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THE
AMERICAS
Anti-trade Feelings Delay CAFTA
BY EVELYN IRITANI, Los Angeles
Times Service
Growing anti-trade sentiment in
several Central American
countries has held up a trade
agreement with the United States
that was slated to launch Jan.
1.
Under the U.S.-Central America
Free Trade Agreement, the U.S.
agreed to open its markets
further to key Central American
products, such as sugar and
apparel and textiles, while
those countries promised to
lower barriers to U.S. farm
goods, high-tech products and
services. Central American
governments also said they would
strengthen their labor and
environmental laws.
COULD POSE PROBLEMS
Some experts said a delay could
pose problems for the Central
America deal, given the rising
skepticism about free trade
across Latin America. CAFTA has
become a hot issue in next
month's presidential election in
Costa Rica, the only country
that hasn't ratified the
agreement, and anti-trade
sentiment is running high in
several countries that have yet
to complete the legal changes
necessary to put the trade pact
in place.
Some countries are balking at
the requirement that they put
more teeth in their intellectual
property laws. Health activists
say these changes, pushed by
U.S. high-tech and
pharmaceutical companies, will
make it harder to get low-cost
generic medicines needed to
treat AIDS.
U.S. officials downplayed the
delay, saying such agreements
often take longer than expected
to complete.
The agreement, which includes
Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua,
El Salvador, Costa Rica and the
Dominican Republic, is one of
the most complex trade pacts the
U.S. has tackled because of the
number of countries and issues
involved.
Given that the United States
already has one of the world's
most open markets, the biggest
adjustments are being made south
of its border.
''We're basically working with
the governments to make sure
that everything is lined up for
the agreement to be ready to go
into effect,'' said Neena
Moorjani, a spokeswoman for the
Office of the U.S. Trade
Representative. ``Other
agreements have taken this long
and longer to take the next
steps, and what's going on with
CAFTA is nothing unusual.''
Trade experts express confidence
that the deal isn't in serious
danger. Central America is
America's second-largest export
market in Latin America after
Mexico, and governments there
are anxious for a deal to help
them compete against cheap
Chinese imports.
`A REALITY'
''CAFTA is going to become a
reality; it's just going to
happen a little bit more
incrementally than originally
planned,'' said Daniel Griswold,
a trade expert at the
free-market-oriented Cato
Institute in Washington.
CAFTA sparked a bitter partisan
battle in the U.S., where the
White House and the Republican
leadership in Congress were
forced to lobby hard for the
votes to pass the legislation
last summer. The chief opponents
were sugar growers and textile
producers fearful of opening up
their markets to cheap imports
and labor unions and Democrats
pushing for tougher protections
for workers and the environment.
Like President Bush, pro-trade
leaders in Central America face
fierce criticism from organized
labor and some industries, such
as farming and small business,
that fear they will be crushed
by powerful U.S. competition,
explained Daniel Erikson, a
Caribbean expert at
Inter-American Dialogue, a Latin
American think tank in
Washington.
In addition, Erikson said,
Central American leaders are
suffering from ''CAFTA fatigue''
brought on by the lengthy
negotiations, which began in
2002 and were delayed by the
U.S. presidential election.
''A lot of leaders in Central
America feel like they have
spent a lot of political capital
on this and now they're being
asked to continue to do so,''
Erikson said. ``There's a
certain exhaustion setting in.''
Some of the Bush
administration's allies are not
happy with last month's
announcement that the U.S. would
implement the trade agreement on
a ''rolling basis'' when
countries have made ''sufficient
progress'' to complete the deal.
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