Free Trade Area of the Americas
The
Free Trade Area of the Americas or
FTAA (in Spanish:
Área de Libre Comercio de las Américas, ALCA) is a proposed agreement to eliminate or reduce trade barriers among all
nations in the
Western Hemisphere except
Cuba. In the latest round of negotiations, officials of 34 nations began meeting
November 16, 2003 in
Miami to discuss the proposal, which is intended as a successor to the
North American Free Trade Agreement.
An article in the
Washington Times said that
Brazil and the
United States have been tussling over key points of the proposal, some of which are perceived to provide unfair benefits to wealthy nations:
- "Many manufacturers in small, poorer nations are afraid they will be wiped out by more powerful U.S. competitors." [1]
The process was begun with the
Summit of the Americas in
Miami in April
1994, but was brought to the greatest public attention with the
Quebec City Summit of the Americas in
2001, a meeting targeted by massive
anti-corporatization protests. The previous round of negotiations, which were held on the
Caribbean island of
Trinidad, ended in October 2003, with an apparent stalemate. \nA Brazilian delegate, who declined to be identified, said "the meeting revealed major differences."
According to news reports, the
US is pushing for a single comprehensive agreement that would cut tariffs on manufactured and agricultural goods while raising barriers to free trade on many services as well as pharmaceuticals and other goods classified as
intellectual property.
Brazil, however, which co-chairs the final phase of the FTAA talks with the United States, has proposed a slower, three-track approach that calls for a series of bilateral agreements to cut tariffs and a hemispheric pact on items such as rules of origins and dispute settlement, but leaves more controversial issues to the
World Trade Organization (WTO).
For the trade agreement to be on track for its scheduled deployment in 2005, substantial progress will need to be made at the November meeting. However, this meeting at
Miami has been cancelled one day ahead of schedule
[1], and many issues were left to be discussed by the WTO. At the same time, between 10,000 and 25,000 people from
trade unions and the
alterglobalization movement have been protesting against the FTAA.
Related articles
\n* free trade\n*
trade\n*
international trade\n*
trade bloc
External links
\n*The official home page of the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) process\n*
Indymedia FTAA News\n*
Canada, Chile thwart U.S.-Brazilian plan - AP news article\n*
Background information about the FTAA and public participation\n*
PDF Comparing the official agreement and alternative visions\n*
Stop FTAA\n*
FTAA Resistance
\n
Category:International organizations\nCategory:Free trade\nCategory:United States treaties