Access to Markets
Background
The goal of the recent wave of free trade agreements has been the reciprocal
lifting of trade barriers among nations, regardless of the countries' level
of development or particular national interests. The dominant principle of these
deals has been the concept of "national treatment," which means that governments
should be required to treat foreign investors, investments, and products the
same as their national counterparts.
This chapter, while not criticizing international trade, argues that trade
liberalization should not be an end in itself for which everything else must
be sacrificed. Instead, market access for foreign products and investments should
be evaluated and defined within the framework of national development plans.
Guiding Principles:
The complex process of reconciling national development plans with international
trade rules should take the following matters into account:
- The differing levels of development among countries are a justification
for allowing non-reciprocal and preferential treatment in market access. Articles
2, 4, 17 and 18 of the United Nations Charter of Economic Rights and Duties
of States (1974) establish the legal and socio-economic bases for demanding
equitable (not equal) treatment. Equal treatment among unequals leads to inequality.
- A development strategy should be multifaceted and must not treat the external
market as the only influence over demand. Domestic markets must be appropriately
valued for their role in generating a "virtuous cycle" of raising the population's
standard of living and increasing economic growth. By linking economic development
to per capita consumption, living standards for the majority inevitably rise.
The fight against poverty and the pursuit of social justice cease to be simply
ethical demands; they become levers for development.
- When internal markets are strong and economic activity is not dependent
solely on external markets, the conditions exist for negotiating an opening
to external trade without adopting a stance of appeasement.
- Permanent and predictable access to foreign markets is important for advancing
growth of productive capacity and securing a healthy balance of payments.
That is, necessary imports are financed through a strong and competitive export
sector. However, market action only works to eliminate non-competitive producers;
trade liberalization does not itself create a strong and competitive productive
capacity. Development and competitiveness require concrete policies with clear
objectives, goals and instruments. States have a responsibility to meet this
challenge. Agreements must not impair the ability of states to set policy
for the promotion and even the protection of certain strategic industries
to achieve just and sustainable national development.
- At the present time, the fundamental obstacles to access to developed countries'
markets are not tariff barriers, but "technical barriers to trade." Trade
negotiations should address this issue.
- The goal of negotiations should be to establish clear and fair rules for
permanent and predictable access to markets which benefit consumers, create
jobs and well-being for the population, strengthen productive capacity, and
protect the environment.
Specific Objectives:
Tariffs
- Producers, and society in general, should agree on a transparent and widely
participatory process for establishing a timetable and choosing products to
be subject to lower duties.
- Internal timetables for trade liberalization and tariff reduction should
be accompanied by coordinated programs to ensure that national industries
become competitive during the transition. These programs should include access
to consultants and training, technological research and development, and long-term
credit. Sectoral programs should be accompanied by a national development
plan, including commitments from the state to create the macro-economic conditions
that enhance competitiveness. For developing countries, trade liberalization
without an industrial policy is suicidal.
- An even-handed tariff policy must be implemented to ensure linkage between
productive sectors so that no sector is disadvantaged. This could occur if
tariffs on an end product were eliminated without a corresponding reduction
of duties on imports of its intermediate inputs.
- The right to impose clear, transparent and agreed-upon performance requirements
in conjunction with programs of tariff reduction must be preserved.
Non-Tariff Barriers and Standards
- Non-tariff barriers increasingly take the form of standards of various kinds:
quality standards, processing standards, fulfilment of phyto-sanitary specifications
(relating to the absence of agents of infection or disease in plants), certificates
of origin, organic product standards (e.g., certification of production without
toxics or chemical fertilizers), environmental standards, and labour standards,
including minimum wage, prohibition of child and forced labour.
These standards, necessary to ensure that such matters as quality, health and
environmental protection and workers' rights are taken into account, have also
been used as hidden obstacles to the free flow of trade from developing to developed
countries. They are imposed unilaterally, and may reflect the interests of corporations
and their lobbyists to get governments to impose protectionist sanctions on
foreign goods and/or services.
The challenge then is to eliminate bias and arbitrariness from the imposition
of such standards to ensure they reflect legitimate interests and are not hidden
protectionist measures to benefit specific companies.
- Laws, regulations, guidelines and standards for guaranteeing the quality
of goods and services for consumer and environmental protection should be
arrived at through broad public consultation. They should take into account
the range of conditions prevailing in different countries and include realistic
timetables. They should be written into wide-ranging agreements on scientific
and technical cooperation and industrial development. These agreements, reinforced
by adequate resources and specific sectoral accords, should raise standards
by international consensus, especially for developing countries and for socially
owned enterprises (such as cooperatives) and micro, small, and medium enterprises.
These provisions should require multinational corporations to meet the highest
standards to prevent the sale of products banned in that company's own country,
or in countries with lower standards or lax enforcement. Only through broad
and democratic processes of consultation and negotiation can consumers' needs
for high standards of health and environmental protections be met and unilateral,
illegal and covert protectionist measures avoided.
Customs Procedures
- Customs procedures should be harmonized while they are modernized to reduce
bureaucracy and simplify procedures. Assistance should be given to the social
sector and micro, small and medium producers and entrepreneurs who engage
in foreign trade.
- Customs valuation procedures should be linked to and integrated with those
used for evaluating dumping and subsidy cases, the suppression of fraud, information
gathering systems and dispute resolution mechanisms.
Rules of Origin
Rules of origin are the criteria by which products come to be considered to
be originating in a given place, which then affects their treatment in cross-border
exchange under free trade agreements. The trend in such agreements is to establish
regional rules of origin specifying a percentage of components or inputs to
be included in order to qualify for designation of origin.
While we do not exclude additional regional or sub-regional content requirements
within the hemisphere, our view is that countries should be able to establish
national content rules if the country feels that national economic development
requires such designation. This demand or principle complements other proposals
in Chapter 9 regarding the requirement for foreign companies to source a percentage
of inputs in the country of production.
Countries may deem that, without national content rules, trade liberalization
benefits only intra-firm integration and leads to the disintegration of national
productive linkages. Lacking incentives to purchase production inputs within
the country of production, large export companies revert to imports, which eliminates
spin-off economic growth, despite increasing production. The neo-liberal model
assumes that the export sector is the engine of economic growth. In practice,
this "engine" becomes disconnected from the rest of the train. Rules of Origin
that only require regional content transform the productive apparatus of many
southern countries into maquiladoras or export processing zones.
Enforcement and Dispute Resolution