Guatemala Harvests Bad Old Days over CAFTA
Guatemala Harvests Bad Old Days over CAFTA
• Guatemalan Congress ratified the Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) on March 10 despite mounting protests in the nation’s capital, which so far have left at least one protestor dead. The U.S. turns a blind eye on Guatemalan military’s transgressions.
• If the U.S. Congress ratifies CAFTA, the U.S. should expect hundreds of thousands more undocumented immigrants from the region flooding the U.S. in search of jobs.
• Siding with U.S. authorities and foreign investors while ignoring his own population’s anxieties, President Oscar Berger expressed his complete support for CAFTA. Berger adamantly refused to call for a national referendum regarding the ratification of CAFTA—which his opponents support—fearing that it would be defeated.
• Sixty percent of Guatemalans are small farmers who, for the best of reasons, are afraid that CAFTA would negatively affect their livelihood.
• As Central America’s most populous nation with 12 million inhabitants, Guatemala has the region’s largest economy and one of its largest militaries, but also its greatest maldistribution of wealth.
• Lawmakers in the U.S. are far from unified over CAFTA: many Democrats oppose it because labor and environmental protections are too weak; some farm-belt Republicans fear that their districts could lose jobs or become less competitive, while sugar growers and textile producers are wary of competition from cheap Central American labor and low cost production.
• Washington is pushing for CAFTA hearings beginning on April 6, 2005, though many Hill protagonists are skeptical whether a divided Congress will approve the pact. President Bush failed to get the votes needed in 2004 to bring CAFTA to the floor, and it is uncertain whether he will be able to nail down the necessary support this time around.
On March 9, 2005, police forces in Guatemala City fired tear gas and beat demonstrators who were protesting the ratification of the U.S.-Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA). President Oscar Berger deployed 500 soldiers wielding truncheons to the city’s historic center armed with water cannons and with the intent to halt nearly 1,000 union members, farmers, students and indigenous people who were demanding a national referendum on the contentious issue.
All told, some 8,000 protesters have been involved in recent demonstrations over CAFTA, making these rallies among the largest protests in Guatemala’s modern history. Despite such public outcries, President Berger and his government have failed to respond to his constituency. Instead, the Berger administration continually has bowed to foreign interests and the country’s landholding elites.
Trade between markedly asymmetrical economies could likely bring catastrophe to relatively uncompetitive Central American markets like that in Guatemala. Central American nations could very well face a fate similar to that of Mexico, where certain agricultural market sectors, confronted by U.S. subsidized agricultural exports, were drowned after the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) came into effect. Critics contend that in order to prevent this from happening, the government must not settle the matter behind its citizens’ backs, but have them participate in their own social and economic destiny through political means, via lawful manifestations and a referendum. Most importantly, the nations participating in CAFTA should reassess the agreement because it demonstrably will not benefit the majority of the population in its current form. Rather than presenting a win-win situation as its supporters adamantly maintain, CAFTA is likely to produce lofty winners and heavy losers, with the former being U.S. and Guatemalan agri-business entrepreneurs and multinational agricultural interests and the losers being small-scale producers and consumers.
Keep Marching On
On March 10, despite
growing protests from opposition forces, the Guatemalan
Congress, after only a short debate, overwhelming ratified
CAFTA by a vote of 126 to 12. The balloting took place a few
days later than originally scheduled because street
demonstrators had blocked the entrance to the Guatemalan
Parliament, forcing many legislators to seek refuge
elsewhere. Protests subsided on March 11 after police warned
organizers that they would be arrested and prosecuted for
public disturbance. President Berger also threatened to call
in the Guatemalan military in order to reinforce police
units surrounding the legislative chambers. Such provocative
actions tarnish the legitimacy of Berger’s democratic rule
because they undermine the ability of Guatemalans to express
themselves freely.
When protests picked up the following week after Berger signed the agreement, the president took the fateful action of calling in the military. On March 15, Reuters reported that at least one protester was killed and many others injured during anti-CAFTA demonstrations in the western Guatemalan province of Huehuetengango, after soldiers had fired on a crowd of demonstrators. Police also surrounded the headquarters of Guatemala’s trade unions in order to detain the protest leaders involved in organizing the protests. In Guatemala City, 4,000 people rallied in front of the national Congress on that same day.
“Strong
Economies, Stable Democracies”
In May 2004, the U.S.
signed CAFTA with Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras,
Nicaragua and Costa Rica, with the Dominican Republic
signing on three months later. El Salvadoran and Honduran
legislative bodies have ratified the agreement, which is
still pending in the U.S. Congress. In order for CAFTA to be
implemented, legislative bodies of all nations involved must
ratify the agreement. President Abel Pacheco of Costa Rica
wisely has announced that he may call for a national
referendum due to growing unrest among his populace.
Protests even took place in Honduras—anti-CAFTA campaigners
stormed congress—following the government having signed the
pact on March 4, one month ahead of schedule. Four days
later, hundreds of anti-CAFTA Hondurans blocked roads for
hours.
The Bush administration believes that the accord will boost exports, productivity, employment and open new markets for U.S. goods and services, while encouraging economic and democratic reforms throughout Central America. Once approved, the trade pact is supposed to immediately make 80 percent of American consumer and industrial exports duty-free in all of Central America, with the remaining tariffs phased out over the next 10 years. Currently, U.S. exports to Central America face tariffs that average 30 to 100 percent, far more than what the U.S. imposes on the region’s exports. According to a major proponent of the pact, the U.S. Chamber for Commerce, CAFTA would “level the playing field” for U.S. workers and businesses. Furthermore, they argue that CAFTA could expand U.S. farm exports by $1.5 billion a year.
On March 10, the Hispanic Alliance for Free Trade, a grouping of U.S.-Hispanic business-oriented interest groups and organizations which believe that “free trade helps to build strong economies and stable democracies, and offers significant benefits to both the United States and our trading partners throughout the Americas,” urged Congress to approve CAFTA. The Alliance calls it the best option to build the economies of Central America and provide new markets for American business and agriculture. It also emphasized the foreign policy aspects of the agreement. Another CAFTA supporter is Al Zapanta of the U.S.-Mexico Chamber of Commerce, who said in a March 10 press release by the Alliance, that he believes CAFTA will “help prevent a return to the political instability that characterized much of the region during the 1970’s and 80’s.”
CAFTA countries provide the second-largest U.S. export destination in Latin America, receiving $15 billion of U.S. exports, and are the 13th largest export market for the U.S. in the world, exceeding exports to Russia, India and Indonesia combined. Bilateral trade between U.S. and CAFTA amounts to approximately $32 billion.
The “Fair”
Deal for Whom?
Not surprisingly, CAFTA’s opponents claim
that the agreement is not in the best interest of workers in
the U.S. or Central America. Some Guatemalans believe that
it will dramatically affect their country in a negative way,
especially hurting the nation’s poor by undermining the
economic viability of small farmers, as well as by limiting
access to public health and other social services. They
worry that small farmers may not be able to compete against
U.S. subsidized agriculture and that CAFTA will only make
Central American countries more dependent on the U.S. They
strongly oppose their government giving concessions to
private companies for infrastructural projects.
Additionally, opponents do not see how Guatemala will really
benefit from CAFTA since almost 80 percent of Central
American products already enter the U.S. duty-free under
agreements like the Caribbean Basin Initiative and the
Generalized System of Preferences.
A number of business and labor groups in the U.S. have opposed the accord as well, fearing that competition from low-wage Central American countries would encourage outsourcing and lead to cheaper imported goods that would skewer the U.S. domestic market. To counter this argument, U.S. proponents of CAFTA claim that the pact would make it less likely for factories and businesses to move to China where labor is even cheaper. The proximity of Central America to the U.S., they say, will serve as an incentive to keep businesses in the region.
Human rights activists opposed to the pact claim that the Bush administration failed to incorporate a requirement for signatories to uphold universal workers rights, such as outlawing child labor, which is a pervasive problem in Central America. In its current form, CAFTA encourages nations to abide only by their current labor laws. Ironically, these countries suffer from the same ineffective labor regulations and poor work standards that the U.S. State Department, the International Labor Organization, and other human rights-oriented enterprises have criticized over the years for rampant abuse by their officials.
The pending ratification of CAFTA and the dire consequences associated therein have won the attention of Guatemalan Bishop Monsignor Alvaro Ramazzini, who declared in front of demonstrators in San Marcos, Guatemala on March 10 that “CAFTA is much more than a simple trade agreement, as it includes a range of mechanisms that combine prohibitions on governments with rights for foreign investors on such issues as investment, national treatment, intellectual-property rights, market access, public services and access to bidding on public contracts. If implemented, CAFTA will transfer privileges for corporations into rights.” Like many of its other opponents, Bishop Ramazzini fears that CAFTA would give foreign companies the ability to exploit workers once they gain status similar to domestic ones.
Mexico and NAFTA - a Lesson Learned?
Many of its
opponents believe that CAFTA is another NAFTA in disguise.
When NAFTA was created, the signatories presumed that it
would open markets for U.S. goods and services, create
high-paying jobs in the U.S. and increase both countries’
prosperity. However, after more than 10 years later, Mexico
has seen little such prosperity and many would argue NAFTA
has caused an enormous and negative social impact there.
Arguably, environmental degradation, heinous labor
conditions and poor living standards have been exacerbated
by this agreement. In the U.S. alone, NAFTA already has
caused the loss of nearly 900,000 jobs and helped create a
$111 billion trade deficit with Canada and Mexico. According
to AFL-CIO President John Sweeney, as reported in The Boston
Globe (“A bad deal on free trade,” March 21, 2005), this
NAFTA deficit is 12 times higher today than 10 years
ago.
Although investments and exports have risen, opponents of NAFTA claim that it has increased inequality and poverty while reducing real wages for the vast majority of Mexican workers. One million Mexican farmers have lost their land due to low-priced, subsidized U.S. agriculture exports now swamping their country. Another reflection of NAFTA’s cloudy success story is that investors in Mexico maquiladoras assembly plants are moving their assets to China where human labor is significantly cheaper.
Overall, both CAFTA and NAFTA are based on the logic that the end justifies the means—a rationale which puts revenue and short-term profit ahead of human rights, environmental sustainability and decent living standards. Critics argue that the neoliberal reforms carried out by the governments end up facilitating one goal: the further concentration of wealth among the rich, regardless of its effects on the destitute sections of the populace.
Berger: Mr. Nice Guy
Becomes Mr. Not-So-Nice-Guy
Guatemala has had continued
problems of political fragmentation, social exclusion and
criminal violence. In 2001, violent crime killed 8,120
people and the number increased to 8,767 in 2002, according
to the federal attorney general’s office (Associated Press,
"U.S. Releasing Military Aid to Guatemala," March 24). One
year after Berger took office, various crises continue to
plague his administration. Incidents of assault, kidnapping
and homicide more than doubled in 2004, with at least 2,000
murders and an alarming spike in the number of violent crime
against women.
Instead of helping Guatemala tackle its insecurity crisis, the Bush administration has managed to cut development aid to Guatemala by one third, from nearly $60 million in 2002 to $38 million in 2005 (The Miami Herald, “Emerging from the darkness,” March 20). Ironically, Washington has decided to grant $3.2 million in military aid to Berger’s armed forces for their overall progress. The aid is intended for training and modernizing the military, which while having decreased in size from 27,000 to 15,000 under Berger’s and previous administrations, continues to pose a threat to the population. The proposed reform is to renovate its forces for peacekeeping missions instead of domestic counter-guerrilla warfare as it had often done during the 1980s. Berger’s use of the military to suppress a peaceful demonstration was little short of a shocking reversion to the bad old days when Guatemala was the worse human rights violator in the hemisphere.
Although the human rights situation in Guatemala has once again deteriorated after some slight improvement in the 1990s, perhaps the U.S. has chosen to make the aid available to Guatemala as a reward for its acquiescence to CAFTA and its participation in peacekeeping efforts in Haiti. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld may have been somewhat overly optimistic when he proclaimed on March 24 that he was very impressed by the reforms that have been undertaken in the Guatemalan armed forces. The fact is that the Guatemalan military was guilty of notorious human rights abuses in the country from 1960 to 1996, when it slaughtered approximately 200,000 Guatemalans, mainly poor indigenous Mayans. The military remains unrepentant.
If the Bush administration successfully manages to ratify CAFTA, it must demand that the Berger government deal with its country’s chronic problems by strengthening implementation of the peace accords and addressing the plight of Guatemala’s poor. It would be beneficial to U.S. policy makers to pay greater attention to Guatemala because it possesses the largest economy, population, and one of the largest militaries in Central America, and its success at addressing its own problems would be pertinent to regional stability.
What the People
Really Want
Although prospects for the passage of the
“state-of-the-art” trade agreement (as it has been referred
by the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative) have dimmed
somewhat as the opposition gains momentum, the U.S. Congress
is planning to hold CAFTA hearings on April 6 and vote on
the issue by May 30. The Bush administration will be hard
pressed to make the case that CAFTA is good for the U.S.
economy and the well-being of its citizens, as well as for
the 45 million Central Americans from the six countries
involved. Lessons must be learned from NAFTA so that the
same mistakes are not repeated. What NAFTA tells us is that
record numbers of Mexicans had to flee to the U.S. in search
of jobs after their old jobs in Mexico had been eliminated
by the trade pact. If CAFTA is implemented, the same is
likely to occur, as several million more Guatemalans and
Salvadorans will join the existing millions from those
countries who have already entered the U.S. without
documentation.
The incorporation of labor rights in a fair-minded CAFTA pact must be on par with internationally accepted labor practices, such as the right to engage in collective bargaining, the right of freedom of association, the elimination of forced and child labor and the ability to work free from discrimination so that poor workers are no longer mercilessly exploited. But most importantly, if the people of Guatemala demand a national referendum to express their opinions democratically, President Berger must make this demand a priority and grant it.
This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Xuan-Trang Ho