“We depend on a global market, but we want a market that is just and
based on solidarity, not just profits for a few,” said Maria Victoria
Fernandez, President of Bolivia’s Women Workers Association. “We need
rules that respect our sovereignty and give us fair prices, so we can
live a dignified life.” She recounted how IMF-backed trade
liberalisation policies, which allowed unfettered imports of used
clothes from the US, had almost destroyed a thriving home-based
Bolivian textile industry. Behind her, clowns on stilts tottered
past with their faces painted: “No to Free Trade. Yes to Life.”
It was April 2005 and clowns, actors, civil society organisations,
small producers and rural farmers as well as religious groups had
gathered in the main high street of the mountainous capital of La Paz
to call for a trade system based on justice and solidarity. The
colourful and vibrant mix of stalls, street theatre and music organised
by the Bolivian Movement against Free Trade culminated a week of events
across the Andean nation and indeed in more than 60 countries worldwide
in support of trade justice.
All along the street, different groups representing farmers,
cooperatives and health workers expressed grave concern at the Bolivian
Government’s attempt to rush headlong into an Andean Free Trade
Agreement with the USA. Hector Calle, a rural parish community worker
said: “The majority of poor people I work with are petrified of free
trade. They feel that their small businesses will inevitably go
under if our market is opened up to rich and powerful companies.”
The civil society groups called instead for different trade rules: ones
that protected small businesses, safeguarded the environment, and were
based not on competition but collaboration.
HOPES INTO REALITY
Whilst people on the street expressed hope of change, few imagined that
the Bolivian Government would one year later take the lead in pushing
for just trade rules.
Bolivia at that point was an observer to the talks for an Andean Free
Trade Agreement (AFTA) which began in 2004. The Bolivian Government
under the Presidency of Carlos Mesa was under great pressure to join
the negotiations from the Chamber of Exports and in particular one
businessman, Marcus Iberkleid who exported apparel to the US
multinational Polo Ralph Lauren.
The threat was and still is that Bolivia had to enter the negotiations
in order to maintain trade preferences granted by the US in a former
trade and drug eradication pact due to expire in December 2006. Almost
all of Bolivia’s media backed the business interests, repeating the
mantra that Bolivia had no alternative but to sign a Free Trade
Agreement with the US.
A year later, and the picture is very different in Bolivia. The demands
from the street have become the official position of the
newly-elected Government of Evo Morales.
Within days of his arrival to his post in January 2006, Morales was
under pressure to join negotiations for AFTA. But just as immediately
Bolivia was to see firsthand its costs when Colombia became one of the
Andean countries to sign in February 2006. Even though it hadn’t been
part of the negotiations, Bolivia suddenly found that Colombia’s
agreement with the US threatened to cut off Bolivia’s biggest export to
Colombia, soya which could not hope to compete price-wise with highly
subsidized soya from the US. Principles of regional co-operation
between Andean nations had been callously sacrificed by the Colombian
Government in their rush to sign a deal with the “biggest market in the
world.”
Angered by the way Bolivia could be treated by a neighbouring country,
Morales in a press conference said “We don’t need a Free Trade
Agreement (FTA). We need a Peoples’ Trade Agreement (PTA).” A policy
was born.
NOT DIFFERENT RULES BUT DIFFERENT GAME
The Bolivian Government’s alternatives were presented a month later.
From the very outset the PTA proposals mark a dramatic u-turn from
current consensus. The first paragraph states that the PTA “understands
trade and investment not as ends in themselves but as a means towards
development. Consequently its aim is not total liberalization of
markets and the shrinking of States but rather creating benefits for
all peoples.”
Whilst the PTA was presented as an alternative to AFTA, it is really an
alternative to the whole system of trade and investment rules today,
which in reality are about much more than trade. The current bilateral
and multilateral trade regimes such as the World Trade Organization
agreements enforce liberalisation of all areas of a country’s economic
and social life including a country’s rights over its services, its
rules on intellectual property, State purchases, competition etc.
Whilst different trade agreements may accept different timetables for
developing countries, they still apply the same liberalisation recipe
regardless of local needs.
More than anything, the current trade regime is about guaranteeing
rights to multinational companies, who are able under investment
chapters of trade agreements to sue developing countries for any
regulatory actions that may affect their profits and investments
PTA openly questions the hypocrisy of the current one-recipe trade
regime given the fact that all so-called “developed countries” became
prosperous by building up nascent industries behind trade
barriers. However it goes further by developing its own core
principles based on demands made by Bolivian social movements over many
years [published on the web at
http://www.boliviasoberana.org/blog/English]. These principles embrace
four fundamental concepts that contrast directly with current trade
policy:
• the State has the right to subordinate trade
agreements to their own long-term vision of national development and to
use “protectionist” measures to achieve this,
• the human right to water and basic services comes above the rights of multinational companies,
• trade agreements should seek solidarity and
complementarity rather than competition and overexploitation, and
• trade agreements should protect and support small community-based enterprises.
Moreover, drawing on indigenous wisdom in a country where almost
two-thirds are indigenous peoples, the PTA unabashedly challenges one
of the fundamental credos of our age when it questions the
un-sustainability of “economic growth” and the Western culture of waste
which “measures the development of a country based on the capacity of
its population to consume.”
The PTA says that currently trade is based on a logic of competition
and the urge for accumulation which leads to overexploitation of
natural and human resources, and instead calls for another logic based
on a “a distinct model of co-existence.” This principle comes directly
from a deeply-rooted idea of “Pachamama” in the Andean cosmo-vision,
which says that we are dependent on and part of creation and need to
live in harmony with nature and not work against it.
TURNING PRINCIPLES INTO REALITY
Moreover, the principles are not just being saved for fine words.
Within a few weeks of promoting these ideas, Bolivia signed a People’s
Trade Agreement in May with Cuba and Venezuela as a “means toward
development with social justice in the framework of genuine fraternal
Latin American and Caribbean integration.” Morales’ ideas dovetailed
with Venezuelan President Chavez’ proposed alternative to the Free
Trade Area of the Americas which he calls “ALBA”: a Bolivarian
Alternative for the Peoples of America.
The treaty explicitly takes into consideration Bolivia’s colonial
history and the challenges Morales faces in developing basic social
services. It establishes a new foundation for trade based on the
conviction that “strong solidarity, mutual cooperation and aid between
their peoples must prevail, free from any interest in business or
market profits.”
The result is that rather than talking about opening up nascent
domestic markets to the flooding of subsidized imports or competition
with powerful multinationals, the treaty instead proposes that each
country “elaborate[s] a strategic plan in order to guarantee
complementary products that can be mutually beneficial based on the
rational exploitation of the countries’ existing assets, the
preservation of resources, the expansion of employment, market access
and other aspects inspired in the true solidarity fostered by our
peoples.”
It encourages the formation and investment in joint companies and
associations with priority given to “initiatives which strengthen the
capacity for social inclusion, resource industrialization and food
security, in a framework of respect and preservation of the
environment.”
Practically, Cuba offered to use its capacity in education and health
to immediately set-up 6 ophthalmologic centres in Bolivia which have
the ability to operate on 100,000 people a year and to extend a
literacy programme to the whole population. Venezuela offered both
technical assistance and substantial investments in Bolivia’s
hydrocarbons sector and most significantly to buy Bolivian agricultural
exports including all the soya that could be cut off from Colombia’s
trade agreement with the US. Bolivia committed to ensuring energy
security for the three countries with its hydrocarbon resources and
also offered amongst other things to exchange “experiences in the study
and recovery of ancestral knowledge in the field of natural medicine.”
Pablo Solón, adviser to the Bolivian Government, in a recent interview
says the agreement is exceptional because it accepts unequal rules for
historically unequal countries ie that a poor country should have
different trade rules than a richer, more economically powerful
country. “In this case, Venezuela opens its state purchasing to
Bolivian suppliers while Bolivia does not; Venezuela lowers tariffs to
zero, but we do not. If we are truly to talk about trade agreements to
eliminate poverty, asymmetrical treatment is key.”
Solón also noted that rather than just opening markets, the treaty also
assures purchases of goods, which helps to guarantee a stable
environment for managed growth rather than expose developing countries
to the vagaries of a global economy. “In the PTA, not only are
there tariff preferences, but a commitment to purchase. In this case,
Venezuela commits not only to lower tariffs for all the goods upon
which they are levied, but also to buy 200 tons of soy and other
products that would be harmed by the FTAs with the United States and
European Union.”
BOLIVIA OPEN FOR BUSINESS
Since signing the PTA, Bolivia has made clear it is looking to initiate
similar trade agreements with other Governments. President Chavez at a
meeting in London specifically suggested that Britain’s capital city
could sign a PTA with Bolivia.
Unfortunately the European Union appears to be firmly headed in the
direction of imposing the old “free trade” model. Most recently in
Vienna, the European Union tried to push forward on a proposed
EU-Community of Andean Nations association agreement that differs
little from the AFTA which the US has attempted to impose on
Bolivia. Venezuela and Bolivia managed to delay the start of
talks by raising some concerns. However Austrian Chancellor Wolfgang
Schuessel’s comments: ''There are always two possibilities in life:
Either you want to open your markets or you don't want to open your
markets -- it's your choice,'' suggest many European governments are
still unable to see outside the “free trade” box.
Meanwhile the backlash against Bolivia’s alternative trade policy has
started, in all likelihood backed by multinationals who see their
interests directly challenged. Within Bolivia, the right-wing
opposition to the Morales Government has launched a fierce campaign
saying Bolivia is subordinating itself to Venezuelan interests. Soon
after the announcement of the PTA, President Bush expressed concern at
the “erosion of democracy” in Bolivia whilst Condoleeza Rice referred
to Morales’ “demagoguery”. If Bolivia finds itself without trade
preferences to the US in the coming years as a result of refusing to
sign the Andean Free Trade Agreement, the backlash will grow.
The reality is that if a Peoples’ Trade Agreement is to succeed, it
will ultimately depend on the peoples themselves. Up to now, global
justice activists have largely been fighting a reactive battle, trying
to stop corporate-managed trade agreements from extending their reach
to all sectors of the economy and public services. Some activist groups
have called for a new trade regime but many have ended up with a
defensive posture calling for developing countries to have “special
treatment” that simply allows certain areas, such as public health, to
be protected.
Yet here is an agreement that isn’t defensive, but offensive in a truly
positive sense. It starts from Andean principles of solidarity,
complementarity, reciprocity and co-existence with nature, which
contrast radically with current trade regimes that extend rights to
capital and multinationals regardless of the cost.
This does not mean it is a perfect trade treaty nor will it be the
panacea to global inequality, but it opens up a new space for a
much-needed debate about people-based alternatives to trade. Trade and
justice activists now have a crucial opportunity to help the Bolivian
Government succeed in its first steps. This may take the form of a
letter of solidarity recognizing that current trade rules have harmed
working families and the environment in all countries and needs to be
changed. It could involve choosing to buy Bolivian goods where there
are choices. It should also involve responding to appeals such as the
one made by Chavez to build a PTA with communities like London.
Speaking over a year ago, Maria Victoria Fernandez, President of Women
Workers Association said she believed the struggle for trade justice
could be won: “I believe we can win in our struggle for justice,
because the yearning to be fully human, to live life in a dignified way
is universal.” Today that hope is in Bolivia. It is our responsibility
to seize this opportunity and help that hope for a dignified life
become a universal reality.
WHAT YOU CAN DO?
In Bolivia, there is a campaign to “Buy Bolivian” which encourages
Bolivians to choose Bolivian products in order to maximise jobs and
investment within the country. Internationally, there is a powerful
fair trade movement which encourages people to pay above-cost for
products that guarantee fair wages for small producers. Many local
governments have twinning and other solidarity programmes that came out
of solidarity movements with South Africa and Nicaragua in the 1980s.
We need to extend these to support Bolivia politically and commercially
as it steps out and proposes alternatives of people-based trade.
* Write to your Government to ask them to sign a Peoples’ Trade Treaty
with Bolivia based on principles of poverty eradication and
environmental sustainability (principles that every Government has
signed up to, but now we have a real example of how mutually beneficial
exchange could be put into reality)
* Choose Bolivian products whenever you have a chance
* Write to your Institution, municipality, State to ask them to sign a PTA with Bolivia.
* Many institutions have already started “fair trade” buying policies
whilst other local governments have programmes to work with communities
in the South on specific projects. Surely these could now be extended
to giving preference to mutual solidarity programmes with Bolivia,
Venezuela and Cuba?
* Write to the Embassy of Bolivia, Venezuela and Cuba congratulating
them on their visionary trade treaty and expressing your solidarity and
support
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