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FTAA Negotiations Miss Jan. 1, 2005, Completion Deadline; Free Trade Theory Runs Aground on Reality of NAFTA’s Harsh Results

December 21, 2004

FTAA Negotiations Miss Jan. 1, 2005, Completion Deadline; Free Trade Theory Runs Aground on Reality of NAFTA’s Harsh Results

Global Justice Activists Celebrate New Year with FTAA Talks Dead in Water and CAFTA Facing Congressional Defeat

WASHINGTON, D.C. – With talks to establish a Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) dead for more than a year, the anticipated   passing of the Jan 1, 2005, deadline for negotiating a pact marks the end of corporate globalization’s decade-long Sherman’s March across the hemisphere, Public Citizen said today.

The sweeping proposal for the FTAA, dubbed “NAFTA on Steroids,” would have extended NAFTA to 31 more countries in the hemisphere. It has met increasing resistance since negotiations began in 1994, with talks in crisis since a 2002 FTAA Ministerial in Quito, Ecuador.   At an FTAA Ministerial in Miami last year, proponents of a NAFTA expansion were forced to   dramatically scale back the scope of the proposed agreement to avoid total implosion of the negotiations. Although the outcome of the Miami summit cast serious doubt on the FTAA’s future, the Bush administration clung to the notion that the Jan. 1, 2005, FTAA deadline could be met.

“The administration must face the fact that NAFTA was a radical experiment that failed,” said Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch. “Citizens and legislators in the United States, Latin America and the Caribbean have seen NAFTA’s result in the United States, Canada and Mexico, and have said ‘no’ to the expansion   of these policies, which harm workers, threaten our environment and undermine our democracy.”

NAFTA’s harsh track record, combined with the rise of massive opposition movements in Latin America and the election of critics of unfettered corporate globalization in many of the 31 countries, point to the reality that this agreement, envisioned to be   the crowning glory of a NAFTA-based trade policy, may never see the light of day.

The failure to meet the January deadline is just the latest blow to the Bush administration’s attempts to expand the NAFTA model. The Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) was signed in May 2004; however, CAFTA remains in limbo, with a majority in the U.S. House of Representatives opposing the agreement.

“NAFTA, CAFTA and the FTAA embody a failed model of corporate globalization that has been widely rejected,” Wallach said. “We should look to alternative trade rules that lift standards of living and environmental and consumer protections throughout the hemisphere. It is time for the administration to admit that NAFTA expansion is a non-starter – in this case, if at first you don’t succeed, it’s time to try something different.”  

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