Copyright 1999 Ag*ence Fran*ce Pres*se
Agence France Presse


May 24, 1999 US-trade-NAFTA 15:35 GMT

SECTION: Financial pages

LENGTH: 432 words

HEADLINE: Commerce secretary faces anti-NAFTA protest as he
defends free trade

DATELINE: CHICAGO, May 24

BODY:
   US Commerce Secretary William Daley was heckled by anti-NAFTA
demonstrators here Monday as he launched he launched an education
campaign to trumpet the importance of free trade for America's
prosperity.

As he met over breakfast with Midwest business executives and
lawmakers at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, two dozens
demonstrators staged a noisy protest outside to decry the loss of
US jobs to Mexico.

"Bill Daley, what a man, export jobs as fast as you can," chanted
activists of the Illinois Fair Trade Campaign, a coalition of
union groups opposed to the North America Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA) linking the United States with Canada and Mexico since
1994.

The protesters claimed that the accord had cost 200,000 US hobs
and triggered a lopsided trade imbalance with Mexico, where
workers sometimes earn as little as two dollars a day.

"There are legitimate issues of environment, labor in a host of
areas not just trade, that should be looked at independently,"
Daley said.

"But anyone who is running around saying the last years have been
bad for the US since 1993 (when NAFTA was passed by the US
Congress) when you look at 18.5 million new jobs having been
created, you look at inflation, unemployment, wages of every
category, business starts for African Americans, Hispanic
Americans, Asian Americans at greater numbers than ever ... I
think it's a little unrealistic," he added.

NAFTA created the world's largest trading bloc with more than 360
million people and a combined output of 1.7 trillion dollars. It
reduced tariffs and guaranteed the NAFTA nations reciprocal
access to each other's markets.

Daley, who is on a 24-hour trade education tour of Chicago as
well as Racine and Milwaukee in neighboring Wisconsin, said the
US economy was the envy of the rest of the world.

"Many Americans do not understand what is happening with trade
and the economy. They do not know trade has generated more jobs
than it has cost, or that export-related jobs pay higher wages --
some 15 percent more," he told the business leaders.

"Businesses need to talk trade up more often," he said. "If we
can't get the people behind us, especially now during the good
times how can we expect Congress to go along with us opening new
markets in China? Or on giving the president the power to
negotiate trade agreements?"

"We need to build a pro-trade majority in this country. If we
don't, I worry the trade deficit will spawn protectionist
pressures that would prevent us from opening new markets, whether
in China, Latin America, or Europe," he noted.



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