
CARICOM to become newest trade bloc on January 23
Friday, December 30, 2005
KINGSTON, Jamaica: Come January 23, 2006 the
Caribbean Community (CARICOM) becomes the newest trade bloc, joining the
approximately 194 other trade blocs in the fight to ensure market survival.
These trade blocs enjoy special and
differential treatment amongst themselves, in addition to the removal of trade
barriers within the bloc and also have a common trade tariff for third
countries.
In essence, regional trade blocs provide a
protective hedge from the erosive winds of globalisation, acting as a trade
union protecting its member countries. Benefits include, a unified and louder
voice in world trade negotiations and the economies of scale accrued to larger
manufacturing and trading entities.
In keeping with the global trend, CARICOM in
January will inaugurate the CARICOM Single Market (CSM) in Jamaica.
The CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME), which looks toward full
implementation in 2008, seeks to go further than establishing a free trade
area (FTA). It seeks to establish a Single Market and Economy, which will
ultimately mean not only the removal of tariffs and special treatment amongst
each other, but also harmonization of tax and social regimes for example.
To achieve this goal, CARICOM has earmarked
US$70 million to be used over a 10-year period.
As the gradual removal of traditional
preferential trading arrangements with the United Kingdom (UK) and the
European Community (EU) under the current World Trade Organisation (WTO)
regime indicates, the CSME is even now more than ever, a vital organ for the
survival of the Caribbean market.
The CARICOM Member States -- Montserrat, St
Vincent and the Grenadines, Trinidad and Tobago, St Lucia, Grenada, Belize,
Antigua and Barbuda, Jamaica, Barbados, St Kitts and Nevis, Guyana, The
Bahamas and Haiti -- have been aware of this reality since as early as 1965
when the Caribbean Free Trade Association (CARIFTA) was crafted by the
Premiers of Barbados, British Guiana and the Chief Minister of Antigua and
Barbuda. As the integration drive deepened, CARICOM was formed out of the1973
Treaty of Chaguaramas. In 1989 at Grand Anse,
Grenada, the decision was taken to further deepen the integration process by
establishing the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME). It was also there
that the Treaty of Chaguaramas was revised.
In essence, the CSME was birthed from the
nine protocols or amendments to the Treaty negotiated at that meeting.
The nine protocols cover:
-
Institutions and structures
-
Establishment, Services and Capital
-
Industrial Policy
-
Trade Policy
-
Agricultural Policy
-
Transport Policy
-
Disadvantaged countries, regions and sectors
-
Competition policy, consumer protection and
dumping and subsidies
-
Disputes Settlement
These nine protocols constitute the legal
framework that establishes the CSME and therefore indicate necessary areas for
integration.
According to Jamaican Senator Delano
Franklyn, State Minister for Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade, these nine
areas, which are further broken down into specific areas, have so far
generated around 350 legal instruments to facilitate integration.
Also, there has to be integration on the
following areas, among others:
-
The Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) –
launched in April 2005
-
The CARICOM Regional Organisation for
Standards and Quality
-
National Standards and Competition
Authorities
-
Free movement of persons, services, goods
and capital
-
The transference of social security benefits
(under free movement)
-
Right of establishment for CARICOM-owned
companies to establish and operate business in any CARICOM Member State
-
Public education
Three important organs/councils of the CSME
are: the Council for Trade and Economic Development (COTED), made up of
CARICOM Ministers responsible for agriculture, industry, tourism, trade and
transportation; the Council for Human and Social Development (COHSOD); and the
Council of Finance and Planning (COFAP), made up of CARICOM Finance Ministers.
CARICOM Secretary-General, Dr. Edwin Carrington says that CARICOM is “a
community which involves economic integration, foreign policy co-ordination
and functional co-operation”. Since the greater economic integration under the
Single Economy is earmarked for 2008, whilst Single Market integration is set
for January 2006, there is now a greater focus on areas for market
integration. As the CARICOM Secretary General
announced in his 2005 year in review, much of the preparatory work for market
integration has been achieved, thus signaling a January 23 signing of the CSM
in Jamaica. Senator Franklyn also said that
individual CARICOM Member States have specific areas of responsibilities, for
which Prime Ministers give reports at the CARICOM Ministerial meetings.
“Guyana has agriculture; St. Lucia has
justice and governance; St. Kitts and Nevis has health; Jamaica has external
trade relations negotiations, with Prime Minister P.J. Patterson being the
CARICOM spokesperson for the FTAA, and Trinidad and Tobago has security, for
example,” the Senator outlined. In addition,
Belize has responsibility for sustainable development, which includes
environmental concerns; Antigua and Barbuda has responsibility for services,
and Barbados has lead responsibility for the CSME.
Because of its internal political situation, Haiti has, for the most part,
been outside of the ambit of CARICOM activities. Bahamas, although a CARICOM
Member State, is not a signatory to the CSME.
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