Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. President George W. Bush's
election to a second four-year term paves the way for the
resumption of negotiations for a free trade agreement spanning
the Americas, Latin American diplomats and executives said.
``The focus will now be the negotiations for the FTAA,'' the
acronym for the U.S.-proposed Free Trade Agreement of the
Americas, Rubens Barbosa, a former Brazilian ambassador to the
U.S. who runs foreign trade consulting company in Sao Paulo, said
in an interview. ``These negotiations will be revived.''
The run-up to the U.S. election stalled talks for at least
six months on easing commercial barriers on trade from Alaska to
Patagonia to create a trading area with 800 million people and a
combined economy of $13 trillion.
Brazilian exporters such as steel producer Gerdau SA are
counting on the free trade agreement to help lower tariffs and
increase sales in the U.S. Mexican exports to the U.S. have
tripled since the country signed the North American Free Trade
Agreement with the U.S. in 1993.
``We have known Bush for his first four years, and Brazil is
already looking into how we can have better trade relations,''
said Frederico Johannpeter, vice-president of Gerdau, Latin
America's largest steelmaker, on a telephone news conference from
Porto Alegre, Brazil. The company has acquired companies in the
U.S. as a way of getting around barriers to Brazilian exports.
`Open Markets'
``In principle, the Republicans are more open in their
economic policy and, they generally want to open markets up to
the maximum when it comes to competition,'' Johannpeter said.
In Mexico, President Vicente Fox said he wants to work with
Bush to help establish a better immigration policy that's
``respectful of rights of Mexican migrants,'' according to Fox's
press office. Fox said he's committed to working with Bush also
to better cooperation on issues of improving security, fighting
organized crime and terrorism and boosting economic growth.
In terms of free trade, the U.S. also signed a bilateral
agreement with Chile in 2003 and in January completed talks with
five Central American countries. The U.S. is in negotiations for
a free trade accord with Andean nations including Colombia and
Peru.
``For Colombia, Bush's triumph offers the opportunity to
continue, without trauma, the important process of free trade
negotiations and of collaboration that has been developed with
undoubted benefit to our society and our economy,'' Jorge
Londono, chief executive of Bancolombia SA, Colombia's biggest
bank, said in an e-mailed response to questions.
Agriculture
U.S. barriers to agricultural imports such as Brazilian
sugar will be a stumbling block for progress on a boarder free
trade agreement, said Christian Lohbauer, manager of
international relations at the Sao Paulo Industrial Federation.
Brazilian Foreign Relations Minister Celso Amorim may find
it easier to work with Bush than Democratic Senator John Kerry,
who conceded defeat today after yesterday's election, Lohbauer
said.
For countries such as Brazil, it's important to press ahead
on free trade talks as the U.S. signs bilateral agreements,
including an accord with Chile in 2003, said Lohbauer. Brazilian
companies risk losing out as other countries in the region
negotiate with the U.S. to lower trade barriers, he said.
``We've seen the benefits of the opening in Mexico over the
last five or six years and in Chile, where they have developed a
bilateral free-trade agreement with the U.S,'' said Gerdau. ``All
of that shows that it might be a good moment for Brazil to open
up more to the U.S. in terms of trade.''
The U.S. is Brazil's biggest trade partner, consuming about
22 percent of the country's exports.
Orange Juice
U.S. trade barriers on Brazil include duties on orange
juice, subsidies for domestic ethanol and meat producers and
quotas for imports of sugar from the country, the world's biggest
producer, according to the development, industry and foreign
trade ministry in Brasilia. Since U.S. sugar quotas were
introduced in 1982, Brazilian exports have dropped 60 percent,
the ministry said.
Brazil needs to show a willingness to reduce barriers on
services and manufactured goods talks on a free trade area to
progress, Peter Allgeier, deputy U.S. trade representative, said
via video-link to business people in Rio de Janeiro last month.
``If the U.S. and the other countries are to make deep cuts
in our support and significant openings in our markets it will be
necessary for other countries to do the same,'' he said. ``For
Brazil this means significant market access.''
To contact the reporter on this story:
Charles Penty at at Cpenty@bloomberg.net