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FTAA Negotiating Draft Text
  
FTAA Timetable in Doubt After Mini-Ministerial

  
Background 

At the Summit of the Americas held in Miami in December 1994, the leaders of the 34 democratic governments of the Hemisphere agreed to the formation of the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA), by January 2005. Since then, this effort to unite the economies of the Western Hemisphere into a single free trade arrangement has been moving ahead.

The FTAA is structured according to 5 functional levels: the Presidential Summit, Meeting of Ministers responsible for Foreign Trade, the Americas Business Forum in which recommendations are drafted for the Ministers, Trade Negotiations Committee (TNC) and the nine Negotiating Groups.

There have been three Presidential Summits held to date: The First took place in Miami, in December 1994; where the 34 democratically elected leaders of the 34 countries of the Western hemisphere agreed to immediately begin the process to create the FTAA. The Summit resulted in the signing of the declaration of principles entitled "Partnership for Development and Prosperity: Democracy, Free Trade and Sustainable Development in the Americas".

The Second Presidential Summit was held in April 1998 in Santiago, Chile where the FTAA negotiations were formally launched. The leaders agreed that the FTAA negotiating process would be transparent and take into account the differences in the levels of development and size of the economies in the Americas, in order to facilitate full participation by all countries.

The Third Summit was convened in Quebec, Canada, in April 2001. During the course of this meeting, the dates agreed to by the FTAA Ministers during the negotiation phase were reiterated. It highlighted the emphasis placed on the democratic clause, which provides that any member country without a rule of law will not be allowed to participate in the trade agreement.

The Chairmanship of the Negotiations is rotated every eighteen months, or at the conclusion of each Ministerial Meeting. Following the Quito Ministerial in November 2002, U.S and Brazil jointly hold the Chair until negotiations are completed at the end of 2004.

The Ministers Responsible for Trade are given the responsibility for the oversight and management of the negotiations. They meet generally every eighteen months in the country which is holding the FTAA Chairmanship.

There have been seven Ministerial Meetings thus far: Denver, Colorado; Cartagena, Colombia; Belo Horizonte, Brazil; San Jose, Costa Rica; Toronto, Canada; Buenos Aires, Argentina, and Quito, Ecuador. The First Draft Agreement was formally received at the Sixth Ministerial in Buenos Aires, in April 2001. Just over a year and a half later in November 2002, the Second Draft Agreement was formally received at the Seventh Ministerial Meeting in Quito.

The nine Negotiating Groups of the FTAA, each have specific mandates from the trade Ministers and the TNC to negotiate text in their respective subject areas. The nine groups and their current Chairs are shown in the table below.

Three special Committees and Groups have been set up with the aim of addressing horizontal issues related to the negotiations. These are: the Consultative Group on Smaller Economies (CGSE); the Committee of Government Representatives on the Participation of Civil Society and the Joint Government-Private Sector Committee of Experts on Electronic Commerce.

The Tripartite Committee of the FTAA has been put in charge of providing assistance to the negotiating groups. This committee consists of the Inter-American Development Bank (IADB), the Organization of American States (OAS) and the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).

The Summit of the Americas Declaration of Principles stresses the need to construct the Free Trade Area of the Americas, in which barriers to trade and investment will be progressively eliminated by 2015. In the Declaration, the participating leaders stated, "We recognize the progress that already has been realized through the unilateral undertakings of each of our nations and the sub-regional trade arrangements in our Hemisphere. We will build on existing sub-regional and bilateral arrangements in order to broaden and deepen hemispheric economic integration and to bring the agreements together."

FTAA Official Website

 

Summit of the Americas Center
Florida International University
University Park, Miami, Fl.
(305) 348-2894

Email SOAC:
summit@fiu.edu

  more links & resources:
 

- Archives
- Atlanta pushes trade headquarters bid with Latin American visitors
- ALCA: Desacuerdo en áreas fundamentales

- Brazil, US Split FTAA Talks in Miami
-
Allgeier Suggests New U.S. Flexibility in Pursuing Comprehensive FTAA
- FTAA-ALCA Official Website
- U.S. Department of State
- Office of NAFTA & Inter-American Affairs
- OAS Trade Unit
- AmericasCanada.org
  

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