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- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: El Salvador: Proceso 527: Free Trade
- Message-ID: <1992Sep1.233409.12800@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
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- Organization: PACH
- Date: Tue, 1 Sep 1992 23:34:09 GMT
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- Lines: 119
-
- /** reg.elsalvador: 164.0 **/
- ** Topic: Proceso 527: Region **
- ** Written 9:42 pm Aug 31, 1992 by cidai@huracan.cr in cdp:reg.elsalvador **
- From: cidai@huracan.cr (Centro de Informacion Documentacion y Apoyo a la Invest. - UCAJSC)
- Subject: Proceso 527: Region
-
- Center for Information, Documentation and Research Support (CIDAI)
- Central American University (UCA)
- San Salvador, El Salvador
-
- PROCESO 527
- August 26, 1992
-
- REGION:
- A new free trade zone in Mexico and Central America
-
- Only a week after the announcement of the North American Free
- Trade Zone, the countries of Mexico, Costa Rica, Honduras,
- Nicaragua, Guatemala and El Salvador signed an agreement which
- provides a framework for a free trade zone. The new agreement will
- allow increased and more diversified reciprocal trade at higher
- levels, and will permit activities aimed at the sustained growth of
- Central American exports and will improve their access to the world
- market.
- The treaty is an attempt to stimulate investments oriented
- toward intensive use of markets and the competitive capacity of the
- signatories, while it also favors the creation of bilateral and
- multilateral regional businesses.
- The new free trade zone is the result of one of the accords
- hammered out during the presidential summit between Central
- American nations and Mexico, which was held in Tuxtla Gutierrez in
- January 1991.
- This transcendental historical step toward regional
- integration and socio-economic development took place in Managua,
- Nicaragua, in the framework of a new economic and political context
- with a tendency toward regionalization, for lack of another
- alternative. It is one of many small steps toward a hemispheric
- free trade zone such as the one President Bush has proposed in his
- "Initiative for the Americas."
- For some, Mexico has become the principal bridge uniting North
- America with the rest of the continent. Not only will it bring
- Central America closer to the north, but will also help establish
- new trade relations in the future with South America. It is hoped
- that Mexico will soon establish a definitive and formal system of
- economic relations with Venezuela and Colombia, in the so-called
- "Group of Three." The latter two belong to the Andean Group, the
- Rio Group and the Latin American Integration Association (ALADI),
- which together involve almost all the southern nations, thus
- facilitating North-South relations. Mexico also belongs to the Rio
- Group and ALADI. For the time being, we must wait to see if events
- confirm or disprove the "bridge theory."
- The framework agreement for free trade between Central America
- and Mexico covers such issues as dumping and all practices of
- unfair competition, a commitment to eliminate all export subsidies,
- safeguard clauses, general criteria for establishing technical
- norms, and issues of domestic taxes. The agreement also specifies
- that controversies will be solved through direct consultations,
- mediation and arbitration; an administrative commission will also
- be created to oversee compliance with the provisions of the accord
- and recommend any necessary modifications.
- Furthermore, the document stresses that freeing up regional
- trade requires continuing the execution of other commitments
- acquired in the Tuxtla meeting, such as financial aid, promotion of
- investments, aid to primary sectors, energy supply and technical
- assistance. The treaty also specifies that Central American
- products may enter the 80-million person Mexican market duty-free
- starting in 1993, while Mexican products can enter Central America
- duty-free starting three years after the treaty was signed; this is
- an extra benefit for Central America, which historically has
- maintained a trade deficit with Mexico.
- Another important point established by the treaty is a
- framework governing bilateral trade negotiations between individual
- Central American countries and Mexico for the purpose of mutually
- establishing duty-free products. This provision would permit free
- entry of products into each respective market with the
- understanding that the free trade zone will be fully established by
- December 31, 1996. Nations may also bilaterally establish
- requisites governing the national composition of each product with
- regard to its eligibility for preferential status.
- Salvadoran Economic Minister Arturo Zablah declared on August
- 25 that El Salvador and Guatemala would negotiate with Mexico as a
- bloc regarding issues such as eliminating tariffs and trade
- barriers, and establishing rules governing the national composition
- of each product. He also expressed the hope that Honduras would
- join up with the initiative, thus forming the so-called "Northern
- Triangle."
- According to statements made several days before the signing
- of the accord by Amilcar Ibarra, Nicaragua's Foreign Trade
- Director, there is a chance that in December a bilateral free trade
- treaty will be signed between Mexico and Nicaragua. Costa Rican
- president Rafael Calderon announced one week before the Managua
- accord that his country and Mexico would sign a bilateral trade
- agreement in November.
- As we can see, nothing has been said yet about Panama, which
- is not part of the treaty because it did not participate in the
- Tuxtla negotiations in 1991 where the treaty originated. However,
- on August 20, the deputy director of the Panamanian Foreign Trade
- Institute, Juvenal Monteza, announced that his country would soon
- request to join the free trade agreement once it had evaluated its
- content and analyzed the mechanisms necessary to become a part of
- it. Yet shortly after his announcement, Panamanian president
- Guillermo Endara denied that plans currently existed to request the
- inclusion of Panama in the accord. Thus the chances of Panama's
- participation in the Mexico-Central America free trade agreement
- are still uncertain.
- In general, opinions expressed by the different governments
- involved have been positive; all feel that this is the best way to
- improve regional standards of living by strengthening regional
- development. Others feel that the Mexico-Central America agreement
- is mostly protocol, and sets forth more intentions than concrete
- acts; business sectors throughout Central America have expressed
- the fear that they will be undersold by a flood of Mexican goods.
- Much of the success of the agreement will depend on measures taken
- to improve business competitiveness as well as government support
- toward this end.
-
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.elsalvador **
-
-