《A Free Trade Area of the Americas Status of Negotiations and Major Policy Issues》.pdf
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Order Code RS20864
Updated April 3, 2006
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
A Free Trade Area of the Americas: Major
Policy Issues and Status of Negotiations
J. F. Hornbeck
Specialist in International Trade and Finance
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division
Summary
In 1994, 34 Western Hemisphere nations met at the first Summit of the Americas,
envisioning a plan for completing a Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) by
January 1, 2005. Nine years later, at the November 2003 Miami trade ministerial, the
United States and Brazil, the FTAA co-chairs, brokered a compromise. It moved the
FTAA away from the comprehensive, single undertaking principle, toward a two-tier
framework comprising a set of “common rights and obligations” for all countries,
combined with voluntary plurilateral arrangements with country benefits related to
commitments. So far, defining this concept has proven elusive, causing the FTAA talks
to stall and the January 1, 2005, deadline to be missed. At the fourth Summit of the
Americas, held in Mar del Plata, Argentina, on November 4-5, 2005, Brazil, Argentina,
Uruguay, Paraguay, and Venezuela blocked an effort to restart negotiations in 2006,
which now appear to rely, at a minimum, on the resolution of agricultural issues in the
WTO Doha Round before they can resume. This report will be updated.
Background and Negotiation Process
In the aftermath of the 1980s debt crisis, much of Latin America embraced broad
economic policy reform that included major strides toward trade liberalization. This trend
raised the prospect of a previously unrealized
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