Treatment of small economies The Greater Caribbean This Week
By Norman Girvan
Guyana Chronicle
June 30, 2002

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LAST week a public disagreement emerged between the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) and the USA over recent FTAA (Free Trade Area of the Americas) negotiations.

The issues are both substantive and procedural. Ultimately they relate to the treatment of small economies in the FTAA, and how far these economies will succeed in coordinating their negotiating positions in the process.

The substantive issue concerns the base tariff to be fixed as the reference point for tariff reductions under the FTAA, especially for agricultural goods. CARICOM 's concern is that current proposals before the FTAA would result in exposure of their domestic agricultural industries to withering competition from imports, without the other sources of support for agriculture that larger countries have.

Thus CARICOM 's position has been to link negotiations on the base tariff to deepening the disciplines on subsidies and providing for safeguards for the agriculture of small economies.

The procedural issue relates to the time allowed for countries to provide notification of their actual base tariff. The proposed deadline of October 15, 2002, is designed to complete the process by the time of the Quito Ministerial FTAA meeting, scheduled for later that month.

CARICOM, which asked for more time to accommodate the capacity constraints of the smaller countries, was granted an extended deadline of December 14, 2002.

Underlying the problem are differing interpretations of what constitutes fair treatment of small economies in the FTAA process.

The Buenos Aires Declaration adopted by FTAA trade ministers in April 2001 reaffirmed a commitment "to take into account, in designing the FTAA, the differences in the levels of development and size" of economies and to recognise such differences in the FTAA negotiations.

The commitment was further underlined in the Declaration of Quebec adopted at the 3rd Summit of the Americas later that month, where the 34 hemispheric leaders agreed that they " attach great importance to the design of an Agreement that takes into account the differences in the size and levels of development of participating economies".

This is also a basic principle of the 25-member Association of Caribbean States (ACS). Similar declarations similar made at the 1st ACS Summit held in 1995 and the 2nd held in 1999.

The 3rd Summit, held in December 2001, went further. The political leaders endorsed a declaration on Special And Differential Treatment For Small Economies In The Context Of The Free Trade Area Of The Americas; available on the ACS website at http://www.acs-aec.org/III_summit/English/small_economies_eng.htm.

This document gives more substantive content to the broad principle accepted by political leaders and trade ministers by listing nine specific principles and nine types of measures that should be applied for small economies.

Among the recommendations are flexibility of implementation and in the application of norms, lower levels of requirements in certain disciplines and longer implementation periods. The need for flexibility is basic to the case of the small economies.

One objective of the ACS Summit Declaration was to work towards coordinating the FTAA negotiating positions of ACS countries on these issues.

Moreover, the majority of the smaller economies in the hemisphere are from CARICOM and Central America and at the CARICOM-Central America Summit in Belize in February this year, the leaders of the two sub-regions also agreed to work towards the coordination of positions in international trade negotiations.

Now these commitments are being subjected to a practical test. The issues that have surfaced will constitute a crucial test of the solidarity of the countries of the Greater Caribbean in the FTAA negotiations.