Agriculture
Background
The pursuance of trade and investment liberalization within the FTAA process
is likely to cause serious social and economic problems for the agricultural
sector. Likely consequences include the acceleration of migration from rural
to urban areas, and the growth of poverty zones and increased marginalization,
both within cities and within rural regions, creating more pressure on local
governments for basic services.
In several countries, large corporations are pressing for the sale of agricultural
land to be converted into forestry plantations, resulting in a decrease in agricultural
employment and the loss of basic agricultural capital. These phenomena would
make our countries´ food security increasingly dependent on volatile international
market prices.
In light of these threats, agriculture should be given special treatment in
trade and investment liberalization agreements, rather than being considered
an economic sector like any other. Agriculture is a sector which fulfils a series
of essential functions for the stability and security of nations: to preserve
the cultural richness and multi-ethnicity of societies, to preserve bio-diversity,
to generate employment and sustainability (as much in agriculture as in related
economic activities), to maintain the population of rural areas, to ensure basic
food security and to contribute to a sustainable development with more economic,
social and political stability.
Therefore, to respond to the impacts of hemispheric integration, the development
of a long-term rural development strategy and the adoption of an integrated
agricultural policy within the FTAA are urgently needed.
Guiding Principles:
- Countries should assume the responsibility to ensure food security. In the
negotiation of international trade agreements, they should have the right
to protect or exclude foods, such as corn, which form the basic diet of their
people.
- Almost everywhere in the Americas, agricultural markets are open to increased
national and global economic exchange, resulting in an even further concentration
of land ownership in the hands of a small number of persons or companies.
This opening is one of the main causes of migration to large urban centers.
An agrarian reform is needed that legitimizes property rights of small producers,
including women and landless rural workers. In particular, the traditional
rights of indigenous peoples to live off their ancestral lands must be respected.
- Governments should address the particular environmental and economic issues
associated with the agroforestry sector. While recognizing the different levels
of development among the nations of the Americas, governments should establish
the necessary incentives to allow for secure and sustained advancement towards
sustainable agroforestry development.
- Countries should work to strengthen the organization of its rural sector
to ensure that this population is duly represented, both in its relations
with the state and with the market. For example, small-scale farmers and their
organizations, who have been previously excluded, should be allowed to play
an active role in trade negotiations. This ongoing process of modernization
of the rural sector must take into consideration the most vulnerable sectors
of the society, and safeguards should be adopted to protect cultural minorities
and social groups that do not have the means to adequately and efficiently
integrate into the market.
- In order for integration to take place in a state of equal conditions, an
efficient state which defines policies and generates options that guarantee
equity and transparency, is necessary. Support for family enterprises and
cooperatives engaged in processing commodities produced by small-scale farmers
is a part of this challenge. Governments should also recognize that small-scale
farming requires special policies concerning land conservation, appropriate
technology (including biotechnology), agricultural research, credit and subsidies.
- In addition to the large differences in levels of agricultural development
that exist among the hemisphere's diverse countries, there are huge differences
in the amount of subsidies and other assistance that governments give to agriculture.
Therefore, any trade liberalization agreement for agriculture must include
concrete measures for the upward harmonization of financial assistance for
agriculture, with the eventual goal of spending similar amounts expressed
as a percentage of GDP.
- The insertion of a country in the global economy requires the modernization
of its agricultural productive capacity, management skills, distribution and
commercialization networks, technological innovation and scientific research,
and the handling of information.
- Laws and regulations designed to guarantee sanitary and phytosanitary standards
to ensure high quality produce and protection for consumers and the environment
should be arrived at through wide consultation with citizens. These standards
need to take into account the diversity of different countries' national capacity
and establish realistic schedules for their upward harmonization.
- Agricultural labourers are frequently subjected to abuses and injustices.
The main demands of the labour movement, as well as of the campesino organizations
of the hemisphere, are the following:
- Guarantee the protection of trade union freedoms that allow for the
constitution of a union structure in the rural sector.
- The promotion of norms that allow the negotiation of wages and other
working conditions, through an efficient system of collective bargaining.
- The recognition of the needs of women in waged and unwaged work, taking
into consideration the unequal share of responsibility assigned to most
women for child-rearing, care for family members, and domestic labour.
- The consideration of specific health and safety standards linked, for
instance, to the effects of chemicals on campesino workers.
- Sustainable development and the protection of the environment can only be
promoted through the best use possible of natural resources and through a
proper monitoring of productive activities, especially of those activities
that have a significant impact. In this regard, the pursuance of agrarian
reform is indispensable, and the demands for such agrarian reform in Latin
America and in the Caribbean should receive the broadest support.
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