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       Public 
      FTAA.soc/civ/79 
      May 23, 2003 
       
      Original: English 
            
      
      
      FTAA - COMMITTEE OF GOVERNMENT 
      REPRESENTATIVES ON THE PARTICIPATION OF 
      CIVIL SOCIETY
      
       
      CONTRIBUTION IN RESPONSE TO THE OPEN AND ONGOING INVITATION 
       
      
      
          
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            Name(s) | 
            
      
      John Murphy, Vice President, Western Hemisphere, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, and Executive Vice President, Association of American Chambers of Commerce in Latin America (AACCLA)  
       
      
      Mark Smith, Executive Vice President, U.S. Section of the Brazil-U.S. Business Council  | 
           
          
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            Organization(s) | 
            
      U.S. Chamber of Commerce 
        Association of American Chambers of Commerce in Latin America (AACCLA) 
        U.S. Section of the Brazil-U.S. Business Council | 
           
          
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            Country | 
            United States of America
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      U.S. Chamber of Commerce 
      Association of American Chambers of Commerce in Latin America 
      U.S. Section of the Brazil-U.S. Business Council 
      Recommendations for the Services 
      Negotiating Group 
      Executive Summary 
      
      The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the 
      Association of American Chambers of Commerce in Latin America (AACCLA), 
      and the U.S. Section of the Brazil-U.S. Business Council welcome this 
      opportunity to present our views on the emerging Free Trade Area of the 
      Americas (FTAA). We strongly support free trade in the hemisphere, and we 
      have previously submitted recommendations to the Committee of Government 
      Representatives on the Participation of Civil Society and to the previous 
      seven meetings of the Americas Business Forum giving our perspective on 
      how the agreement should be framed. 
      International trade in services is a 
      rapidly growing element of total trade, and we believe that throughout the 
      FTAA agreement, there should be a maximum liberalization of all modes of 
      supply, as well as national treatment for service providing companies 
      operating in foreign markets. Beyond the necessary market access issues 
      that negotiators face, they will need to provide for simplified business 
      travel procedures. Other key elements for services trade include clear 
      professional qualification requirements, and technical standards and 
      licensing requirements based on objective criteria, such as professional 
      competence. Negotiators should also provide for transparency in rule 
      making, with opportunity for public comment on proposed rules, and 
      harmonization or mutual recognition of professional standards. In addition 
      to our specific recommendations, we would also like to reiterate our 
      support for the recommendations that were endorsed during the VI Americas 
      Business Forum in Buenos Aires, Argentina. 
      
      
       
      U.S. Chamber of Commerce 
      Association of American Chambers of Commerce in Latin America 
      U.S. Section of the Brazil-U.S. Business Council 
      
      Recommendations for the Services 
      Negotiating Group 
  
      The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the 
      Association of American Chambers of Commerce in Latin America (AACCLA), 
      and the U.S. Section of the Brazil-U.S. Business Council welcome this 
      opportunity to present our views on the emerging Free Trade Area of the 
      Americas (FTAA). We strongly support free trade in the hemisphere, and we 
      have previously submitted recommendations to the Committee of Government 
      Representatives on the Participation of Civil Society and to the previous 
      seven meetings of the Americas Business Forum giving our perspective on 
      how the agreement should be framed. 
      Specifically we recommend that the 
      governments in the hemisphere agree during the Quito FTAA Ministerial to 
      take the following actions to build a strong foundation for the final FTAA 
      Agreement, including endorsing the following measures: 
      
        - Recognizing that there are 2 
          divergent views on the issue, as established during the VI Americas 
          Business Forum 2001 services negotiation workshop, we would like to 
          recommend that the FTAA countries negotiate liberalization according 
          to a top-down (“negative list”) approach, whereby all sectors are 
          liberalized except where a particular FTAA country negotiates a 
          reservation for a particular sector or measure. 
 
        - The FTAA Agreement should 
          provide for an obligation for an FTAA Party to: 1) remove 
          non-discriminatory quantitative restrictions; 2) guarantee access to 
          and use to publicly-provided telecommunications networks; and 3) not 
          impose local presence requirements (for example, a representative 
          office or any form of company) in its territory as a condition for the 
          cross-border provision of a service.
 
        - With respect to the proposal to 
          include labor standards in the text of the FTAA - a subject discussed 
          in the services negotiating group - we wish to register our 
          opposition. Nearly all economists agree that trade liberalization 
          raises incomes, and higher incomes lead in turn to improvements in 
          labor standards. Efforts to block trade liberalization in the interest 
          of promoting workers’ rights fly in the face of these facts. All too 
          often, calls for trade-linked mechanisms to enforce labor standards 
          are simply protectionism by another name. In fact, advocates of labor 
          rights often seek to restrain trade in the very sectors where Latin 
          America’s economies are at their most competitive. Thus, while we 
          support efforts to improve working conditions and ensure workers’ 
          rights, it is not appropriate to address this issue in the text of a 
          trade agreement.
 
        - Potentially, even before 
          completion of the FTAA Agreement, the FTAA countries should encourage 
          the use of the WTO Guidelines for Mutual Recognition Agreements in 
          Accounting by responsible authorities within the Western Hemisphere 
          for the development of sector-specific agreements on mutual 
          recognition of equivalency of licensing and qualification requirements 
          for professions (e.g., architecture, engineering, and accountancy), 
          where appropriate.
 
        - We support the incorporation of 
          a framework for transparency within the FTAA, as recommended by the 
          2001 services negotiation workshop at the VI Americas Business Forum, 
          which ensures that laws, regulations, and procedures affecting trade 
          in services are promptly published or otherwise made available to the 
          private sector, with appropriate opportunity for advance comment by 
          interested parties. Additionally however, the FTAA countries should 
          take the necessary steps to ensure transparent and timely 
          authorization procedures, where authorization is required to supply a 
          service.
 
        - At the earliest possible date - 
          and potentially even before completion of the FTAA Agreement - we 
          would like to support the creation of the proposed “FTAA Visa”, 
          established during the 2001 services workshop at the VI Americas 
          Business Forum. Furthermore, the FTAA countries should agree to 
          provide business visa treatment on a most-favored nation basis to all 
          FTAA countries including the implementation of simplified procedures 
          for temporary entry of business people, establishing multiple entry 
          visas as the norm and eliminating special requirements for those 
          providing technical assistance.
 
        - The FTAA countries should 
          indicate implementation dates for each of two phases of the 
          Inter-American Telecommunications Commission (CITEL) mutual 
          recognition agreement (MRA) for conformity assessment of 
          telecommunication equipment.
 
        - The FTAA Agreement should 
          recognize Express Delivery Services as a distinct service sector.
 
        - The FTAA countries should 
          recommit themselves to the complete and rapid implementation of the 
          customs-related business facilitation measures adopted at the 1999 
          Toronto Trade Ministerial. The business facilitation process is an 
          essential part of the FTAA, and implementation of the business 
          facilitation measures should remain a priority in the FTAA process.
 
       
      
        
          
        
      
      
      We would like to underscore the 
      importance of - and reiterate our support for - the following 
      recommendations, which were endorsed during the services negotiation 
      workshop at the VI Americas Business Forum in Buenos Aires, Argentina: 
      
      
        - We support the recommendation, 
          established during the VI Americas Business Forum 2001 services 
          negotiation workshop, that the principles of most-favored nation (MFN) 
          treatment and national treatment should be the rule for the FTAA 
          Agreement’s provisions related to all service sectors and service 
          suppliers. As we understand, MFN treatment would mean treatment that 
          is no less favorable than the treatment a Party to the FTAA Agreement 
          provides, in like circumstances, to service suppliers of another 
          country, whether or not that country is a Party to the FTAA Agreement. 
          National treatment would mean treatment that is no less favorable than 
          the treatment an FTAA country provides, in like circumstances, to its 
          own service suppliers.
 
        - We would like to express our 
          support for the continued liberalization in telecommunications 
          services including provisions outlined in the WTO Basic 
          Telecommunications Reference Paper as recommended in the VI Americas 
          Business Forum 2001 services negotiation workshop, in order to elevate 
          commitments among all 34 FTAA countries and foster effective 
          implementation of the pro-competitive regulatory principles set forth 
          in the WTO agreement.
 
       
            
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