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Putting a Price on Free Trade

Jul. 24--Congress is likely to vote on whether to approve the Central American Free Trade Agreement before the end of the month.

On Friday, House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, called CAFTA the "big ticket" item on the House agenda next week, which is strongly backed by President Bush.

Proponents argue CAFTA will promote trade and help some local businesses, especially farmers in West Virginia.

Critics point to the North American Free Trade Agreement, signed by President Clinton in 1993, which eliminated many trade barriers with Mexico and Canada and ended up costing Americans more than a million jobs.

"I just read in the West Virginia Chamber of Commerce's newsletter that West Virginia workers are the fourth-best in terms of giving productive hours to their employers," Rep. Nick J. Rahall, D-W.Va., said on Friday.

"CAFTA says to these hard-working folks, 'It doesn't matter. We want to open the doors for corporations to throw up tin sweat shops south of the border, and they can take advantage of people less trained, less seasoned, with less health and safety measures and you can undercut American jobs.'

"Call it NAFTA, CAFTA whatever. It's all about 'shafta,'" Rahall said.

Rep. Alan Mollohan, D-W.Va., said, "I will oppose CAFTA for the same reason that I have opposed every free-trade agreement to come before the Congress: they are simply not in the best interests of my district.

"Pitting a country with a high standard of living against one with a low standard of living will always hurt the country with the high standard of living. Pursuing free-trade agreements without any appreciation for that reality, or without any sympathy for the workers and communities adversely affected, is a formula for disaster."

Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., has not yet made up her mind about the pending legislation.

R.C. Hammond, Capito's spokesman, said on Friday, "She has not determined how she will vote. She has received letters from her constituents and is considering them now."

Sens. Robert C. Byrd and Jay Rockefeller, both D-W.Va., voted against CAFTA when the Senate passed the bill, 54-45, on June 30.

The Senate vote was not strictly along party lines. Ten Democrats and one independent voted for the treaty, while 12 Republicans voted against it.

CAFTA will affect trade relations between the United States and Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua.

When NAFTA passed in 1993, the United States had a $20.6 billion export deficit with Mexico and Canada. By 2004, the deficit increased to $110.6 billion (measured in 1996 dollars), a jump of 538 percent, according to a study published last week by the Economic Policy Institute, an economic think tank in Washington.

Authors Robert E. Scott and David Ratner wrote that NAFTA helped investors, but "no protections were contained in the core of the agreement to maintain labor or environmental standards.

"As a result, NAFTA tilted the economic playing field in favor of investors and against workers and the environment, causing a hemispheric 'race to the bottom' in wages and environmental quality."

The EPI study shows all 50 states lost jobs. The 10 hardest-hit states, in percentage of jobs lost, were: Michigan, Indiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, Ohio, Rhode Island, Wisconsin, Arkansas, North Carolina and New Hampshire.

West Virginia ranked 18th, suffering a net job loss of 5,984 between 1993 and 2004. New exports created 5,993 jobs, but new imports displaced 11,918 other jobs.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture, however, believes CAFTA will help boost farm prices and income on West Virginia farms that produce poultry, beef, fruits and dairy products.

The agency's Web site states, "Exports of farm products help boost West Virginia's farm prices and income. Such exports help support jobs both on and off the farm in food processing, storage and transportation.

"In 2003, West Virginia's farm cash receipts were $390 million, and agricultural exports were estimated at $37 million. ... Implementation of the CAFTA will increase West Virginia's exports of agricultural products."

CAFTA will eliminate high tariffs and other barriers to importing U.S. farm products into those Central American countries, according to the Agriculture Department.

The American Farm Bureau and 50 other agriculture and farm groups back the treaty.

Ted Boettner, a researcher for the West Virginia Citizen Action Group, said, "The most devastating impact this agreement will have on Americans and the people in West Virginia is a decrease in wages.

"Like NAFTA, this trade agreement will keep wages from growing by increasing competition with workers making 50 cents an hour and by making it easier for employers to threaten to move when workers demand their share of rising productivity.

"To cut wages, it's important to recognize you don't have to move manufacturing. You just have to be able to threaten to do it. The threat alone is enough to lower wages and increase temporary employment," Boettner said.

During a telephone interview, Scott said he has also looked at agricultural trade. "The results we got are very different from what the Bush administration is promising."

Scott said the agricultural and textile industries will be the major losers in Eastern states.

CAFTA is likely to have little impact on the steel industry, which was hurt by NAFTA by "giving Canada and Mexico a lot of exemptions in anti-dumping and illegal subsidies," Scott said.

Farmers and workers in Central America also will suffer, according to Andrew de Sousa, an organizer for the Network in Solidarity with the People of Guatemala, based in Washington.

"Groups opposing CAFTA cite the experience of NAFTA and conclude that in their country, where 60 percent of the population survives through agriculture, small farmers will be decimated [and] genetically modified food will wipe out local biodiversity.

"Local medicinal knowledge will be patented and restricted by U.S. pharmaceutical companies, and life-saving generic medicines will be illegal for years, among many other negative impacts," de Sousa said.

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Source: The Charleston Gazette