spacer spacer spacer
Op-Eds and Editorials
Approve the free-trade agreements

Opinions/ The Washington Post The U.S. economy needs swift approval of the pending free-trade agreements with Colombia, Panama and South Korea. Yet a week after the release of a disappointing employment report, procedural disagreement over a program that has provided benefits to American workers for almost 50 years is stalling the entire trade agenda.

Deficit reduction is an urgent task requiring intense scrutiny of spending measures. But it is counterproductive to delay long-overdue trade agreements that finally have a chance of passing over a relatively inexpensive assistance program designed to smooth out the rougher edges of the global economy.

Republicans have argued in the debt-ceiling negotiations that economic growth, rather than higher taxes, is key to raising revenue. At the same time, they understand that the United States will not achieve such growth without the benefits of international trade. Given political realities, the cost-benefit analysis should be clear: better to incur the fiscal cost of renewing the Trade Adjustment Assistance program than to lose the much greater benefits of free trade with three important trading partners.

This is not to say that Republicans should support TAA as a mere quid pro quo for the Obama administration’s submission of the trade pacts to Congress. The program deserves renewal on its merits. Even passionate free-traders recognize that lowering tariff barriers isn’t a boon for all workers in all sectors. For this reason, TAA helps displaced workers train for jobs in businesses that can compete with rising imports.

In fact, TAA is a far better way to defend workers from trade-related disruptions than protective tariffs or quotas. Little wonder that the program has been in existence since 1962 and has been repeatedly renewed with bipartisan support, most recently only two years ago. Ironically, some of the same members of Congress who criticize TAA’s inclusion in the South Korea bill today voted for reauthorization of TAA in the NAFTA legislation in 1993.

The controversy over these trade bills would be merely puzzling if it weren’t so damaging to our nation’s economic interests. The longer the United States delays, the larger market share U.S. producers lose as global competitors fill the void. Take Colombia, a crucial market and a valuable ally in a  trategically important region. While U.S. exporters continue to face high tariffs and declining market share, Argentina and Brazil are already taking the market from U.S. agricultural producers, and a Colombian free-trade deal with Canada will come online in barely a month.

Both the administration and congressional Republicans profess an appropriate sense of urgency regarding passage of the trade agreements. To reach that goal by the August recess, they must end the partisan wrangling over TAA, which is a dispute over process, not substance.

Compromise is an inherent part of governing in a representative democracy. Even in today’s contentious political environment, we must depend on our leaders to find common ground and, in this case, quickly resolve an impasse that threatens to undermine our engagement with the world economy. The reward would be the creation of new jobs and opportunities for workers and businesses across the country.

John D. Negroponte, a deputy secretary of state and director of national intelligence in the George W. Bush administration, is chairman of the Council of the Americas. Mack McLarty, a former special envoy for the Americas and White House chief of staff in the Clinton administration, is president of McLarty Associates. Jim Jones, a Democratic former U.S. representative from Oklahoma, was White House appointments secretary in the Johnson administration. Rob Mosbacher Jr., the president of Mosbacher Energy, was president of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation during the George W. Bush administration. All are members of the Council of the Americas’ trade advisory group.

 
EL ESPECTADOR / Has the FTA's Time Come?

By: Michael Shifter / President Juan Manuel Santos´s message to Washington is, by now, clear: Colombia wants a close and productive relationship with the United States.  He may have new priorities such as improving relations with Venezuela and Ecuador and deepening ties with Asia (China especially). But these should not come at the expense of relations with the US.  Santos told the Washington Post he sees Colombia and the US as "strategic partners," working together to confront regional and global challenges like drugs.

Read more...
 
POLITICO - Bipartisanship can revive economy

By Rep. David Dreier / There are no higher priorities for our country right now than job creation and economic growth.

As the new Congress begins, every decision we make must be tied directly to those goals. If we are going to get our economy back on track, we need to take several key steps. These include making the current tax rates permanent, repealing the job-killing health care law and dramatically reducing federal spending.

Read more...
 
THE MIAMI HERALD - The Myth of U.S. bases in Colombia

By Andres Oppenheimer - What's most surprising about South America's growing uproar over Colombia's plans to allow U.S. military bases on its territory is that there may be no such thing in the making but rather a major Colombian PR blunder.

I, for one, was surprised to hear in an interview with Colombia's Foreign Minister Jaime Bermdez that there will be not one single centimeter in Colombian territory in which there will be a U.S. military base. Virtually all press reports I had read on my way here suggested that, following Ecuador's recent order to close the U.S. anti-drug base in Manta, the Pentagon is talking with Colombia about setting up U.S. anti-narcotics bases in Colombia. Earlier in the week, key South American countries, including Brazil and Chile, had expressed concerns about the alleged U.S. military bases in Colombia, and agreed to discuss the issue at an Aug. 10 summit of South American countries in Ecuador.

Colombian President Alvaro Uribe has said that he will not attend the summit because Colombia is likely to be the target of a coordinated attack over the issue. Ecuador, the host country, broke relations with Colombia over a 2008 attack by Colombian troops to a FARC guerrilla camp in Ecuadorean territory. Uribe left Tuesday for Peru, Bolivia, Chile, Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay and Brazil, in a last-minute effort to explain the nature of ongoing U.S.-Colombian military cooperation talks.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chvez had said that he has alerted his colleagues in the region about the danger that these new gringo military bases pose to Venezuela. 

Read Op-Ed

 
EL NUEVO HERALD - Cooperación entre Colombia y EEUU

Jaime Bermudez Merizalde - Colombia es un país que ha conocido como ningn otro los efectos perversos del narcotráfico y el terrorismo. Nuestro pueblo ha sufrido en carne propia el rigor de la violencia y nuestras instituciones democráticas --jueces, periodistas, candidatos-- la amenaza de las organizaciones criminales y grupos armados ilegales. A pesar de todos los esfuerzos, el narcotráfico y el terrorismo que ste financia continan siendo una amenaza para Amrica Latina.

La retórica internacional en esta lucha es frecuente en los foros internacionales, pero no tan frecuentes han resultado ser los casos en los que esta cooperación se hace efectiva y arroja resultados concretos. Colombia y los Estados Unidos tienen una larga trayectoria de cooperación bilateral que constituye una de las experiencias más eficaces de los aos recientes, no sólo por continuidad del esfuerzo en el largo plazo, sino tambin por ser una política de Estado en ambos países. En el caso de los EEUU el apoyo decidido a Colombia ha sido un asunto bipartidista.

Continuar leyendo Op -Ed

 

 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 Next > End >>

Page 1 of 4