[Congressional Bills 108th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[S. Con. Res. 90 Introduced in Senate (IS)]
108th CONGRESS
2d Session
S. CON. RES. 90
Expressing the sense of the Congress regarding negotiating, in the
United States-Thailand Free Trade Agreement, access to the United
States automobile industry.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
February 23, 2004
Mr. Levin (for himself and Mr. Voinovich) submitted the following
concurrent resolution; which was referred to the Committee on Finance
_______________________________________________________________________
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
Expressing the sense of the Congress regarding negotiating, in the
United States-Thailand Free Trade Agreement, access to the United
States automobile industry.
Whereas the United States Trade Representative recently announced an intention
to negotiate a free trade agreement (FTA) with Thailand;
Whereas properly structured FTAs may have important benefits for the United
States, and a bilateral free trade agreement program pursued under a
coherent policy and strategy may play an important role in United States
trade policy;
Whereas the global automobile market is subject to inherently multilateral
problems that need to be addressed on a multilateral basis, including
numerous, widespread, and complex nontariff barriers maintained by major
producing countries;
Whereas providing Thailand privileged access to critical segments of the United
States automobile market would significantly erode United States
leverage to negotiate reductions to global automobile market distortions
in multilateral negotiations, because producers from third countries
would be able to benefit from the privileged access of Thailand under
the FTA;
Whereas Thailand is the second largest source of pick-up truck production in the
world, with many major automobile manufacturers from outside of Thailand
producing pick-up trucks there;
Whereas Thailand's Board of Investment has actively been recruiting automobile
producers from outside of Thailand, including Japan, South Korea, and
India, to produce automobiles in Thailand, and some of these producers
have cited Thailand's privileged access to foreign markets through FTAs
as a rationale for setting up production in Thailand;
Whereas many of these producers from outside of Thailand have moved their pick-
up truck production out of their home countries and into Thailand in
order to make Thailand their global pick-up truck production and export
bases;
Whereas as a result of this activity by automobile producers from outside of
Thailand, pick-up truck production in Thailand will soon approach
1,000,000 units annually, and could grow even larger;
Whereas given these facts, if Thailand were given privileged access to critical
segments of the United States automobile market in an FTA, it could be
used by third-country automobile producers as a backdoor into the United
States market; however, Japan, South Korea, India, and other major
producing countries would not be required to reduce their tariff and
nontariff barriers to United States automobile producers, and in fact
the tariff and nontariff barriers maintained by those countries would
continue to distort global markets and restrict the access of United
States exports to markets in those countries;
Whereas given that these third-country producers would already have privileged
access to the United States market through the United States-Thailand
FTA, their home countries would have less incentive to address the
inherently multilateral problems in the global automobile market through
negotiations on a multilateral basis; and
Whereas the United States automobile industry is a major driver of the United
States economy--accounting annually for between 3 and 4 percent of the
gross domestic product (GDP) of the United States, leading all United
States industries in annual research and development spending, directly
employing over 500,000 highly skilled and efficient workers in jobs that
pay on average 60 percent higher than the average United States job, and
supporting the jobs of over 7,000,000 other workers--and it has played a
critical role in efforts to revive the United States economy: Now,
therefore, be it
Resolved by the Senate (the House of Representatives concurring),
That it is the sense of the Congress that negotiations on access to
critical segments of the United States automobile market should not
take place on a piecemeal basis, but only--
(1) as part of negotiations that include all major
automobile producing nations; and
(2) as part of comprehensive negotiations that address both
tariff and nontariff barriers specific to the automobile
industry, with progress on eliminating tariff barriers
explicitly linked to concrete progress on eliminating nontariff
barriers.
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