Editor's
Note: This commentary comes to FPIF courtesy of the
Americas Program at the Inter hemispheric Resource
Center (IRC). For more commentary and analysis on
inter American affairs, visit the IRC's Americas Program
at www.americaspolicy.org
or FPIF's own Americas section at http://www.fpif.org/indices/regions/latin.htm
At the end of this month,
trade ministers from throughout the Western Hemisphere
will gather in Quito, Ecuador, for negotiations on
the proposed Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA).
Many FTAA proponents, including the Bush administration,
herald the FTAA as a NAFTA for the Americas. Indeed,
early drafts suggest that the proposed treaty is modeled
closely on NAFTA, which took effect in 1994. Less
clear is why the Bush administration believes that
NAFTA's spotty track record will help sell the FTAA
to wary Latin American governments.
The NAFTA debates of the early
1990s featured many rounds of dueling studies on the
agreement's anticipated impacts. Far less time, energy,
or attention has been spent assessing those early
promises and warnings, and especially regarding whether
Mexico has benefited from the agreement.
Three years ago, we set out to
study the social and environmental impacts of NAFTA
and the broader economic integration process of which
it is a part. We looked at data not just from the
NAFTA period but from the mid-1980s, when Mexico first
began to open its economy. One of our goals was to
inform future trade policies and treaties, such as
the FTAA, so that developing countries could better
assess the promise and the perils of entering into
agreements modeled on NAFTA.
Consistent with the public record,
our research suggests that Latin American and Caribbean
governments should think twice about signing on to
the FTAA in its proposed form.
Trade Without Development
It is widely accepted that the goal of economic integration
should be to raise living standards. According to
our review of the public record, NAFTA has yet to
fulfill that promise.
Official figures from both the World Bank and the
Mexican government show that trade liberalization
has succeeded in stimulating both trade and investment,
and it has brought inflation under control. Mexico's
exports have grown at a rapid annual rate of 10.6%
in real terms since 1985, and foreign direct investment
(FDI) has nearly tripled, posting a real 21% annual
growth rate. Inflation has been significantly tamed.
Unfortunately, these figures have not translated
into benefits for the Mexican population as a whole.
The same official sources show that:
- Economic growth has been slow in Mexico less than
one percent per capita per year from 1985-99, compared
with 3.4% from 1960-80.
- The increase in exports has been far outstripped
by rising imports, leaving Mexico with a serious
balance of payments deficit.
- There has been little job creation, falling far
short of the demand in Mexico from new entrants
into the labor force. Even the manufacturing sector,
one of the few sectors to show significant economic
growth, has seen a net loss in jobs since NAFTA
took effect.
- Wages have declined nationally, with real wages
down significantly. The real minimum wage is down
60% since 1982, 23% under NAFTA. Contractual wages
are down 55% since 1987. Manufacturing wages are
down 12% under NAFTA.
- Sixty percent of the employed do not receive any
of the benefits mandated by Mexican law. One-third
of the economically active population is in the
informal sector.
- The number of households living in poverty has
grown by 80% since 1984, with some 75% of Mexico's
people now living below the poverty line.
- Inequality has worsened, with Mexico's Gini coefficient
the standard international measure of inequality
rising from .43 to .48 since 1984, putting Mexico
among the most unequal nations in the hemisphere.
The rural sector is in crisis, beset by grain imports
from the U.S., falling commodity prices, and reduced
government support. Four-fifths of rural Mexico
lives in poverty, and over half are in extreme poverty.
These figures make clear that economic integration
in Mexico has come at the expense of development.
Our own empirical research on the social and environmental
impacts of integration contributes to this gloomy
report card.
Environment: Accelerated Degradation
Our research runs contrary to the pre-NAFTA predictions
that economic integration with Mexico would eventually
lead to an upward harmonization of environmental standards
and performance. Between 1985 and 1999, rural soil
erosion in Mexico grew by 89%, municipal solid waste
by 108%, and air pollution by 97%. The Mexican government
estimates that the economic costs of environmental
degradation have amounted to 10% of annual GDP, or
$36 billion per year. These costs dwarf economic growth,
which amounted to only 2.6% on an annual basis.
The surge in foreign direct investment (FDI) has
largely failed to bring cleaner technologies to Mexican
industry. Although the Mexican cement and steel sectors
are now cleaner as a result of FDI, they are the exception
not the rule. Industrial pollution as a whole has
nearly doubled since 1988. Unless economic integration
is coupled with strong environmental regulations and
enforcement, pollution will only continue to worsen.
Since NAFTA took effect, however, real spending on
the environment has declined 45%, and plant level
environmental inspections have shown a similar drop.
Corn and NAFTA: The U.S. as
"Pollution Haven"
Our research has also demonstrated that some of the
most significant trade shifts under NAFTA have net
impacts that are very destructive for the environment.
In conjunction with Mexican researchers, we have studied
the environmental impacts of the growth in U.S. corn
exports to Mexico following the rapid elimination
of tariffs. The surge in U.S. exports has put added
pressure on poor corn farmers in Mexico. This has
caused not only increased poverty and out-migration,
but also threatens the rich stock of plant biodiversity
cultivated by Mexico's traditional farmers and relied
on as a public good by the world's crop breeders.
In environmental terms, Mexico's loss is not the
United States' gain. The rise in U.S. corn production
has provided a stimulus to some of the most environmentally
destructive agricultural practices in the United States.
Corn is very chemical-intensive, both in terms of
fertilizers and pesticides. Recent expansions of corn
production have taken place in some of the drier states,
necessitating irrigation at unsustainable levels.
It has also encouraged a rise in the cultivation of
genetically modified corn, as the product is particularly
designed to resist pests that are more prevalent in
dry conditions. In effect, the U.S. is serving as
a "pollution haven" for corn, with more
environmentally destructive U.S. practices supplanting
more sustainable practices in Mexico.
NAFTA: No Blueprint for the
Americas
We have also carried out case study research regarding
the manner in which Mexican civil society organizations
in Mexico's most vulnerable communities are responding
to the challenges of economic integration. This research
highlights how many Mexicans are being left behind
by the economic integration process maquiladora workers
seeking health and safety protection, coffee farmers
fighting falling international prices, basic grains
farmers struggling against the flood of imports, community-based
forestry cooperatives facing both economic and human
rights issues, and poor communities trying to protect
health and environmental standards challenged under
NAFTA's Chapter 11 investment provisions.
The conventional wisdom on economic integration is
changing. In response to the hard facts, a wide range
of Latin American governments, prominent economists,
and civil society organizations are questioning the
U.S. approach to economic integration. A vibrant debate
among these actors will be occurring both inside and
parallel to the official meetings in Quito. These
critics do not deny that trade and investment are
essential tools for development the question is what
kind of trade and investment, by what rules, and to
what end. NAFTA's track record in Mexico certainly
does not bode well for Latin American and Caribbean
nations desperate for change after over a decade of
slow growth and worsening poverty.
Kevin Gallagher and Timothy Wise are researchers
at the Global Development and Environment Institute
at Tufts University and frequent contributors to the
IRC's Americas Program. To get email notification
when new Americas Program materials like this one
are available online, send a blank note to:
americas-subscribe@lists.irc-online.org
February 13, 2003.
[Source: http://ase.tufts.edu/gdae/highlights/FPIFnaftaOct2002.pdf
This piece was published in 'Foreign Policy
in Focus', October 24, 2002.]
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