Free Trade Area of the Americas - FTAA |
|
![]() |
Declarations |
Committee |
Committees |
Facilitation |
Society |
Database |
Cooperation Program |
||||
|
|||||||||||
Public FTAA -
COMMITTEE OF GOVERNMENT REPRESENTATIVES ON THE PARTICIPATION OF CONTRIBUTION IN RESPONSE TO THE OPEN INVITATION
Executive summary Free trade area of the Americas To be successful, FTAA
negotiations have to take place within the ongoing process of
globalization of the world economy. As is well known, globalization in the
commercial field seeks liberalization of goods and services trade, and in
investment, together with greater protection for intellectual property
rights. As a result, it is expected that the international production of
goods and services will be relocated, restructured and/or decentralized.
In this regard, the 1998 WTO report states “an increasingly smaller number
of products can today be produced competitively on the basis of national
inputs alone”; and it adds, “trade in components and parts is growing
considerably faster than trade in finished products.” Consequently, in the
FTAA negotiations, developing countries should seek to become part of this
new international trade structure, granting concessions on tariffs and
non-tariff barriers in selected strategic sectors, complementing this with
higher levels of protection for intellectual property rights, and stronger
guarantees for foreign investment to enable it to contribute to the
development process with technology and capital. Developed countries, for
their part, should stop producing articles in which they are not
competitive, and focus instead on high-technology sectors and those which
characterize the new economy. This new distribution of labor will
significantly reduce the need for countries to have recourse to non-tariff
measures such as subsidies, dumping, safeguard measures, technical
barriers etc, or raise tariffs to protect inefficient production. |
|
|
|
|