Good morning, I hope everybody had a good weekend. I wanted to share this article written by Bjorn Cleason which touches the fiber of International Trade Issues affecting us to day. Please check it out, it is a very interesting piece.
Let me remind you once again that the Fair Trade Committee meeting is scheduled for this Wednesday June 30 at 6:30 p.m. I hope to see you all there.


thank you,
Stefano Tijerina

----- Original Message -----
From: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Bjorn Claeson at PICA
To: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Stefano Tijerina
Sent: Monday, June 28, 2004 8:01 AM
Subject: do you want to send this out to the fair trade committee, board?


Bangor Daily News

Last updated: Friday, June 25, 2004

Rules of trade: Should we care?


On June 12, 1999, President Bill Clinton prohibited federal acquisition of products made by children who are indentured or forced to work. There were, however, some notable exceptions to the ban: the 29 countries that have signed either NAFTA or a World Trade Organization government purchasing agreement.

Why were these countries exempted from such a seemingly basic ethical
standard? Because the Clinton administration feared it would violate
government purchasing rules in the trade agreements. According to one
such rule, for example, governments may only require that suppliers have
"the legal, technical, and financial abilities" to fulfill a contract.
Disqualifying a supplier for using indentured children to manufacture
their products or committing other human rights violations would be an
illegal barrier to trade.

Fast forward to August 2003: U.S. Trade Representative Robert Zoellick
asked all governors to authorize trade negotiators to offer their state
government purchasing markets in an array of new trade agreements. Such
offers were necessary to leverage access to other countries' state and
local government purchasing markets for U.S. corporations. However,
these new trade deals - with 38 new countries including the Central
America and South African regions - would require states to conduct
their government purchasing according to NAFTA and WTO-style rules that,
for example, allow forced child labor. The governors could not know what
rules they were agreeing to because none of the agreements had been
completed or were publicly available when they were asked to commit.

After giving Zoellick an initial nod of approval, Gov. John Baldacci
recently amended his response, saying the state would study the
agreements on a case-by-case basis before making any commitments. The
Maine Fair Trade Campaign, a coalition that educates the public about
the impact of trade policies and advocates for fair trade, had argued
that the purchasing rules in the trade agreements do not necessarily
provide any economic benefit for the state and could jeopardize a number
of our public policy objectives.

The rules of the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA), for
example, conflict with such policies as: favoring Maine businesses that
employ Maine workers for state contracts; requiring recycled content in
paper purchased by the state government; or insisting that state
suppliers do not sell products made in sweatshops. Failure to conform to
the trade rules could lead to a challenge of state purchasing laws in
private trade tribunals and result in taxpayer liability.

Six other governors, both Republican and Democratic, have recently
withdrawn their state purchasing markets from trade deals such as CAFTA,
citing similar concerns about their economic and public policy
objectives. The governors are not closing their states to international
trade; they are simply reserving the right to continue to make policy
for the benefit of the people of their states.

According to the U.S. Trade Representative office (USTR), the trade
rules help U.S. workers and firms by opening markets in other countries.
However, the same trade deals that are increasing exports and creating
jobs are increasing imports at a faster rate than exports, leading to
mounting U.S. trade deficits and job losses. Liberalizing trade in
government purchasing markets could have the same negative net result
for Maine if our companies lose more opportunities to supply goods and
services to Maine's government than they gain in contracts with foreign
governments. Even if Maine can leverage the opening of an additional
small foreign state or local government purchasing market, a large
transnational firm - that is neither based in Maine nor employing Maine
workers - is more likely to gain the additional contracts than most
small Maine businesses.

USTR denies that trade rules threaten most state policies, claiming that
trade agreements contain exceptions that states can use to protect
policies that otherwise violate trade rules. It is true that CAFTA's
trade rules, for example, do not apply to government preference programs
for small businesses and businesses owned by minorities, disabled
veterans, and women. However, other so called "exceptions" to the trade
rules are written in weak and sometimes circular language that does not
provide much protection for a government policy that is challenged as an
illegal barrier to trade. For example, according to CAFTA, government
purchasing policies to protect the environment are fine as long as such
restrictions are not "disguised barriers to trade." But the WTO has
ruled repeatedly that taking into account how a product is made or
harvested - for example, rejecting clear-cut tropical timber or fish
caught with "curtain of death" drift nets - is just that: a "disguised
barrier to trade."

Another "exception" safeguards environmental measures "necessary to
protect human, animal or plant life or health." But the party defending
a challenged environmental measure must show that there is no other
less-trade-restrictive means of obtaining its goal. Absent such proof,
the WTO has deemed environmental policies "not necessary." When
California decided to phase out the MTBE (methyl tributyl ethanol)
gasoline additive - like Maine just did - because it pollutes ground
water, the Canadian maker of methanol sued the U.S. under NAFTA arguing
that the least trade restrictive measure to obtain California's goal is
not banning MTBE but inspecting and improving underground tanks. The
company is claiming nearly a billion dollars in damages to their
reputation and future profits.

States can, in fact, decide whether or not to offer their purchasing
markets in trade deals and can also exempt sensitive purchasing
policies, goods, and services from coverage in trade agreements. The
first problem is, earlier in this not-so-public process, who knew? The
second: once we commit to the trade rules it is prohibitively difficult
to withdraw goods or services from the agreements since the federal
government would have to compensate trading partners for the loss of the
Maine market.

Gov. Baldacci's historic action has given us the opportunity to correct
this democracy deficit. Maine does not need to rush into any trade
agreement that limits state government policy capacity in the name of
free market competition without public debate and, ultimately,
legislators' decision. To learn more or get involved, contact PICA at
947-4203 or see <http://www.pica.ws/mftc>www.pica.ws/mftc

Bjorn Skorpen Claeson is program director for Peace through
Interamerican Community Action (PICA), a Bangor-based membership
organization working for global economic justice.


Jonathan Falk
RR 2, Box 7162
Carmel, ME 04419
(207)848-2433





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