FTA: How Long Can Panama Hold Out?
Free Trade Showdown:
How Long Can Panama Hold Out
for an Agreement that Reflects its Own National
Interests?
• In the wake of Congress’ recent approval
of the Dominican Republic-Central American Free Trade
Agreement (DR-CAFTA), another U.S. free trade agreement with
Panama, an oft-overlooked trade partner, simmers on the back
burner.
• The Republic of Panama, conspicuously absent from the DR-CAFTA negotiations, has been involved in a separate set of free trade discussions with the United States since April 2003.
• The U.S.-Panama Free Trade Agreement (FTA) has undergone eight rounds of negotiations thus far without showing any potential for compromise in the near future.
• The backlash from U.S. special interest groups angered by the passage of DR-CAFTA is likely to stiffen U.S. obstinacy when it comes to protecting its agricultural subsidies, thwarting hopes that a U.S.-Panama FTA might set a precedent for a fairer template for free trade in the Americas.
While many see the passage of
the Dominican Republic-Central American Free Trade Agreement
(DR-CAFTA) as fueling the U.S.’ momentum in achieving a Free
Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA), others believe the bitter
DR-CAFTA debate has exacerbated sharp divisions over free
trade among special interest groups in the U.S., which could
ultimately present even greater challenges to the trade
dialogue with Panama. A number of contentious issues
continue to dash hopes that a U.S.-Panama FTA will soon come
to fruition. In particular, agricultural subsidies have
marked a major road block in negotiations, as neither side
has been eager to ensure that free trade will also
constitute fair trade. After the difficult fight to pass
DR-CAFTA, Washington’s delegation can also expect heightened
activism by domestic agro-industries anxious to preserve
their agricultural subsidies. This could have one of two
consequences: U.S.-Panama relations will either be strained
by further FTA quarreling, or Panama, unable to reject an
offer that would stimulate bilateral trade with an economic
giant, will be intimidated into accepting undesirable
conditions in order to achieve an FTA with the U.S.
The
Road to Global Domination is Paved with Free Trade
Agreements
The United States has historically wielded a
pseudo-custodial diplomatic relationship with Panama. For
nearly a century, the U.S. administered the operation of the
strategically located Panama Canal before finally passing
ownership to Panamanian hands at the end of 1999. In the
last decade, trade negotiations have dominated the otherwise
low voltage U.S.-Panama diplomatic relations. In 2003, trade
between the two nations totaled approximately $2.1 billion,
with U.S. exports to Panama accounting for $1.8 billion and
$0.3 billion constituting Panama’s share. Today, nearly half
of Panama’s total imports come from the U.S., and trade
between the hemispheric neighbors appears to be increasing
at breakneck speed. Between 2002 and 2003, Panama’s market
for U.S. exports grew by 30 percent. U.S. foreign investment
in Panama has steadily risen as well, now totaling roughly
$25 billion in the finance, maritime and energy sectors.
Panama’s service sector continues to hold the utmost
importance to the United States, evident in the fact that 13
percent of all U.S. shipping passes through the Panama
Canal.
According to the Office of the United States Trade Representative, an FTA with Panama will seek to build on existing trade arrangements under both the DR-CAFTA and the Caribbean Basin Initiative (CBI), which has governed U.S.-Panama trade relations since its inception in 1983. In theory, a U.S.-Panama FTA would eliminate duties and “unjustified” barriers to trade in Panamanian and U.S.-made goods.
Further, a U.S.-Panama FTA may be a crucial link in a much larger U.S. economic strategy to establish a free trade zone spanning the Western Hemisphere. The so-called FTAA could eventually encompass $13 trillion worth of trade and serve 800 million people from Alaska to the tip of South America. However, many of the crucial South American players have previously issued responses ranging from ambivalence to virulent opposition to U.S. proposals for a hemispheric open market system. Panama thus holds renewed importance to Washington as a potential avenue for securing diplomatic cooperation from the steadily expanding markets in the Southern Cone for future FTAA negotiations.
The ratification of DR-CAFTA, the centerpiece of the U.S.’ current FTAA objectives, is likely to create greater challenges for Panama’s trade delegation as domestic special interests gain leverage in the U.S. legislature. DR-CAFTA’s narrow victory will undoubtedly incite U.S. domestic producers’ lobbies to exert heavier pressure on trade representatives to strive for an agreement more favorable to U.S. industry. Such attempts would further exacerbate the rift between the Panamanian and U.S. trade delegations on the subject of agricultural subsidies and other non-tariff trade barriers, which could delay indefinitely passage of a U.S.-Panama FTA. If the U.S. delegation is able to keep intact its extensive network of agricultural subsidies under the U.S.-Panama FTA, the result will likely incite a backlash from other potential Latin American trade partners and further diminish hopes for securing the FTAA in the near future.
Trade Precedent: The Caribbean Basin
Initiative
The current legal framework underlying
U.S.-Panama trade relations is the CBI, which was passed in
1983 to stimulate export development in Central America and
the Caribbean islands through “private sector initiative.”
The most recent revision of the CBI, the 2000 U.S.-Caribbean
Basin Trade Partnership Act (CBTPA), purports to lift quotas
and duties on CBI exports to the United States. In reality,
however, duty-free trade is reserved only for those foreign
textiles manufactured using U.S. yarns and fabric.
Besides
promoting economic development, the 2000 CBTPA outlines the
initiative as another “incentive” for hemispheric neighbors
to cooperate in FTAA proceedings. The language of the CBTPA
specifically etches a primary goal as:
“ To seek the
participation of Caribbean Basin beneficiary countries in
the FTAA or another free trade agreement at the earliest
possible date, with the goal of achieving full participation
in such agreement not later than 2005.”
It is unsurprising, then, that as a corollary to this objective, the CBTPA delineates as policy the stipulation that preferential tariff treatment be offered only to those Caribbean Basin beneficiary countries willing to become party to the FTAA. Evidently, even in the early stages of these free trade agreements, the U.S.’ vision for commanding a regional free trade behemoth took precedent over concerns of economic development and poverty alleviation.
Isthmus
of Opportunity
While it may seem that Panama would not
have much bargaining leverage with an economic giant like
the United States, the isthmian country is not a novice to
free trade negotiations. Within a short time span, Panama
has opened up the second largest duty-free zone in the
world, the Colón Free Zone (CFZ), formed free trade
alliances with two Asian powerhouses, Singapore and Taiwan,
and accepted an offer to become an associate member of
MERCOSUR, South America’s regional trading partnership.
Panama’s CFZ, the largest duty-free trade area in the Americas and the second largest in the world, after Hong Kong, has drawn the interest of many international market players to Panama as a potentially explosive trading partner. More than 2,000 companies and 25 banks operate within Panama’s trade zone; its market is larger than the country’s entire internal market, with transactions totaling $12.2 billion in 2003. The majority of the trade flowing through the CFZ is between Asia and Latin America, suggesting yet another reason why the U.S. may be interested in an FTA with Panama—to regain the markets it has slowly ceded to its most vigorous economic competitors. The United States currently accounts for about 4.3 percent of exports transactions and 9.3 percent of imports to the CFZ.
The CFZ has proved extremely lucrative for Panama, generating $22 million a year in direct revenue for the Panamanian government. In addition, the zone employs 19,000 workers in a country with a perpetually high unemployment rate. Multi-national corporations are seeking to establish roots in the manufacturing and service district there in large part because they only have to pay a maximum rental rate on average of 50 cents per square meter, which is significantly lower than at the Miami Free Zone, with rates starting at $760/month.
The CFZ became pivotal in U.S.-Panama FTA negotiations when a wave of destabilizing violence broke out along the Panama-Colombia border and soon made financing security control a key matter of importance for the Panamanian trade delegation. Panama hoped the U.S. would provide funds for addressing security concerns in the persistently treacherous zone spanning Panama’s short-waisted border with Colombia in an effort to protect its potential participation in the CFZ. If Washington fails to come through with satisfactory security provisions in the FTA negotiations, CFZ General Manager Nilda Quijano has indicated that other foreign-based companies, including South Korea’s Samsung, have issued attractive offers for security support. It is unlikely the United States would be pleased to have a South Korean security presence replace its own in the strategic and historically U.S.-dominated Panama Canal region.
The MERCOSUR Connection
Panama may hold
increasing value for the United States as a link to
MERCOSUR, South America’s premier regional free trade bloc.
Panamanian President Martin Torrijos was officially invited
to participate in the June MERCOSUR summit, elevating Panama
to the rank of “associate member.” Associate member status
grants Panama access to preferential trade with the MERCOSUR
bloc, but not to the tariff benefits of the four full
members, Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. Torrijos
has sought official MERCOSUR membership since his
inauguration last fall, hoping to expand Panama’s service
exports in the region to counterbalance the country’s
negative trade balance with MERCOSUR member countries. In
2003, for instance, Panama’s imports from Argentina totaled
more than 150 times the value of its exports.
Full
membership in MERCOSUR would greatly increase Panama’s
bargaining leverage in U.S.-Panama FTA talks, considering
Washington’s long-term interest in integrating the Southern
Cone under its hemispheric trade umbrella. A U.S.-Panama FTA
could serve as a diplomatic staging ground for the United
States to advance FTAA proceedings with the major South
American countries that, up to now, have greeted such
connections somewhat coldly.
Lots of Talk, but Little
Action
Those serving as Panama’s trade representatives
see an FTA as a potentially “tremendous opportunity” for
their underdeveloped country, which already uses the U.S.
dollar as its currency but struggles with high poverty and
unemployment rates. In addition, appearing to take concerted
action to stimulate the Panamanian economy could win public
favor for an administration already deeply mired in
corruption allegations and a scandal over no-show diplomas
at the University of Panama. Specifically, Panama has hoped
an FTA would fuel the production of nontraditional exports,
such as pineapples and melons, in addition to more
traditional markets like bananas and sugar. However, while
Panamanians want greater access to U.S. agricultural and
industrial markets, they fear that opening Panama’s markets
entirely to U.S. products will have disastrous consequences
for Panamanian farmers and producers, who are likely to be
overwhelmed when forced to compete with U.S.-subsidized
agro-industries. Panama’s former President Mireya Moscoso
was an avid FTA supporter, given her proclivity to yield to
the highest bidder, but current president Martin Torrijos
has been less convinced that an FTA with the United States
is best for Panama. According to Torrijos, "much prudence
and caution [are] required" on the issue because of the
United States’ immense economic outreach.
The biggest roadblocks to reaching a consensus in negotiations between the U.S. and Panamanian trade delegations have involved agricultural issues. At the end of the fifth round of talks in 2004, Panamanian negotiator Estif Aparicio described the U.S.’ farm proposals as “rough and aggressive,” and lamented that there was still “a lot to do” in upcoming negotiation rounds. Meanwhile, Panamanian farmers have continued their protest throughout the country, demanding protection for domestically produced milk, meat and poultry products.
In the United States, the sugar industry has strongly opposed the inclusion of this commodity in any FTA, wary of the losses that would inevitably be suffered if Panama were given the opportunity to openly export its lower-priced produce to U.S. markets. For Panama, concerns over U.S. demands are multi-sided. The U.S.’ bid for increased access to beef, dairy, pork, onion, potato, rice and other agricultural markets in Panama is disconcerting to local producers who fear that they will be entirely unable to compete against U.S.-government subsidies in an open market. Francisco Aleman, Deputy for the right-wing Arnulfist Party, has complained that the negotiations thus far have not revealed any benefits for Panama: "I do not understand what the rush is to close negotiations in this round, if there is not yet a balance in Panama's favor, particularly in the agricultural part."
Do as I Say, Not as I Do
While the
United States’ trade delegation has sought free trade
guarantees from Panama, it has, as it did in the CAFTA
negotiations, shirked its own responsibility for ensuring
truly free and fair trade by eliminating trade barriers at
home. The Bush administration outlined to Congress specific
objectives for FTA negotiations with Panama. Such objectives
focus U.S. priorities on eliminating tariffs and duties, as
well as non-tariff barriers on U.S. exports to Panama.
However, Washington explicitly has expressed an
unwillingness to offer Panama comparable trade conditions by
canceling its own agricultural subsidies. Not only were any
U.S. subsidies or waivers specifically omitted from the
proposed free trade agreement’s draft of trade objectives,
but the language actually underlines that the U.S.
delegation will seek to “improve U.S. import relief
mechanisms as appropriate.” In effect, this would allow the
U.S. government to reinforce existing subsidies and aid for
U.S. industries adversely affected by the proposed Free
Trade Agreement.
Even free trade proponents are troubled by Washington’s laxity toward improving environmental and labor standards with its trading partners. Many saw DR-CAFTA and a U.S.-Panama FTA as opportunities to persuade these countries to enact reforms that would bring their domestic laws into compliance with International Labor Organization and environmental standards. While Washington has claimed it will ensure that Panama enforces its current environmental and labor laws, it has not made any effort to use the FTA’s potential to improve upon such existing laws. Considering that Panama has proved to be more difficult than other negotiating partners in accepting conditions favorable to U.S. agricultural interests, the U.S. delegation has proven wary of wasting precious bargaining leverage on promoting what all along have been low priority issues for the administration: sustainable environmental standards and labor rights.
Will Panama Stand its Ground?
As
U.S.-Panama FTA talks wear on, Panamanian taxpayers are
becoming increasingly alarmed over the daily cost of the
negotiations. In the first 18 months, Panama committed $1.5
million to consultants and lobbyists operating on its
behalf, even though this is a small portion of the $7
million total spent thus far to negotiate the agreement with
Washington. Many Panamanians have been unimpressed by the
inability of their negotiators to generate favorable
conditions for their side of the agreement. According to the
authoritative Panama City daily, La Prensa, national
agricultural producers are overwhelmingly dissatisfied with
the consultants’ treatment of agricultural issues. The
Panamanian government has issued public pledges to
steadfastly defend the country’s interests to the bitter
end, vowing that the government will not ratify an FTA
without favorable conditions on the most important
agricultural clauses.
Many Latin American planners have faulted the U.S.’ execution of free trade stipulations under NAFTA, and fear that DR-CAFTA will bring on more of the same. The decline of a number of agricultural sectors, the proliferation of violence and human trafficking in industrialized border towns and environmental degradation are some of the pitfalls associated with free trade that Washington once again has failed to satisfactorily address, in DR-CAFTA and in the proposed FTA with Panama. The question remains whether the U.S. will use its colossal economic clout to allow Panama to fully benefit from the virtues of reciprocal free trade that is not only free, but fair.
This analysis was prepared by COHA Research
Associate Jessie Gaskell.