| Free Trade Area of the Americas - FTAA | 
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      Public FTAA - 
      COMMITTEE OF GOVERNMENT REPRESENTATIVES ON THE PARTICIPATION OF  CONTRIBUTION IN RESPONSE TO THE OPEN AND ONGOING INVITATION 
 
 AGRICULTURE WORKSHOP RECOMMENDATIONS   INTRODUCTION:       
        
       Caribbean Latin American Action (CLAA) 
      is a non-profit organization, governed by an international Board of 
      Trustees, that promotes private sector generated economic development in 
      the Caribbean and Latin America. CLAA has played an active role by 
      engaging the business community in the move toward a Free Trade Area of 
      the Americas and serving as a vehicle for private sector input at each of 
      the major FTAA meetings, including the three Summit of the Americas and 
      subsequent business fora in Denver, Colorado (1995); Cartagena, Colombia 
      (1996); Belo Horizonte, Brazil (1997); San José, Costa Rica (1998); 
      Toronto, Canada (1999) and Buenos Aires, Argentina (2001). CLAA's work 
      program is divided along sectoral lines with a “business team” of company 
      representatives from each sector established to identify public policy 
      actions which governments could take to increase regional prosperity 
      through trade and investment liberalization.  
        
       CLAA believes that the FTAA will 
      make the various agricultural sectors in the Hemisphere more efficient. 
      The reduction of the various Hemispheric trade barriers shifts production 
      toward the more efficient producers and enables consumers to purchase 
      goods at lower prices. Furthermore, CLAA supports the FTAA mandate to make 
      itself a “subsidy free zone” with all members pledging to neither extend 
      subsidies on their own exports, nor to admit subsidized imports from 
      outside the region.  
      
       RECOMMENDATIONS 
      
       Standards as Barriers to Trade
       
      
       Governments should ensure that national food safety, 
        quality, sanitary and phytosanitary standards (SPS) are equivalent to 
        standards set by international bodies within the constraints of national 
        law. Where national standards are not fully developed, governments 
        should accept international standards.  Countries willing 
        to pay for technical assistance in the product qualification and 
        pre-inspection process should receive assistance from the developed 
        countries or international bodies. A greater capacity for pre-inspection 
        of produce and meat processing facilities overseas would help dispel the 
        notion that inspections are used to slow or prohibit produce entry. The 
        private sector should finance the development of training on grades and 
        standards to increase the number of personnel qualified for 
        pre-inspection. Importers should share this expense in order to reduce 
        the burden on exporting countries to finance such facilities.  The FTAA should adopt a uniform Hemispheric food inspection standard based on U.S. and Canadian models. 
 Enforcement Capabilities 
 
 Private Sector Empowerment 
 
 Dispute Resolution 
 
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