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From:
Ylva Hernlund <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 2 Jun 2000 13:25:40 -0700
Content-Type:
TEXT/PLAIN
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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 2 Jun 2000 12:12:41 -0500
From: APIC <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Africa: Trade, USA

Africa: Trade, USA
Date distributed (ymd): 000602
Document reposted by APIC

+++++++++++++++++++++Document Profile+++++++++++++++++++++

Region: Continent-Wide
Issue Areas: +economy/development+ +US policy focus+
Summary Contents:
This posting contains two news stories, used by permission from
InterPress Service (http://www.ips.org), summarizing reaction and
content of the African Growth and Opportunity Act passed by the U.S.
Congress and signed by President Clinton last week. The full text
of the bill is available at http://thomas.loc.gov.  Look for H.R.
434, and choose the "final version as passed by both houses."

A parallel posting today includes a newsletter with updates on
Africa/Europe trade relations from Action for Southern Africa
(ACTSA).

Of related interest, an "After Seattle" policy brief from the South
Africa Council of Churches on developing countries' demands for
change in the World Trade Organization:
http://www.sacc-ct.org.za/ppu_wto.html


+++++++++++++++++end profile++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

TRADE: South Africa Welcomes US Trade Bill With Reservations

By William Dhlamini

JOHANNESBURG May 18 (IPS) - South Africa has cautiously welcomed
the new US  African Growth and Opportunity which aims to give
greater access to US  markets for African, Caribbean and central
American clothing and other  exports but expressed reservations
about the conditions attached to it.

"SA supports the broad thrust of the US trade bill, inasmuch as it,
for the  first time, opens the US market to products from
developing nations, but  the conditions attached to the bill
remains a point of contention for the  SA government," says
Tsedisho Matona, director of bilateral trade in SA's  department of
trade and industry.

The  US Senate passed the bill last week expanding US trade with 75
subsaharan African, Caribbean and central American nations by
removing  import duties on clothing and cutting tariffs on other
goods from those  regions.

The passage of the bill in the US Senate last week, came a week
after  approved by the House of Representatives.

US President Bill Clinton hopes to sign the trade bill into law
during SA  President Thabo Mbeki's visit to the US next week.

The trade bill known as the Africa-Caribbean Basin Initiative, is
expected  to benefit US clothing makers who have plants in Africa
and the Caribbean,  which in this case is defined to include
Central American nations.

Under the bill the US provides duty-free, quota-free benefits to
apparel  made in Africa, Caribbean and central America from US
produced yarn and  fabric.

Critics of the measure - which includes SA's trade unions, civics
and  non-governmental organisations say the conditions attached,
such as the US  setting caps on textile imports, will do little to
solve the major problems  facing the region, such as AIDS and
crippling developing country debts.

To reap the benefits of the trade bill, African, Caribbean and
central  American nations will have to privatise industry, cut
corporate taxes, open  their economies to foreign goods and pursue
economic reforms similar to  those required by the World Bank and
International Monetary Fund.

African, Caribbean and central American countries must also abide
by human  rights standards set by the US. The US has the
prerogative to decide which  countries must benefit. If a country
does not uphold a human rights culture  acceptable to the US or
does not pursue economic policies approved by the  US, the US has
the right to unilaterally suspend trade.

Matona says SA believes regional organisations such as the Southern
African  Development Community, SADC, or the Organisation of
African Unity, OAU,  should make such judgement calls.

Former SA President Nelson Mandela said at the introduction of the
bill two  years ago: "To us (SA), it is not acceptable."

Former University of Cape Town academic and now lecturing at
Columbia  University in the US, Mahmood Mandani says the trade bill
"tilts the  balance of reform in developing countries away from
choice to an external  exposition.

"It reads like a set of terms that every African country must meet
before  getting ease of access to the US market. Many people wonder
whether the US  is opting for regimes that are willing to impose
economic reforms designed  in Washington, even if these regimes
deny the local opposition the right to  organise.

****************************************************************

TRADE-US: Clinton Signs Africa-Caribbean Bill

By Jim Lobe

WASHINGTON, May 18 (IPS) - Celebrating his first trade victory in
six  years, US President Bill Clinton Thursday signed into law the
Trade and  Development Act of 2000, which is designed to promote US
commerce with  sub-Saharan Africa and two dozen countries of the
Caribbean Basin.

In an enthusiastic ceremony on the south lawn of the White House,
Clinton  told the two regions' diplomatic corps, as well as key
lawmakers, that the  legislation "will be good for the United
States, good for Africa, good for  Central America and the
Caribbean."

"Let me say that the legislation I sign today is about more than
development and trade; it's about transforming our relationship
with two  regions full of good people trying to build good futures,
who are very  important to our own future," he said.

He also called for quick Congressional approval of debt relief for
the  poorest nations and for proposed tax incentives to speed the
development  and delivery of vaccines for HIV/AIDS, malaria, and
tuberculosis.

The new law - an amalgam of the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act
(AGOA)  and the Enhanced Caribbean Basin Initiative (CBI) - passed
both houses of  Congress by large majorities earlier this month
after a protracted  negotiation to reconcile different versions
which they had approved last year.

Both the AGOA and Enhanced CBI bills had been pending in Congress
for a  long time. The Africa bill, which Clinton submitted in 1997
and which the  House had approved the following year, was blocked
in the Senate by  lawmakers from textile-producing states.

Enhanced CBI, which was originally designed to give Caribbean
nations many  of the same trade advantages acquired by Mexico under
the 1993 North  American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), was held up
by a coalition of  textile interests, labour unions, and some
environmental groups. It was  actually rejected by the House in
1997 but revived when senators attached  it to the Africa bill late
last year.

As a result, the final version of both bills, which runs through
2008, is a  pale shadow of what their supporters had originally
hoped to achieve in the  way of opening the US market much wider to
exports from poor regions. For  example, it fails to reduce tariffs
and increase quotas on key farm  commodities, such as sugar or
coffee, important commodities in both  regions, especially for
poorer countries.

The new law's main provisions concern textiles and apparel. The
original  intent of the bills was to eliminate quotas and tariffs
on these products  from beneficiary countries. But that proved
politically impossible. As a  result, a complex set of rules was
devised for each region.

Apparel made in both regions from US yarn and fabric may now enter
the US  market duty-free, a provision that favours the Caribbean in
particular, due  to the major transport costs involved in shipping
goods to and from Africa.

African textile and apparel manufacturers, however, could benefit
more by  two other provisions in the law. Apparel shipped from
Africa and made from  regional fabric and yarn will be accorded
duty- and quota-free benefits, up  to a ceiling ranging from 1.5
percent to 3.5 percent of all US apparel  imports over eight years.
All apparel exports from Africa currently add up to less than one
percent  of the US import market with a value of about 580 million
dollars. [Under the caps in the bill, apparel exports to the U.S.
made of regional and third-country fiber could reach $4.2 billion
in the year 2008].

South Africa and Mauritius, the region's two most important
exporters,  could be major beneficiaries of this provision,
according to a 1997  government study here.

In addition, apparel made in Africa from non-regional, non-US
fabric will  also be given duty- and quota-free treatment, provided
that the exporting  country's annual per capita income is less than
1,500 dollars. This  provision could prove a boon to Kenya,
Lesotho, Swaziland, Madagascar, and  Zimbabwe, all of which
currently export apparel to the United States.

It could also help eight other countries - Cameroon, Cote d'Ivoire,
Ghana,  Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria, Tanzania, and Zambia - which
have the  potential to expand apparel exports to the United States,
according to the  same study.

To prevent illegal transhipments of goods made or assembled outside
Africa,  the law provides additional funding for US Customs
inspection and requires  beneficiary countries to upgrade their own
monitoring practices.

In addition to duty-free treatment for apparel made in CBI
countries from  US yarn and fabric, Caribbean exporters may receive
the same benefits for  knit apparel made from regional fabric up to
a cap of 250 million square  meters during the first year, or about
10 percent of what the region  exported to the United States last
year. That ceiling will rise by 16  percent each year for the
following three years and will be capped at 450  million square
meters after that.

The law also extends trade benefits already enjoyed by CBI
countries  through 2008. At the same time, it requires beneficiary
countries to  guarantee intellectual property rights, protect
foreign investment, improve  market access for US exports, ensure
internationally recognised worker  rights, and eliminate the worst
forms of child labour.

It applies similar conditions to African beneficiaries. Under the
law, the  president must certify that a country is making
"continual progress"  towards establishing "a market-based economy"
which, among other things,  provides national treatment to foreign
investment, ensures the rules of  law, and protects worker rights.

Critics have charged that these conditions amount to a "new
colonialism"  against Africa which place US corporate interests
above those of most poor  Africans.

The law also creates a US-Africa Trade and Economic Co-operation
Forum,  similar to the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation (APEC)
forum, to  facilitate regular trade and investment policy
discussions between US and  African officials and authorises the
president to put together a plan for  entering free-trade
agreements with those African countries which fully  meet the law's
eligibility requirements.

At present, Africa accounts for only one percent of all US exports,
imports  and foreign investment which are concentrated in only a
handful of  countries. In 1999, 70 percent of US exports to the
region (5.5 billion  dollars) went to only five countries - South
Africa, Nigeria, Angola,  Ghana, and Equatorial Guinea - and 92
percent of US imports (14 billion  dollars) came from four
countries - South Africa and oil-exporters Nigeria,  Angola, and
Gabon, according to recent Commerce Department statistics.

Two-way trade with CBI countries, which include the seven nations
of  Central America, Guyana, Suriname, and all Caribbean island-
countries  except Cuba, last year was - at more than 40 billion
dollars - twice as  great as trade with Africa.

************************************************************
This material is being reposted for wider distribution by the
Africa Policy Information Center (APIC). APIC provides
accessible information and analysis in order to promote U.S.
and international policies toward Africa that advance economic,
political and social justice and human and cultural rights.

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