Australia–United States Free Trade Agreement
| |
---|---|
Type | Free trade agreement |
Drafted | 18 May 2004 |
Signed | 18 May 2004 |
Location | Washington, D.C., United States |
Effective | 1 January 2005 |
Condition | 2 months after notification of each state that all internal procedures have been completed |
Original signatories |
|
Ratifiers | |
Languages |
The Australia – United States Free Trade Agreement (AUSFTA) is a
History of the FTA
Pub. L.108–286 (text) (PDF) | |
Legislative history | |
---|---|
|
US Free Trade Agreement Implementation Act 2004 & US Free Trade Agreement Implementation (Customs Tariff) Act 2004 | |
---|---|
Parliament of Australia | |
Long title
| |
Citation | No. 120, 2004 No. 121, 2004 |
Passed by | House of Representatives |
Passed | 24 June 2004 |
Passed by | Senate |
Passed | 13 August 2004 |
Royal assent | 16 August 2004 |
Status: In force |
The U.S. first proposed a free trade agreement with Australia as far back as 1945. In more recent times, the prospect of an Australia-U.S. FTA was raised in the 1980s by the
It was not until early 2001, after the election of
The FTA was ratified by the
In Australia, the agreement's implementing legislation, the US Free Trade Agreement Implementation Act 2004, was passed, with amendments, by the Senate on 13 August 2004. After some delay, the U.S. Administration accepted the amended Australian legislation as being consistent with implementation of the agreement.[citation needed]
The Agreement came into force in both countries on 1 January 2005.
Provisions of the FTA
The text of the Free Trade Agreement is divided into twenty-three sections, listed and summarized as follows:
Establishment of the free trade area and definitions
This chapter lays the framework for the FTA. It states that the provisions are consistent with the relevant sections of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) 1994 and the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). Both GATT and GATS are documents created by World Trade Organization (WTO) agreements and they lay the boundaries for subsequent bilateral agreements such as the Australian-U.S. FTA.
The chapter also sets definitions to be used throughout the agreement in order to assure uniformity.
National treatment and market access for goods
Chapter two of the FTA lays out conditions for what types of goods are subject to non-discriminatory treatment. Certain types of goods are fully applicable to the agreement immediately and some are phased in over a period of years or temporarily applicable.
The chapter also reminds the two countries that they must abide by the WTO rules applying what is called national treatment. "National treatment" means that each country will provide the same treatment to imported goods from the other country as if they were domestically produced goods.
Finally, the chapter established a Committee on Trade in Goods with the purpose of providing arbitration for each country to "raise issues of concern in relation to tariffs, non-tariff measures, rules of origin and customs administration."
Agriculture
The agriculture section of the agreement outlines the system for eliminating most tariffs for agriculture products being traded between the two countries. It also agrees to eliminate
Special tariff-rate quotas are part of the agreement. These quotas allow Australian producers to export increasing amounts of these products free of duty to the United States during the tariff elimination period. The following agricultural products are designated:
- Beef
- Dairy
- Tobacco
- Cotton
- Peanuts
- Avocados
The quota systems vary for the different products and are outlined, in detail, in this section.
The section also sets up a Committee on Agriculture with the purpose of providing "a formal opportunity for Australia and the United States to discuss a wide range of agricultural issues relevant to the Agreement, including trade promotion activities; barriers to trade; and consultation on the range of export competition issues."
Finally, the two countries have committed to working with the WTO on a multilateral scale to eliminate export subsidies to other WTO member countries.
Textiles and apparel
Chapter four deals with the trade of textiles and apparel between the two party countries. The bulk of this section outlines the
In addition, this section details the cooperation of
Rules of origin
The rules of origin section outlines the rules for determining the origin of the goods being traded in order to establish eligibility and also the method to determine the value of the goods traded.
For the purposes of the FTA, this section defines an originating good as those that:
- are wholly obtained or produced entirely in the country, such as minerals extracted there, vegetable goods harvested there, and live animals born and raised there;
- are produced in the country wholly from originating materials; or
- are produced in the country partly from non-originating materials.
The section also outlines supporting documentation and verifications that the goods being traded are, indeed, originating in the exporting country, as defined by the agreement. The responsibility for verification of the applicable conditions is given to the importer. Denial of preferential treatment and penalties may apply if proper verification is not provided by the importer upon request made by the importing country.
Customs administration
This section outlines the requirements of the customs authorities to:
- promptly publish law, regulations, guidelines and administrative rulings,
- administer customs laws in a uniform, impartial and reasonable manner,
- provide advance rulings on tariff classifications and rules of origin within a given period of time,
- provide some sort of administrative body to review customs determinations,
- cooperate with each other on all reasonable matters, especially those involving suspicion of illegal activity,
- protect the confidentiality of information provided in cooperation with other customs authorities,
- impose their respective penalties for violations of customs laws and regulations,
- promptly release goods consistent with ensuring compliance with customs laws,
- apply risk management systems to concentrate on high-risk areas and facilitate low-risk areas, and,
- maintain expedited procedures with respect to express shipments.
Sanitary and phytosanitary measures
In conjunction with the existing WTO Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) Agreement, this section sets up two committees to ensure that the SPS agreement provisions are followed.
- Committee on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Matters (provided with a mandate for "increasing the mutual understanding of the SPS measures and regulatory processes of each Party as well as continuing the cooperative efforts of the Parties internationally")
- Standing Working Group on Animal and Plant Health (to help with the resolution of specific animal and plant health matters with the goal of resolving the problems with the least adverse effect on trade as possible)
Technical barriers to trade
This section acknowledges the rights and obligations of Australia and the United States to each other with respect to combating barriers to trade. These rights and obligations were laid out by the WTO Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade, which deals with standards, regulations, and conformity assessments, among other things.
Most of the section is language from both countries agreeing to share information on several levels of government regulation. They agree to attempt to accept each other's regulations and publish such rules and regulations in a timely manner in order to ensure transparency.
Safeguards
The goal of the safeguards section of the agreement is to lay out an agreed upon structure to guard against severe adverse effects to each countries domestic industries during the transition period after lifting tariffs. The countries also agree to consider the exclusion from the application of global WTO safeguards imports from the other country where those imports are not a substantial cause of the injury to the domestic industry.
Cross-border trade in services
Section 10 of the FTA gives clear meaning to the phrase "cross-border trade in services" and provides suppliers with an open environment in which to conduct their business. It requires that each country give the other's service suppliers national treatment or most-favored-nation treatment and prohibits many restrictions to market access and transfers.
Investment
The investment chapter of the FTA provides clear definitions as to what investments are covered and gives cross-border investors assurances in order to make it as safe as if they were investing in their own country. Among other things, the section prohibits each country from imposing or enforcing any of the following requirements in relation to an investment in its territory:
- to export a given level or percentage of goods or services;
- to achieve a given level or percentage of domestic content;
- to purchase, use, or accord a preference to goods produced in its territory, or to purchase goods from persons in its territory;
- to relate in any way the volume or value of imports to the volume or value of exports or to the amount of foreign exchange inflows associated with an investment;
- to restrict sales of goods or services in its territory that an investment produces or supplies by relating such sales in any way to the volume or value of its exports or foreign exchange earnings;
- to transfer a particular technology, a production process, or other proprietary knowledge to a person in its territory; or
- to supply exclusively from its territory the goods that an investment produces or the services it supplies to a specific regional market or to the world market.
Telecommunications
This section details agreed upon terms by both countries to assure fair trade between the telecommunications industries in each country. The rules specifically exclude measures relating to broadcast or cable distribution of radio or television programming.
Among other provisions, the agreement lays out rules for settling disputes among the members of the telecommunications industries in one country with the members in the other. It entitles enterprises to:
- seek timely review by a regulator or court to resolve disputes;
- seek review of disputes regarding appropriate terms, conditions, and rates for interconnection; and
- to obtain judicial review of a determination by a regulatory body.
Financial services
This chapter is concerned with ensuring a non-discriminatory environment with regard to financial services. The section defines financial services as "all insurance and insurance-related services, and all banking and other financial services, as well as services incidental or auxiliary to a service of a financial nature."
The section further lays out the scope of its application as it applies to measures by either country that affect:
- financial institutions located in the territory of that country that are controlled by persons of the other country;
- investors of the other country who have invested in financial institutions located in that country;
- the investments of investors of the other country in financial institutions located in that country; and
- cross-border trade in financial services by service suppliers of the other country.
The parties agreed to minimise obstacles to the operation of each other's competition and consumer protection policies. Australia agreed that its governments at all levels would not provide any competitive advantage to any government businesses simply because they are government-owned. This provision is consistent with existing provisions of Australia's National Competition Policy
Government procurement
Subject to some exceptions, and the non-participation of some US states, the agreement required, in government and government agency procurement, that each party should accord to the other treatment no less favourable than the most favourable treatment accorded to domestic goods, services and suppliers.
Electronic commerce
The parties agreed to co-operate on mechanisms to facilitate electronic commerce, not to impose customs duties on digital products and for each to apply non-discriminatory treatment to the digital products of the others.
Intellectual property rights
Australia agreed to extend its copyright expiration period from 50 to 70 years after the author's death where copyright is calculated on the basis of the life of a natural person, and 70 years after the first performance or publication in other cases.
The agreement expands the rights of patent holders.
The agreement requires legal enforcement of digital rights management systems, however an Australian legislative committee has issued a report stating that this portion of the treaty has a "significant flaw": while the agreement provides permitted exceptions allowing the use of copyright access circumvention devices, it also disallows access to the tools used for such circumvention. The report goes on to term it a "lamentable and inexcusable flaw", an "egregious flaw", and even a "flaw that verges on absurdity". The committee expressed the strong view that the Government must find a solution to the flaw before implementing this portion of the treaty.[4]
Labour
Chapter 18 of the Agreement deals with labour, and is largely confined to general statements of principle. The Parties reaffirm their obligations as members of the International Labour Organization (ILO) and their commitments under the ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work and its Follow-up (1998) (ILO Declaration). The Agreement recognizes the right of each Party to establish its own labour standards, and to adopt or modify accordingly its labour laws, and states that each Party shall strive to ensure that its laws provide for labour standards consistent with the internationally recognised labour principles
Environment
Chapter 19 responds to concerns that parties may seek to gain trade advantages by relaxing environmental laws.
Article 19.2 states that "The Parties recognise that it is inappropriate to encourage trade or investment by weakening or reducing the protections afforded in their respective environmental laws."
Accordingly, each Party shall strive to ensure that it does not waive or otherwise derogate from, or offer to waive or otherwise derogate from, such laws in a manner that weakens or reduces the protections afforded in those laws as an encouragement for trade with the other Party, or as an encouragement for the establishment, acquisition, expansion, or retention of an investment in its territory.
Transparency
Chapter 20 requires that:
Each Party shall ensure that its laws, regulations, procedures, and administrative rulings of general application respecting any matter covered by this Agreement are promptly published or otherwise made available in such a manner as to enable interested persons and the other Party to become acquainted with them.
and that
Each Party shall maintain judicial, quasi-judicial, or administrative tribunals or procedures for the purpose of the prompt review20-2 and, where warranted, correction of final administrative actions regarding matters covered by this Agreement.
Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme
See Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme
U.S. attitudes to the FTA
After the FTA was signed, there were initially concerns that the American agricultural sector would lobby against the agreement, due to a fear that it could interfere with the government's farm subsidies program. However, the agreement, with time limits on importation of Australian agricultural products such as
A coalition of trade unions and other groups did speak out against the agreement on the basis that it would cause similar problems to those experienced by NAFTA.[specify]
More substantial
American manufacturing lobbies strongly supported the FTA.[5]
On 15 July, both houses of the
Additionally, labour groups expressed concern regarding the agreement. In a report to the USTR office, the Labor Advisory Committee (LAC) recommended that Congress reject the U.S.-Australia FTA because they believed the agreement failed to meet congressional negotiating objectives.[6]
Australian attitudes to the FTA
Support
The agreement became a major political issue leading up to the
The government relied on estimates of the economic benefits of the FTA computed by the Centre for International Economics, a consultancy group. The leading group supporting the FTA was called Austa. Austa's arguments focused on the dynamic benefits of integration with the U.S. economy.
Opposition
Criticisms of the FTA appeared from a number of sources and on a number of grounds:
Trade diversion
Economic theory suggests that bilateral agreements like the FTA will lead to trade creation between the parties directly involved, but will also cause trade diversion from third countries, offsetting any benefits. Bilateral agreements may also undermine multilateral agreements such as those associated with the World Trade Organization. Partly as a result of these factors, the estimates of benefits produced by the CIE and relied on by the government were disputed by most economists who made submissions to the Senate Committees inquiring into the topic, some of whom concluded that the agreement would reduce Australia's economic welfare.
Intellectual property
The provisions of the AUSFTA in Ch 17 required Australia to offer stronger protection to American intellectual property. In particular, the minimum term of copyright was extended to 70 years after the author's death. Most economists and others interested in intellectual property issues regarded this as undesirable. A number of prominent American economists took the same view in the case of Eldred v. Ashcroft.
Other key changes included:
- special copyright term extension for photographs
- broader definition of technological protection measures, narrow exceptions, and review process
- protection of temporary copies
- stronger protection of electronic rights management information
- protection of pay television broadcasts
- safe harbour provisions for Internet Service Providers
- protection of performers' economic and moral rights in respect of sound recordings
- broader civil and criminal offences
For a discussion of the copyright changes, see Rimmer, M. "Robbery Under Arms: Copyright Law and the Australia-United States Free Trade Agreement"[7]
Local content provisions
Many in the Australian
Manufacturing and agricultural sector
Australia as a whole is heavily reliant on the
The Australian manufacturing sector was another problematic area. Australian labour, wage and environmental protection standards are substantially higher than those of the US. The Australian Manufacturing Workers Union ran a high-profile campaign against the FTA on the basis that it would lead to manufacturing jobs being outsourced overseas.
Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme
The
While the scheme is very effective at keeping many drug prices low, pharmaceutical corporations in both the US and Australia are wary of the operation of the scheme, since they argue that higher drug prices are necessary to fund the costs of
While companies have in particular criticised the process by which drugs are listed on the PBS, claiming that it lacks transparency, public health advocates have claimed that calls for transparency are merely an effort by drug companies to gain greater control over the process of listing. To a large degree the existing limitations on the transparency of the process are those that have been imposed by the industry itself. The text of the Agreement included text mandating transparency to the public, reflecting an offensive interest of Australia, thus creating a treaty level obligation to circumvent the efforts of the pharmaceutical industry to continue to frustrate public transparency of PBS processes.
Disquiet about the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme led to speculation that the American side would lobby heavily for its abrogation as an integral component of a free trade agreement. The Government was criticised, particularly by the Australian Democrats and Greens, for not doing enough to safeguard the operations of the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, allegations which the Government strenuously denied. Some academics (such as Thomas Alured Faunce) claimed that the provisions of the Agreement would lead to increases in the prices of PBS medicines. However the relevant text was actually limited to issue of process and transparency, and contained no provisions that could affect price, and this was ultimately shown not to be the case.
Ratification of the FTA
The Australian Government did not hold a majority in the Senate, and thus required the support of the
Latham responded unexpectedly by making Labor's support of the FTA conditional on an amendment that would allegedly safeguard the PBS.[9] This effectively turned the tables on Howard: if the Government refused the amendment as unnecessary, it opened itself to claims it was not safeguarding Australian interests; if it supported the amendment, it then tacitly admitted that the original terms of the agreement were inadequate. The bill was eventually amended and passed.
Latham's amendment proposals were supported by the Australian Medical Association, but dismissed as ineffective by the Greens and Democrats, who still argued for outright rejection of the FTA.
Outcomes
In the year following the agreement, Australian exports to the U.S. declined,[10] while U.S. exports to Australia increased. This followed the International Monetary Fund's prediction that the Australia-United States FTA would shrink the Australian economy marginally because of the loss of trade with other countries. The IMF estimated $US5.25 billion of extra U.S. imports entering into Australia per year under the FTA, but only $US2.97 billion of extra Australian exports to the U.S. per year.[11] However, it remains unclear whether or not Australia's worsening trade deficit with the United States can be solely attributed to the FTA. It may have been a lagged effect of an appreciation of the Australian dollar against the US dollar between 2000 and 2003.
For the U.S., the FTA improved the overall trade deficit situation, creating a trade surplus with Australia which rose 31.7% in the first quarter of 2005, compared to the same timeframe in 2004. U.S. exports to Australia increased 11.7% in the first quarter of 2005 to nearly $3.7 billion for the quarter. Agriculture exports to Australia increased 20%.[citation needed]
According to Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade figures the imbalance in trade between the U.S. and Australia increased substantially during 2007. The United States became Australia's largest import source, with goods and services imported to a value of over A$31 billion. Australia's exports to the U.S., however, amounted to only $15.8 billion AU.[12] It remains unclear what, if any, real benefits the agreement has produced.
In U.S. Fiscal Year 2006 (October 2005 through September 2006), which was the first full year during which E-3 regulations were in effect, the U.S.
According to Shiro Armstrong from the Crawford School of Public Policy at the Australian National University concluded, from over 10 years of dataset from the Productivity Commission suggests that Australian and US trade with the rest of the world fell - that there was trade diversion - due to AUSFTA after controlling for country specific factors. Estimates also suggest trade between Australia and the United States fell in association with the implementation of AUSFTA - also after controlling for country-specific factors.[15] Shiro Armstrong also concludes Australia and the United States reduced their trade with the rest of the world by US$53 billion and are worse off than they would have been without the agreement.[16]
See also
- Rules of Origin
- Market access
- Free-trade area
- Tariffs
- E-3 visa program passed by the United States government in the aftermath of the AUSFTA.
- Import sensitive product
- United States-Australia relations
Australian free trade agreements:
- Australia-Chile Free Trade Agreement
- Australia New Zealand Closer Economic Relations Trade Agreement
- Australia–United Kingdom Free Trade Agreement
References
- ^ "US Free Trade Agreement Implementation Act 2004". Center for Economic and Policy Research. [dead link]
- ^ "H.R. 4759:United States-Australia Free Trade Agreement Implementation Act". Retrieved 25 October 2009.
- ^ "President Bush Signs U.S.-Australia Free Trade Agreement". 3 August 2004. Retrieved 25 October 2009.
- ^ "Review of technological protection measures exceptions Archived 10 March 2006 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "National Association of Manufacturers". Archived from the original on 18 December 2004.
- ^ "Office of the United States Trade Representative" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 October 2004.
- SSRN 855805. Retrieved 24 August 2013.
- ^ "A Bitter Pill?". Four Corners. 2 August 2004. Archived from the original on 7 July 2017. Retrieved 25 October 2009.
- ^ "Official Website of the Australian Labor Party". Archived from the original on 18 August 2004.
- ^ "The economic impact of the Australia–United States free trade agreement" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 7 July 2015.
- ^ "IMF Marks Down US Free – Trade Deal". Archived from the original on 13 October 2009. Retrieved 25 October 2009.
- ^ "DFAT trade topics June Quarter 2008" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 March 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-25.
- ^ "Supplemental Table 1: Nonimmigrant Admissions (I-94 Only) by Class of Admission and Country of Citizenship: Fiscal Year 2006". Archived from the original on 30 August 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-25.
- ^ "Yearbook of Immigration Statistics: 2007, Supplemental Table 1". Archived from the original on 20 October 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-25.
- ^ "The economic impact of the Australia–United States free trade agreement" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 7 July 2015.
- ^ "The costs of Australia's "free trade" agreement with America". 28 April 2015. Archived from the original on 6 July 2015.
External links
Governmental links
- Australian legislative committee report on the Technological Protections Measures aspects of the treaty
- U.S. International Trade Commission Report on Australia-U.S. FTA
- Congressional Research Service Report on Australia-U.S. FTA
- U.S. Senate Finance Committee Hearing on Australia-U.S. FTA
- U.S. House Ways and Means Committee Hearing on Australia-U.S. FTA
- President's Message to the United States Congress on the AUSFTA