| Free Trade Area of the Americas - FTAA | 
|   | Declarations | Committee | Committees | Facilitation | Society | Database | Cooperation Program | ||||
| 
 | |||||||||||
| 
      Public FTAA - 
      COMMITTEE OF GOVERNMENT REPRESENTATIVES ON THE PARTICIPATION OF  CONTRIBUTION IN RESPONSE TO THE OPEN AND ONGOING INVITATION 
 Executive Summary 1) Three years after the establishment of the terms of discussion of the appended report, the topic is still open to discussion, notwithstanding important events that have occurred in the overall context (for example, the granting of fast-track authority to President George W. Bush). 2) Labor law inevitably entails costs for the employer, and these costs have repercussions for international trade. Under certain conditions, the ability to compete internationally of 
		countries in which workers have a higher level of protection may be 
		harmed by countries in which workers have a lower level of protection. 3) The problem is not new, and it has been addressed through a number of 
		initiatives. 4) Other initiatives were taken by the organized international 
		community, which in 1919 created the International Labor Organization (ILO), 
		one of whose founding principles was that nations that provided 
		inadequate treatment to their workers hampered, for the reasons noted 
		above, improvements to the treatment of workers in other countries. The topic has also been raised at the World Trade Organization (WTO). At 
		the 1997 Singapore Ministerial Conference of the WTO, trade ministers 
		resisted a bid by some developed countries to include a social clause in 
		trade agreements that would establish a link between the trade system 
		and respect for international labor standards. 5) Efforts to link international trade with respect for labor standards 
		have also been made within regional organizations, such as the European 
		Union (e.g., through the additional concession of generalized 
		preferences to countries that commit to abide by certain labor 
		standards) and the North American Free Trade Agreement (with its 
		complementary Agreement on Labor Cooperation). 6) Lastly, the linkage has also been expressed in bilateral agreements, 
		such as the trade agreement between the United States and the Kingdom of 
		Jordan, and the proposed agreement between the United States and Chile. 7) At the global level, unions tend to attempt to associate trade with 
		the respect for basic labor standards, through regulations and 
		sanctions. Global business, on the other hand, tends to resist that 
		linkage, instead reserving labor issues for specialized bodies, such as 
		the ILO.  8) The tendency of developing-country governments is to generally oppose 
		this type of linkage, since they understand that the latter can pursue 
		in reality or constitute in fact an imposition of non-tariff barriers to 
		international trade. 9) In other words, a number of governments consider that in addition to 
		(or in lieu of) a genuine concern for labor rights, there may in fact be 
		an underlying "protectionist orientation," promoted by corporate 
		interests that influence the governments of developed countries 
		(symptomatic of this is the fact that some employer organizations in 
		developed countries, along with unions, support their governments when 
		the latter demand the insertion of a social clause in instruments that 
		regulate international trade). 10) The tendency to link labor law with international trade is also 
		reinforced by the globally organized resistance to market 
		liberalization, aresistance that is due not only to the pressure of 
		corporate interests, but also to the end of the Cold War and to the fact 
		that the "struggle against globalization" provides a suitable 
		opportunity for channeling opposition and even the frustrations of many 
		non-governmental organizations that have ample financial and media 
		support. | 
|  |  |  |  | ||