.S. economy; services account for approximately 81 percent of private sector GDP in the United States, and account for the same proportion of private sector employment. From 1992-2002, the services sector added approximately 21 million new American jobs.
In 2003, U.S. cross-border exports of services were $305 billion, up from $292 billion the previous year, and represented about 40% of U.S. merchandise exports of $713 billion. The $60 billion services trade surplus that the U.S. ran last year partially offset our merchandise trade deficit of $549 billion.
A significant portion of U.S. services trade is delivered through the foreign affiliates of U.S. parent companies. In 2001, the services sales of U.S. foreign affiliates worldwide reached $432 billion. Such sales generated inflows of income from investments of about $68 billion in 2001, and they support a substantial number of jobs at home offices in the United States. These foreign operations are crucial to U.S. companies' competitiveness in global markets.
Under the DR-CAFTA, the Central American countries will open up substantial portions of their services market, subject to few exceptions. They have also agreed to significant commitments on regulatory transparency and principles to guide independent regulatory authorities. Key sectors where new opportunities will be created for U.S. companies include telecommunications, banking, insurance, distribution, computer, audiovisual and entertainment, energy, transport, construction, professional and other services.
Under the DR-CAFTA, the Central American countries also agreed to reform their so-called dealer distribution laws, which represent a substantial barrier to distribution in the region. They also agreed to provisions on e-commerce that reflect the importance of services and other e- commerce activities.
There are extreme deviations among each country's GATS commitments, with particular sectors being severely constrained and with others relatively open. The DR-CAFTA therefore represents significant new market access and opportunities for one of the most vibrant sectors of the U.S. economy.
U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement Expanded Markets for the U.S. Textile and Apparel Industry Swift implementation of a high standard U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) is critical for the continued evolution of the strong partnership that currently exists between textile and apparel industries in the United States and in Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua.
During the past twenty years, and especially over the last 36 months, the United States and these six countries have developed an increasingly integrated supply chain and co- production relationship in textiles and apparel. As a result, Central America and the Dominican Republic has emerged as both one of the largest export markets for U.S. cotton growers, yarn spinners, and fabric mills, and one of the most important sourcing locations for U.S. apparel and retail companies. During 2003, U.S. fabric and yarn exports to the region stood at $2.24 billion, or just over 26 percent of worldwide U.S. fabric and yarn exports. Apparel imports from the region surpassed 3.9 billion square meter equivalents (SMEs), or about 20.8 percent of all U.S. apparel imports. More than ever, the one million U.S. and Central American and Dominican Republic textile and apparel workers depend upon each other to maintain a globally competitive textile and apparel industry in North America.
While the current U.S.-Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act (CBTPA) trade preference arrangements has worked to keep the industry competitive thus far, it is not dynamic enough to withstand new competitive pressures that will be unleashed, and which are already being felt, as worldwide textile and apparel quotas are removed on J anuary 1, 2005. The DR-CAFTA will build on the CBTPA by making that partnership:
More Flexible: A new rule of origin and commonsense customs procedures in the DR- CAFTA will ensure that more garments are eligible to qualify for the trade benefits, thus extending the incentive for U.S. input to a larger market. Currently, 36 percent of all apparel that is imported from the region is ineligible to qualify for trade benefits because of rigid and incomplete rules.
Reciprocal: Not only will the DR-CAFTA preserve duty free benefits for Central American exports to the United States, but it will also, for the first time, extend the same benefits to U.S. textile and apparel exports to the region.
Broader: U.S. textile firms lose opportunities to sell their products to the region because they are used as inputs for finished textile products, such as home furnishings, that are currently excluded from the trade preference partnership regime. The DR-CAFTA will remedy this.
Predictable: The CBTPA is unilateral, is conditioned on trade preference criteria and will expire in a few years. The DR-CAFTA will create a reciprocal rules based system that is more predictable and permanent the perfect foundation upon which to grow this partnership.
U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement New Opportunities and Expanded Markets for U.S. High-Tech Companies
The U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) with Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua holds the promise of new opportunities and expanded markets for a wide array of U.S. high tech merchandise exporters, manufacturers, service providers and their employees. Total U.S. high- tech exports to Central America in 2003 totaled nearly $2.5 billion.
This agreement also contains strong commitments in the following areas that will provide significant opportunities for U.S.-made high-tech products and services. It will also establish important precedents for other U.S. agreements, including an FTA with the Andean nations and the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA).
Market Access The agreement features tariff elimination, most of it immediate, across a wide range of products. In particular, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua will join the WTO Information Technology Agreement (ITA), allowing U.S. high-tech exports to enter their markets duty-free. Costa Rica and El Salvador already are parties to the ITA. These 4 new ITA members will save U.S. exporters over $75 million annually on tech product duties.
E-Commerce All parties commit to non-discrimination and national treatment of digital products, and they will not impose customs duties on products delivered electronically.
Intellectual Property Rights All parties will ratify the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) copyright treaty upon entry into force and ensure that governments use only legitimate computer software.
Services All six countries agreed to use a negative list whereby all sectors are deemed open to liberalization unless specifically exempted. No reservations (exemptions) apply to computer and related services; only Costa Rica applied reservations to telecommunications services.
Telecommunications services o All six parties agreed to implement wide-ranging telecom regulatory principles that guarantee flexibility in the choice of technologies, access to and use of public telecommunications networks and services, interconnection obligations of major suppliers and support for and/or creation of independent regulatory authorities. o Costa Rica made first-time-ever commitments in a trade agreement to open to foreign competition Internet services, private data networks and wireless services.
DR-CAFTA Will Make it Easier for U.S. Companies to Distribute and Sell Products in Central America and the Dominican Republic Among its numerous benefits, the U.S.-Central America and Dominican Republic Free Trade Agreement (DR- CAFTA) is the first trade agreement to require trading partner signatories to reform onerous distribution laws that have restricted trade for decades. Background: So-called dealer protection laws in five of the six DR-CAFTA countries have for decades imposed substantial obstacles on U.S. and other foreign companies seeking to distribute and sell their products in the region. In some cases, these dealer protection regimes effectively lock foreign companies into exclusive and permanent relationships with a single local distributor, regardless of how well or how poorly the local distributor performs. Dealer protection laws tend to supersede any private contracts and have prevented foreign suppliers from disciplining a nonperforming or even larcenous dealer. In one country, the law specifically applied only to foreign suppliers, in clear violation of World Trade Organization national treatment rules. Moreover, these laws may subject outside suppliers to paying disproportionate penalties (often in the millions of dollars) in order to terminate or modify a dealer relationship. In the face of such exposure, many U.S. companies have chosen not to enter these markets at all. DR-CAFTA Commitments: Among its provisions, DR-CAFTA eliminates any requirement that a U.S. supplier must import through a local dealer. The agreement also prohibits the use of import bans, which can completely block a U.S. company from selling its products in the country, as a remedy in any dealership dispute. The four countries with existing dealer protection laws Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, and Honduras each committed to adopt a number of additional, substantial revisions of their laws. For example: All four countries committed to allow U.S. exporters, when they establish new dealer and distribution relationships, to establish the duration of the relationship, whether it is exclusive, the terms of indemnification for premature termination of the dealership, and any requirements for the use of arbitration. Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic and Honduras undertook explicit commitments that allow parties in future dealer relationships to terminate such agreements at the end of the contract or renewal period without costly indemnification payments. The Dominican Republic and Honduras explicitly committed that the calculation of actual damages will be based on general contract law in the case of an early termination of a dealership (rejecting current requirements that use an inflated, artificial statutory formula that bears little relation to the commercial relationship). Guatemala, which had already repealed its dealer protection law but still applies its provisions to contracts already in existence, will encourage dealers still subject to the old law to renegotiate their contracts to eliminate application of the old law. Benefits to U.S. Companies: These commitments will result in the significant liberalizing of onerous dealer protection laws in the DR-CAFTA countries, substantially improving access to these markets for U.S. companies once DR-CAFTA enters into force. U.S. companies for the first time will have concrete assurances that the contacts they enter into with local dealers will be respected and not superseded by local law and that they will not be locked into exclusive or unproductive relationships or be unfairly financially penalized for trying to terminate unproductive dealer relationships.
U.S.-Central American Free Trade Agreement New Opportunities and Expanded Markets for Food and Consumer Products
The U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement with Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua holds the promise of new market opportunities for exports of processed food and beverage products.
Opening Markets
In general, U.S. exports of processed food products already capture roughly one quarter of total food imports in these economies and U.S. brands are well known throughout the region. Already, exports of processed food products are often growing faster than any other agricultural product and the elimination of Central Americas and the Dominican Republic tariffs on our products will make them far more competitive in the region. Products with the most potential growth in the region include, snack foods, breakfast cereals, pet foods, frozen potatoes and processed fruits and vegetables.
Tariffs on exports of all food and beverage products will be reduced to zero over fifteen years. Certain products, such as breakfast cereals, soups, cookies and pet food products will receive immediate duty-free treatment in these countries.
Comprehensive Agreement
Perhaps the most important aspect of the agreement for the food and beverage industry is the comprehensiveness of the agreement. All products are included in the agreement, including sugar, a key ingredient for many food products. As a result, U.S. food manufacturers will have increased access to high quality Central American and Dominican Republic sugar, which will help increase their competitiveness vis--vis other low cost producers.
Enhanced Rules on Intellectual Property Rights
The agreement goes beyond current protections for trademarks to apply the principle of first-in- time, first-in-right to all products, including those that may contain a place (geographical) name. This means that the first company to file for a trademark is granted the exclusive right to that name, phrase or geographical place name. This agreement sets an important precedent that is necessary to fight the European Unions approach to geographical indications. (Under EU law geographical indications (Parmesan cheese, Parma ham, Pilsner beer) are given priority to trademarks and may cancel protections for brands.)
U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement Sugar Provisions The U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) will eventually lead to fully liberalized trade in nearly all products. In the case of sugar, however, U.S. imports from DR-CAFTA countries will expand only modestly, through small quotas that increase incrementally during the agreement.
Sugar is among the most highly protected of all U.S. commodities. The U.S. government gives import quotas to 40 countries, and each country can sell only its quota into the U.S. market any sugar above that amount is subject to a prohibitive tariff.
The table below shows the quantity of sugar that the DR-CAFTA countries can ship under the quota system today, before the agreement takes effect, and the additional quantities that they will be entitled to sell in the agreements first and fifteenth years.
Country Current Quota
(metric tons) Year 1 Additional Quota (metric tons) Year 15 Additional Quota (metric tons) Costa Rica 15,796 13,000 16,080 Dominican Republic 185,335 10,000 12,800 El Salvador 27,379 24,000 36,040 Guatemala 50,546 32,000 49,820 Honduras 10,530 8,000 10,240 Nicaragua 22,114 22,000 28,160 Total 311,700 109,000 153,140
The additional sugar access for DR-CAFTA countries is extremely modest. The first-year additional quota of 109,000 metric tons represents
Less than 1% of 2003/04 total U.S. sugar supply; Less than 7% of total U.S. imports and less than 6% of 2003/04 ending stocks; About one-tenth of one months value of sugar utilization in the United States.
Contrary to the claims of some DR-CAFTA opponents, these small imports will not harm the domestic U.S. sugar industry. Under the U.S. sugar program, domestic sugar prices should not decline at all. Prices will be stabilized by domestic marketing allotments, legislated by Congress in 2002 at the specific request of the U.S. sugar industry.
Sugar is about 1% of the U.S. farm economy, and the DR-CAFTA imports are less than 1% of total sugar supplies. If ever anyone made a mountain out of a molehill, it is the opponents of the DR-CAFTA who claim it will harm U.S. sugar growers.
The U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America FTA Strong Rules to Protect and Promote Creative and Scientific Industries
The U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) contains strong rules for the protection of intellectual property that are critical to promote innovation and new research in numerous sectors, from information technology to scientific industries, and to stimulate a rich and diverse marketplace for the development and publishing of business information and creative works. Key commitments include:
International Agreements. Parties agreed to ratify or accede to other international agreements protecting intellectual property, including the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) Internet Treaties and the International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants. Trademarks. Parties agreed to strong protections, including: a system to resolve disputes over trademarks used in Internet domain names; adoption of first-in-time, first-in-right principle to trademarks and geographical indications; encouragement of on-line system for registration and maintenance of trademarks; and transparent procedures for the registration of trademarks, including geographical indications. Copyright. Parties agreed to strong protections for copyrighted works, including by clarifying copyright owners rights with respect to temporary copies in computer memory; ensuring that authors, composers and other copyright owners have the exclusive right to make their work available on-line. providing terms of copyright protection for works and phonograms that are consistent with U.S. law; establishing prohibitions against circumvention of technological measures used to protect copyrighted works and satellite programming; requiring governments to use only legitimate computer software; and establishing rules for limited liability of Internet Service Providers consistent with U.S. law; and requiring the Dominican Republic to take special measures to address broadcast piracy. Patents. Parties agreed to strong protections for patented products, including: compensation for delays in granting original patents, consistent with U.S. practice; protections against arbitrary revocation of patents; protections for test data and trade secrets submitted to a government for the purpose of product approval for a period of five years for pharmaceuticals and ten years for agricultural chemicals. protections against marketing approval of products that infringe on existing patents; and protections for newly developed plant varieties. Enforcement. Parties agreed to provide strong penalties for violations, including: criminalization of end-use piracy; statutory and actual damages for copyright infringement and trademark piracy; seizure, forfeiture and destruction of pirated and counterfeit goods, the equipment used to make or distribute them and related documentation.
The U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America FTA Exporting U.S. Legal Protections for Americans Investing Abroad
The U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) contains strong rules to protect Americans investing in these six countries. These investment rules are based on centuries old U.S. legal principles -- from the Takings Clause and Due Process and Equal Protection provisions of the U.S. Constitution to strong state and federal laws on the protection of property. Since foreign investors in the United States already enjoy these protections, the DR- CAFTAs investment provisions are critical to level the playing field.
The Core Protections. Like the 45 bilateral investment treaties and five FTAs that preceded the DR-CAFTA, it includes at its core very basic and critically important provisions, including:
NO DISCRIMINATION in favor of domestic investors or other foreign investors (the better of national treatment or most favored nation treatment). TREATMENT IN ACCORDANCE WITH CUSTOMARY INTERNATIONAL LAW, including fair and equitable treatment (e.g., due process) and full protection and security. PROMPT COMPENSATION FOR EXPROPRIATION. PROTECTION FOR THE MOVEMENT OF CAPITAL, including the repatriation of profits. NO PERFORMANCE REQUIREMENTS, such as local sourcing or export requirements. RESOLUTION OF DISPUTES between investors and governments before objective, impartial arbitral tribunals.
In accordance with Congress directions in Trade Promotion Authority, enacted as part of the Trade Act of 2002, the DR-CAFTA also ensures that key protections conform to U.S. legal principles and practice and that disputes are handled transparently, efficiently and with public input. Unlike any prior FTA, the DR-CAFTA also provides a concrete mechanism for the development of an appellate or other review procedure to ensure the coherence of decisions.
Investment Protections Are Critical To Support Continued U.S. Economic Growth. U.S. investment overseas, which depends on strong investment protections, is critical for supporting U.S. economic growth. Over the past 20 years, U.S. companies that invest abroad have:
exported more (accounting for to of all U.S. exports) expended more on U.S. research and development and physical capital investments, and paid their U.S. workers more
than companies not engaged globally. Foreign affiliate sales of U.S. companies invested abroad amount to approximately $2 trillion, which help to support jobs and business activities in the United States. More than 70 percent of the profits earned by such affiliates are returned to the United States. In short, these investment protections support U.S. foreign investment that, in turn, complements U.S. business activity, supporting higher paying jobs, greater productivity, a higher standard of living and economic growth in the United States.
Labor Rights in Central America and the Dominican Republic: Constitutional and National Law Protections Labor Law Framework of the DR-CAFTA Countries: Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua have generally adopted -- both through International Labor Organization (ILO) conventions and their own constitutions and laws robust standards of the protection for labor rights. Core ILO Conventions: Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic have ratified all eight ILO core labor conventions while El Salvador has ratified six. * These conventions are considered part of the domestic law of each of these countries. Constitutional Protections: As documented by the ILOs two recent reports, Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work: A Labour Law Study Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, ILO (Oct. 2003) and Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work: A Labour Law Study Dominican Republic, ILO (J an. 2004), the constitutions of each of these six countries incorporate broadly many, if not all, of the four ILO core labor principles. National Law Protections: In addition, the national laws of each of these countries also include strong standards for labor rights on the core issues of freedom of association and collective bargaining, forced labor, child labor, and discrimination. The ILO has identified specific areas where laws could be and should be improved; over the past several years, each of the countries has and continues to make progress in improving its labor standards. Implementation: Each of these countries has also taken important steps to enforce its labor standards, although each recognizes the need for more resources and attention to improve implementation of its labor laws. DR-CAFTA Framework: The U.S.-Central America and Dominican Republic Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA), includes binding dispute settlement for the enforcement of each countrys labor laws, as well as related work on capacity-building. DR-CAFTA represents an important opportunity to strengthen and broaden the labor rights protections in each of these countries through new commercial opportunities, investment and technical assistance. In December 2004, Congress appropriated $20 million for labor and environmental capacity- building in these countries. Countries Commitment to Concrete Improvements in Working Conditions: On April 4, 2005, the six countries and the Inter-American Development Bank released a paper detailing how the democratically-elected governments of each country have made and continue to seek progress in improving labor standards and working conditions in their countries. The report also identifies specific areas where the countries require technical assistance to improve working conditions. Status Quo Is Not the Answer: Failure to implement the DR-CAFTA will at best maintain the status quo. It will not improve labor conditions and could actually worsen the situation with the flight of U.S. investment, the loss of jobs in the second largest sector in these economies (textiles and apparel) and a deteriorating economic situation.
* Freedom of Association Conventions: C. 87 and C. 98; Forced Labor Conventions: C. 29 and C. 105; Discrimination Conventions: C. 100 and C. 111; Child Labor Conventions: C. 138 and C. 182. El Salvador has ratified all but the two conventions on Freedom of Association.
The U.S.-Central American and Dominican Republic FTA Binding Environmental Provisions and Concrete Steps on Capacity-Building The U.S.-Central America and Dominican Republic FTA (CAFTA-DR) contains key provisions on environmental protection that go beyond the requirements of Trade Promotion Authority and the recently implemented U.S.-Chile and U.S.-Singapore FTAs.
FTA Contains Binding Commitments to Enforce Environmental Laws. Each of the six nations has agreed, subject to binding dispute settlement, to enforce their environmental laws. This is a robust commitment given that each of these countries -- Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua -- have generally adopted, both through multilateral environmental agreements and their laws, high standards of protection for the environment. Each of these nations is, for example, a party to the following multilateral environmental agreements:
United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Kyoto Protocol Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer Basel Convention on the Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes
FTA Provides for Formal Citizen Submission Process. Going beyond the U.S.-Chile and U.S.- Singapore FTAs, this FTA establishes a robust citizen submission process that will create a secretariat to review all public submissions regarding a countrys enforcement of its environmental laws.
Countries Agree to Take Concrete Action to Promote Environment Capacity-Building. The countries also agreed to create a standing body for trade capacity building and for developing concrete and ambitious projects to promote environmental protection. These steps will build upon and advance the work of the Central America-United States J oint Accord (CONCAUSA) and other activities, through which the United States has worked with these countries to undertake a wide range of environmental protection activities, including with respect to wildlife population, pesticides and pollutants, sea turtles, sustainable development, tropical forest conservation, water resource management, and sustainable wastewater and solid waste treatment. Congress has already appropriated $20 million for environmental and labor capacity- building in these countries.
In short, the CAFTA-DR and the related Environmental Cooperation Agreement will help strengthen and broaden the protection of the environment in each of these countries through several mechanisms, including new commercial opportunities, investment, capacity building, and a citizen submission process. Failure to achieve an FTA, on the other hand, will at best maintain the status quo. It will not improve environmental conditions and could actually worsen the situation if the result is a flight of U.S. investment and a deteriorating economic situation.