U.S. Trade Policy and the Caribbean: From Trade Preferences to Free Trade Agreements

Abstract

For over 40 years, the United States has relied on unilateral trade preferences to promote exported development in poor countries. Congressionally authorized trade preferences give market access to selected developing country goods, duty free or at tariffs below normal rates, without requiring reciprocal trade concessions, although their extension is conditioned on extensive eligibility criteria and the use of U.S. inputs in many cases. The Caribbean Basin has benefited from multiple preferential trade arrangements, the first being the Caribbean Basin Initiative (CBI), passed by Congress in the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act of 1983. Other programs include the Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act (CBTPA) of 2000, which provides tariff preferences for imports of apparel products, and the Haiti HOPE Act of 2006 (amended in 2008 and 2010), which gives even more generous preferences to imports of Haitian apparel. Since the preferences have been implemented, U.S.-Caribbean trade has grown, but evaluations of the early programs suggest that their effects were not as robust as originally hoped. Benefits tended to be concentrated in a few countries and products, limiting export promotion and deterring product diversification. Over time, benefits have been ?eroded? by multilateral trade liberalization and other regional U.S. preference programs. Bilateral free trade agreements, particularly the CAFTA-DR, have actually replaced unilateral preferences with permanent, more attractive tariff reductions and trade rules for former CBI countries such as the Dominican Republic and Central American countries. As the main exporters of apparel in the Caribbean Basin, they were among the primary beneficiaries of the Caribbean trade preference programs.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jun 22, 2010
Accession Number
ADA524190

Entities

People

  • J.f. Hornbeck

Organizations

  • Library of Congress

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical
  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Agreements
  • Central America
  • Commerce
  • Congress
  • Costa Rica
  • Dominican Republic
  • Economic Development
  • Economic Policy
  • Employment
  • Government Procurement
  • Intellectual Property
  • International Trade
  • Investments
  • Law
  • Manufacturing
  • Trade Policy
  • United States

Fields of Study

  • Economics

Readers

  • Government and Public Administration Law.
  • Industrial Economics
  • International Relations, focusing on Korea-Africa and North Korea-South Korea relations, and Nigeria-Latin American Relations.