| Free Trade Area of the Americas - FTAA | 
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FIRST ISSUE MEETING WITH THE PARTICIPATION OF CIVIL SOCIETY OF 
THE HEMISPHERE 
SUMMARY REPORT ON THE FIRST ISSUE MEETING WITH THE 
PARTICIPATION OF  SYNOPSIS OF EVENT The First Issue Meeting of the FTAA Committee of Government 
Representatives on the Participation of Civil Society was held in Sao Paulo, 
Brazil, on 25 June 2003, and focused on agriculture negotiations. The meeting proceeded in accordance with the agenda, attached 
hereto. The participants from civil society throughout the Hemisphere (see 
attached list) represented a variety of organizations from different spheres of 
civil society: non-governmental organizations, business associations, labor, 
academic sectors, indigenous community representatives, and agricultural 
producer groups, as well as representatives from the Brazilian Parliament and 
local governments. Also in attendance were several delegates from the SOC and 
the Negotiating Group on Agriculture. A total of eighteen countries participated 
in the meeting. See attached list. The event was held at the headquarters of the Fundación 
Memorial de América Latina (Latin American Memorial Foundation). The forum was formally opened with introductory remarks by 
Ambassador Luiz Felipe de Moredo Soares, Secretary General for South America of 
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Brazil, and by Luis Fernando Peredo Rojas, 
Chair of the FTAA Committee of Government Representatives on the Participation 
of Civil Society. Both speakers emphasized the need for civil society 
participation in the creation process of the FTAA and the importance of the 
issue selected as the focus of the meeting. The Chair highlighted the efforts of the Ministers and Vice 
Ministers of the Hemisphere to increase two-way communication with civil society 
regarding the negotiations, enhance and sustain participation of the different 
sectors of civil society in the hemispheric initiative, and strengthen and 
deepen their consultation processes with civil society at the national level. 
Recent Trade Negotiations Committee (TNC) Guidance to the SOC (contained in TNC/22 
and TNC/23, available to the public online at
www.ftaa-alca.org) 
identified various mechanisms in order to achieve this goal, including the 
organization of FTAA issue meetings with Hemispheric civil society in rotating 
host countries. The Chair explained how this event fulfills this instruction. In 
addition, the Chair emphasized the Committee’s role as a conduit through which 
to work with civil society and clarified that the SOC is not an FTAA negotiating 
entity. Ms. María Izabel Víeira, National Coordinator for 
Agriculture, from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Brazil, commented on the 
mandates of the Negotiating Group on Agriculture and the current status of the 
negotiations. She explained that the NGAG has based its work on the San José, 
Buenos Aires, and Quito ministerial mandates, as well as on the specific 
mandates of the TNC, and that the Group has produced a draft Chapter based on 
proposals submitted by the various delegations. Ms. Víeira further explained 
that the Group has reached some agreements, citing the elimination of export 
subsidies, although differences continue to prevail on other issues, such as 
support measures that affect trade. In this regard, some delegations feel that 
the issue should be treated multilaterally, in the WTO, while others insist that 
it should be addressed within the FTAA. The NGAG negotiates non-tariff measures, 
as well as sanitary and phytosanitary measures. One of the most significant 
agreements produced by the Group was to design an instrument whereby countries 
may notify non-tariff measures existing in the FTAA partners that are adversely 
affecting them. Finally, the NGAG has worked on market access negotiations. 
Delegations are currently working on improvements to market access offers. Civil society participants spoke on a variety of topics, also 
mirrored in the written statements (see annex), which are summarized as follows: 1. - General remarks on the FTAA and its potential impact on 
the participating countries. Remarks on the FTAA in general and its impact on the 
participating countries Clearly, there is a range of views on the impact of the FTAA: 
first, a position supporting the creation of the FTAA, given the positive and 
wide-ranging impact it will have on the economies of the countries, job 
creation, and poverty reduction. Agricultural producer groups and industry 
groups attending the meeting indicated that they firmly supported this position. 
Trade in agricultural products among the nations of the Western Hemisphere could 
be expanded substantially, if the many and varied forms of impediments to that 
trade were eliminated. Several delegations to the SOC also expressed their 
support for this position, explaining the importance of the negotiations in 
formulating clear trading rules for small countries.  - With regard to criticisms of the FTAA there were two 
  distinct viewpoints expressed by some labor and academic groups, as well as 
  NGOs: a viewpoint rejecting the FTAA altogether, and another stating that the 
  FTAA in its current form needed to be dramatically improved.  - Some oppose trade liberalization agreements and the 
  globalization process, because they generally view the latter, and by 
  extension the FTAA, as a process that limits national sovereignty, confirms 
  the status of rich and powerful countries, and perpetuates current poverty 
  levels in developing countries. Some speakers clearly opposed the negotiation 
  of this type of agreement, regardless of its outcome.  - Other participants emphasized that the FTAA needed to be 
  modified to address the following significant issues: differences in the 
  levels of development and size of the economies, in infrastructure and human 
  capital, and the existing asymmetries regarding access to capital and 
  technology for development. Some representatives indicated that their support 
  for the FTAA will depend on the integration model arising out of the 
  negotiations and that they will only support a model geared towards overcoming 
  asymmetries, including on agriculture, which negotiations are seeking to 
  address.  - Other representatives noted that trade plays a 
  significant role in development and poverty reduction, if properly managed, 
  through the elimination of tariff and non-tariff barriers, and the 
  modification of rules.  - Finally, representatives from some indigenous communities 
  expressed their opposition to the process, stating that it threatened the core 
  spiritual and cultural values of their communities.  The FTAA Process and the Participation of Civil Society Many organizations referred to the perceived lack of 
transparency in the process of creating the FTAA. In this respect, some 
organizations emphasized the difficulties in accessing the information 
available, both at a general level regarding the process and the impacts thereof 
on the population, and at a more specific level, on the negotiations themselves. 
They are dissatisfied with the type of documents that have been made public, 
which they assert do not provide any relevant information. It is not enough to 
have access to the draft Chapters, although the Ministers’ decision to release 
the first and second draft texts of the agreement was acknowledged. Many of 
those who took the floor indicated the limitations of the Internet as a means of 
communication with civil society, describing it as a non-democratic medium for 
many countries, particularly so in light of the fact that a very small 
percentage of the population of the Hemisphere enjoys access to the Internet. 
One representative insisted on the need for the Committee to disseminate 
documents more effectively. A number of participants requested that civil 
society be informed as to who made the proposals that are reflected in the draft 
Chapters.  More specifically, with regard to civil society participation 
in the FTAA process, some participants felt that the current mechanisms in place 
at the national and regional level needed to be strengthened and improved. In 
general, they indicated their desire to actively and substantively participate 
in the process, rather than simply being consulted. They argued that 
consultations and other similar mechanisms, such as the contributions in 
response to the open invitation, are insufficient and do not guarantee that the 
positions expressed will be taken into account during the negotiations.  Representatives of Argentine civil society reported that a 
forum will be held in Buenos Aires from 5 to 7 November 2003 in order to create 
an FTAA Permanent Committee on Civil Society. They propose that the forum be 
used as a channel through which to notify civil society on all pertinent events. 
The representatives requested the support of the Committee.  The participants also questioned the format of the issue 
meetings, indicating that the meetings could not be considered as consultations, 
but as forums for the exchange of ideas. It is worth mentioning that the 
Brazilian members of parliament and the local government representatives in 
attendance said that they were pleased with the format of the meeting, 
explaining that it enabled them to improve their understanding of the process, 
participate in the discussions, and prepare to cope with their future impact. Agriculture In regard to agriculture, both detractors and supporters of 
the FTAA argued for the elimination of agricultural export subsidies, and many 
supported eliminating trade-distorting domestic support measures. The 
participants mentioned that these types of measures have a protectionist effect, 
constitute unfair competition, and adversely affect the economies of the poorest 
countries. Differences still exist, however, on the arena in which these issues 
should be negotiated. Some organizations emphasized the benefit of negotiating 
rules on domestic supports in the WTO due to continued use of such supports by 
non-FTAA countries. Others insisted that working within the FTAA would help to 
reach more substantial agreements than those reached in the WTO to date. 
Regardless of the outcome of these discussions, several emphasized the need to 
define dispute settlement mechanisms to settle disputes on the issue of 
subsidies in the Hemisphere.  Among FTAA supporters, there is general consensus on the 
benefits of trade on development and job creation in the agricultural sector. 
For this reason they support the comprehensive liberalization of the sector, 
with full market access and the elimination of non-tariff barriers. They defend 
broad-based negotiations with a universal scope and few exceptions. In terms of 
tariffs and sanitary and phytosanitary measures, they support an FTAA that is 
more aggressive than the WTO, but that also ensures that the transition to free 
trade is adequate.  In regard to the process of exchanging market access offers, 
participants expressed their views on two issues: - The need to define the tariff elimination period for the 
  D basket, which currently provides for tariff elimination over a period of 
  greater than 10 years. Some participants proposed that the period for tariff 
  elimination for the products in basket D be 12 years. - Some also noted the need to reduce scaled tariffs in some 
  countries. Furthermore, the participants expressed their concern 
regarding the process for consultations with U.S. Congress on sensitive 
agricultural products as derived from the Trade Promotion Authority Act.  Many participants indicated that the Chapter on Agriculture 
does not sufficiently consider special and differential treatment for developing 
countries. Some expressed concern that the Chapter does not provide for any 
particular treatment for the family farm, nor does it limit the power of 
agricultural transnationals or prohibit the dumping practices that occur through 
the granting of subsidies.  The Brazilian delegation emphasized the comprehensive nature 
of the negotiations and noted that if sensitive agricultural issues are not 
negotiated in the FTAA, nor should issues such as services, intellectual 
property, or investment be negotiated. Some who oppose the FTAA made the following statements on the 
subject of agriculture: - The FTAA is an attack on food sovereignty, which is 
  viewed as essential for the poorest sectors of the population. Free trade 
  agreements do not contain mechanisms to guarantee that countries preserve 
  their food sovereignty. - The FTAA will destroy the family farm and adversely 
  affect rural workers.  - Competition as promoted by the free market will only 
  cause a trade war between the poor countries, which will be forced to cut the 
  salaries of rural workers even more in order to compete in a market that is 
  already flooded with surpluses. - The FTAA means that smaller countries will give up 
  control of their domestic markets to the large producers. - Free trade agreements in agriculture do not guarantee 
  equitable access to the markets of developed countries. - The FTAA makes no provisions for protecting traditional 
  knowledge or for defending cultural and ethnic values or biodiversity.  Prior to the close of the issue meeting, it was announced 
that a second issue meeting focusing on the issue of services would be held on 
23 September in Santiago, Chile.  Finally, the Committee Chair closed the event, thanking the 
civil society organizations for participating. The Chair described the feeling 
of dissatisfaction with the current state of affairs in the hemisphere with 
regard to development, and stated that the FTAA should help to better that 
situation and spread the benefits of expanded trade. The Chair emphasized that 
the Committee would channel the contributions received throughout the event, 
while recognizing the need to strengthen the mechanisms established to date to 
promote increased and improved participation. | 
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