Australia-United States FTA - Overview
Australia-United States Free Trade Agreement - OVERVIEW
FOR FULL DETAIL SEE...
http://www.dfat.gov.au/trade/negotiations/us.html
This agreement represents a landmark in improving Australia's trade relationship with the world's most dynamic and richest economy, a third of the world's GDP, and the world's largest merchandise and services exporter and importer.
This agreement will very significantly enhance Australia's attractiveness as a destination for US investment, important for our efforts to maintain Australia at the leading edge of growth and competitiveness.
For our export industries the agreement will provide some important advances in liberalising access to a key market - in many cases the increased export opportunities will help to underpin the prosperity of our export sectors.
At the same time, we have secured important Australian interests in areas such as health, in particular the PBS, foreign investment screening, the audio-visual sector and our quarantine and food safety regimes.
For our manufacturers...
1. Over 97 percent
of our exports to the United States, worth $5.84 billion
last year, will be duty free from day one.
2. We will
now have access for the first time to the US Federal
Government procurement market of $270 billion a year.
3.
The 25 percent tariff on light commercial vehicles that
previously kept the Australian utes out of the US market
will be removed immediately.
4. The US auto market,
worth $538 million for passenger motor vehicles for
Australian exporters in 2002, is now set to grow further.
5. Our auto parts industry exports to the United States,
worth $310 million in 2002, will be boosted by the immediate
elimination of tariffs.
6. The 50 percent tariff on ship
repairs and maintenance, part of the maritime protection
known as the Jones Act, will be removed.
For our farmers and our food processors...
1. About 66 per cent of
agriculture tariffs will go to zero immediately, with a
further 9 percent going to zero in four years
2. Our
beef quota, currently 378,000 tonnes, will be substantially
increased - growing by 18.5 per cent over 18 years, then
effectively becoming free trade.
3. Our lamb and sheep
meat producers will have most tariffs reduced to zero
immediately, and the rest within four years - a high
priority for this industry in its biggest and fastest
growing market.
4. Our exports of quota constrained
dairy to the US - currently worth around $40.5 million -
will likely increase by around $55 million in the first year
and build from there into a lucrative trade for our
industry.
5. Australia will get immediate zero tariff
treatment for horticulture products such as oranges,
mangoes, mandarins, strawberries, tomatoes, cut flowers, and
fresh macadamias.
6. For the first time, avocados from
Australia will have access to the US market, up to 4000
tonnes (subject to SPS restrictions).
7. For cereals, we
will get immediate zero tariffs for wheat and cereal flour
mixes.
8. For processed foods we will get zero tariffs
within four years for a range of fruit juices and for baby
foods.
9. For our wool industry, an industry priority of
zero tariff for greasy wool, a premier Australian export
industry, will be achieved within four years, and for other
wool items within 10 years.
10. Our wine producers will
have the benefit, in what is already an almost billion
dollar market, of all tariffs reducing to zero over 11
years.
11. Our peanut industry, which currently has no
access to the US market, will get a quota of 500 tonnes in
year one, expanding over time.
12. Australian seafood
exports, currently worth around $140 million, will enter the
market duty free immediately.
13. Immediate removal of a
35 per cent tariff on canned tuna will provide duty free
access to the $650 million US market - likely to be worth up
to $20 million in the first year.
For our service providers ...
1. Australian services exports to the
United States, worth over $5 billion a year, will have
enhanced legal protections that guarantee market access and
non-discriminatory treatment.
2. We have important
commitments ensuring non-discrimination against Australian
service suppliers in a market of almost 300 million people -
a valuable improvement on the commitments we had from the
United States in the WTO.
3. We have secured a robust
framework that should promote the mutual recognition of
qualifications in professional services. Problems with
recognition of qualifications can be a major hindrance for
the export of professional services.
4. Education will
particularly benefit from the greater recognition of
Australian degrees and other aspects of the Agreement
promoting more liberal services trade.
5. Australia is a
net exporter of education services to the United States,
which benefits not only our universities, but all businesses
that provide services to US students when they live in
Australia.
6. We now have a framework for cooperation in
financial services (worth over $600 million in exports to
the United States), linking us into the largest financial
services market in the world.
7. We have agreement on
the value of pursuing more liberal air services
arrangements.
8. In telecommunications, we have
commitments on market access and a solid framework for
pro-competitive regulation, as well as a mechanism for
continuing engagement.
For our miners and metal producers...
1. All metals and minerals will be immediately duty free - particularly valuable for our aluminium industry, currently exporting $134 million to the United States.
For our creative industries...
2.
Closer harmonisation of Australian and US intellectual
property laws will benefit Australian exporters, by creating
a more familiar and certain legal environment, and
Australian innovators, and by helping them to attract US
investment.
3. Australian copyright industries
(including publishing, filmmaking and music) will benefit
from an extended term of copyright protection, an
expeditious process that allows for copyright owners,
Internet Service Providers and subscribers to deal with
allegedly infringing copyright material on the Internet, and
agreed criminal standards for copyright infringement.
4.
Australia and the United States will work to further reduce
differences in laws and practices relating to patents,
trademarks and designs, to further assist our right holders
to protect their intellectual property in the US market
5. The AUSFTA demonstrates to our trading partners the
benefits of strong intellectual property laws and reinforces
Australia's reputation as one of the world's leading
countries in protecting and enforcing intellectual property
rights.
6. Australia retains the flexibility to
implement the Agreement in a way that meets our domestic
circumstances, for example, providing a mechanism to
introduce public interest exceptions in relation to
technological protection measures
And for all our exporters...
1. Australia will now gain the benefit of
preferred status as an FTA partner with regard to any future
global safeguard actions - that is, we will be exempted from
safeguard restrictions almost automatically, just as Canada
was for steel and lamb.
2. The US will waive the
Merchandise Processing Fee levied on all imports, a saving
to Australian industry of about US$10 million a year.