Jamaica Gleaner

US/CARICOM relations: WTO CBI waiver secured, but…

- Elizabeth Morgan Elizabeth Morgan is a specialist in internatio­nal trade policy and internatio­nal politics. Email feedback to columns@ gleanerjm.com.

THE US request for the Most Favoured

Nation waiver for the Caribbean Basin

Initiative (CBI) was approved at the

General Council

Meeting of the World

Trade Organizati­on

(WTO) held October 15-16. The CBI comprises the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act (CBERA) and the Caribbean Basin Trade Partnershi­p Act (CBPTA). The waiver, which gives legitimacy to the CBERA/CBPTA in the WTO, is for six years to end on September 30, 2025.

Members of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), now the principal beneficiar­ies, welcomed the waiver approval and thanked the US administra­tion for securing it.

The CBPTA, however, expires on September 30, 2020. In February, a bipartisan bill to extend CBERA/CBTPA was again tabled in the US House of Representa­tives by representa­tive Teri Sewell (D-Al). At the time, I suggested that it would have been better to obtain the extension and, thereafter, request the waiver. At the US/CARICOM Trade and Investment Council Meeting in June, officials of the Office of the US Trade Representa­tive signalled their intention to request the waiver.

There is still no further movement on this bill in the House. Senator Johnny Isakson (R-GA) tabled a similar bill in the Senate on September 12. As the CBPTA expires in September 2020, I believe that there isn’t the urge to expedite adoption of this bill. After all, the Congress is seized with far more important and pressing matters.

I understand that the CARICOM Caucus of Ambassador­s in Washington, DC, with support from Caribbean interest groups, is continuing to lobby for the bill’s adoption. The impact of Hurricane Dorian in The Bahamas and the situation in Haiti may strengthen the cause.

In looking at this issue, I like to consider the bigger picture, including the US position in the WTO on the developmen­t status of developing members proposing differenti­ation and graduation from special and differenti­al treatment (S&DT) flexibilit­ies. I also look at overall US/CARICOM relations, which, I gather, are actually not as tepid as appears. There has been some movement in the implementa­tion of the 2016 US/Caribbean Strategic Engagement Act and its related 2017 Strategy under priority areas such as energy and disaster relief. It remained unclear whether significan­t progress has been made under the priority area, ‘prosperity’, dealing with trade and investment and business and infrastruc­ture developmen­t.

A MORE SECURE AND PROSPEROUS ENVIRONMEN­T

However, following from the meeting of a group of CARICOM heads with President Trump in March, a May 23 press release from the US Overseas Private Investment Corporatio­n informed that a high-level team visited The Bahamas, Jamaica, Haiti, St Lucia and the Dominican Republic to explore investment opportunit­ies in energy and other critical sectors and to strengthen relationsh­ips with key partners in fostering security and stability in the Western Hemisphere.

I also noted that a US Small Enterprise Assistance Fund is partnering with Sagicor Investment to assist small and medium-sized enterprise­s in the Caribbean.

Implementa­tion of the 2017 Strategy is coordinate­d through the Department of State and US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t. From what I am reading and seeing on television, it is not surprising that overall implementa­tion is moving at a slower than normal pace.

The Caribbean is supposed to be the US’s third border. The US is the region’s principal trading partner. In a recent press report, there was concern about Jamaica’s zero population rate if low birth and high migration levels continue on the same trajectory. I welcome the waiver in the WTO. But, as we endeavour to implement the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, how wonderful it would be were the US to really partner with us to achieve these goals, by adopting the extension bill and fully implementi­ng the 2017 Strategy, creating a more secure and prosperous environmen­t in our countries, allowing those at home and abroad to genuinely proclaim – a yah suh me live, a yah suh me luv, a yah suh suit me well nice!

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