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      PublicFTAA.soc/civ/41
 June 10, 2002
 
      
      Original: SpanishTranslation: FTAA Secretariat
 FTAA - 
      COMMITTEE OF GOVERNMENT REPRESENTATIVES ON THE PARTICIPATION
      OFCIVIL SOCIETY
 
      COVER SHEET FOR OPEN INVITATION CONTRIBUTIONS 
 
          
            | Name (s) | Working Group on Competition Policy |  
            | Organization (s) | FTAA/PERU 
      COMMISION |  
            | Country | Peru |  
 
      
      Open Invitation to Civil Society in FTAA FTAA/PERU COMMISION
 Participating Countries
      Proposal from the 
      Working Group on Competition Policy
      April 
      2002
      In the 2001 Buenos 
      Aires Ministerial Declaration, the Negotiation Group on Competition Policy 
      was instructed to identify any areas involving the relationship between 
      competition and antidumping policy that may merit further consideration by 
      the TNC. The Negotiation Group on Dumping, Subsidies and Compensatory 
      Rights was likewise required to undertake a similar process of 
      identification. 
      This is a subject of 
      prime importance, as it affects the future of trade flows within the FTAA. 
      If antidumping rules do not have built-in competition principles, barriers 
      to fair competition between companies in the hemisphere could result. 
      Conversely, competition rules should incorporate relevant market criteria 
      – the trade policies in such markets - in economically integrated areas 
      already in operation since they could entail cross-border effects on 
      competition. Pro-trade and pro-competition policies thus imply some 
      overlapping between the objectives and potential adverse effects on the 
      well-being and economic efficiency of the countries integrated through the 
      free trade area. 
      This priority is not 
      only manifested in theory, either. In practice, other fora, such as APEC, 
      are considering the need for APEC economies to give effect, through their 
      trade policies, to the competition principles which they uphold, 
      especially in antidumping and countervailing duty cases. Similarly, the 
      interaction between competition policy and trade within the WTO was 
      pointed up in the recent Doha Declaration (paragraph 25).  
      With the foregoing in 
      mind, Peruvian civil society, represented by the FTAA/PERU Committee 
      proposes further study and incorporation in the FTAA of the relationship 
      between trade and competition policy. This would include an assessment of: 
        
        • The 
        potential for antidumping policy to create dominant positions for local 
        producers, importers, or foreign producers on the local market or the 
        relevant cross-border market. 
        
        • Experiences 
        in countries where competition principles or criteria have been 
        incorporated in domestic antidumping laws. 
        
        • Impact 
        on the well-being and efficiency in the implementation of antidumping 
        measures. 
        
        • Cases 
        in which competition rules and pro-trade policies can be applied, and  
        their results and market impact compared. 
        
        • Barriers 
        to entry and trade in pro-trade and competition rules alike. Comision ALCA/PERU
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