[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 156 (Thursday, December 6, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7646-S7647]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RUSSIA PNTR
Mr. BLUNT. Mr. President, I am pleased the Senate is considering a
critical bill this week to establish permanent normal trade relations
with Russia. I should have borrowed my friend's sign that says ``PTC
Creates Jobs,'' which may very well be an accurate equation, but PNTR
also will equal jobs. We can compete given the opportunity to compete,
and that is what these trade relationships are all about. This
legislation overwhelmingly has passed the House. It is going to have
strong bipartisan support in the Senate, and I believe it will pass
today and needs to pass today.
Russia joined the World Trade Organization in August of 2012. Since
that time, our exporters--U.S. companies--have not been able to take
full advantage of the fact that they have this new way to get to the
Russian market because we haven't granted permanent normal trade
relationships to Russia.
Since all the other major WTO members already have that permanent
relationship, they have had a real advantage since August of last year,
as they can move forward immediately and compete and make agreements
that American companies can't make. American companies are the only
companies losing market share after Russia joined the World Trade
Organization--and not because they are not as competitive. But until we
do what we need to do here today, they will be working at a real
disadvantage.
In addition to securing a level playing field for American companies,
we also need to replace the Jackson-Vanik policy with something that,
frankly, has now more real-world potential and real-world
understanding. Russia is clearly not the Russia of Soviet days, but we
still have reasons to be concerned about individual freedom of
expression in Russia. We need to express that concern. That is why I am
in support of a portion of this bill that Senator Cardin and Senator
Kyl have fought for during this whole discussion and now have in this
bill, in the House bill--the portion where we look at the terrible
treatment and ultimate death of Sergei Magnitsky.
This provision will ensure that those who were complicit in those
activities and in his ill-treatment and death don't get a free pass. It
sends messages to other countries that while we want to trade with
them, we also want to continue to speak strongly for the rights of
individuals, no matter where they are, to speak up against their
government.
Normalizing trade relations with Russia is also an important move to
my State and, I assume, all our States. I know in Missouri we exported
$86 million to Russia in 2011, and exports are up 6 percent already
from that year since we started 2012. Worldwide, Missouri exports more
than $12.3 billion in goods and services--or at least we did in 2010--
and almost half of that was exported to countries where we have free-
trade agreements. We need to continue to do that. Nearly 300 Missouri
companies supported 32,000 jobs that were driven by exports. So 32,000
people in Missouri have jobs because of trade, and a lot of that trade
is in our hemisphere.
I want to come back to that in a minute. I am concerned on the
Russian agreement that Russia has failed to agree to bring its animal
health and food safety measures in line with the WTO agreement on the
application of sanitary and phyto-sanitary measures, called the SPS
agreement. I am going to continue to monitor this situation to ensure
that American agricultural exports--and pork would be a good example of
this--don't face market access barriers in Russia.
Free trade has to be fair trade. Free trade doesn't work if it is not
fair trade. If it is fair trade and free trade, American workers and
American companies can and do actively and positively compete all over
the world. In fact, we have a little bit of trade imbalance these days,
and I think we should be concerned that 57 percent of it is in energy.
If we become more energy self-sufficient, we could easily reduce our
trade imbalance by 50 percent. If we just got North American energy as
our focus for energy, we could only be more secure, and we would also
have a better trade relationship.
This legislation we are dealing with today, the Russia PNTR, builds
on the progress we made last year with the passage of the three free-
trade amendments. Many of us on this side worked closely with our
friends on the other side and the White House to get these long
negotiated deals passed. In the 6 months since our free-trade agreement
with South Korea took effect, trade between our two countries has
increased by over $30 billion--a $30 billion increase in 6 months.
As we are trying to figure how to grow our economy, the export world
and free trade is one of the places we can have the most speedy
application of what we do to grow our economy. Thirty billion dollars
in Korea alone.
American exports to Columbia have increased 20 percent since that
free-trade agreement took effect. The ratification of the Panama Free
Trade Agreement just went into effect a few weeks ago, but that enables
American firms to fully participate in the economic opportunities that
will occur with the expansion of the Panama Canal and the continued
growth of that economy. What happens there is critical to us.
This agreement, I have said already, has passed the House and I think
it will pass the Senate today. There are other
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things we can and should do. We need to work with the President, and
the President should be working with Republicans and Democrats who are
friends of trade to do several things. One would be trade promotion
authority. We used to call this fast track. This is where the
administration can negotiate an agreement, and then the House and
Senate either vote yes or no on that agreement. It is the only way to
get agreements done in the world we live in today.
Right now, the administration has no realistic way of passing trade
agreements through the Congress. The President needs to work with
Congress so that we will give him the authority. He needs to ask for
it, and he needs to want it so we can have these agreements. This gives
our trading partners the confidence they need to make the concessions
that you make in negotiation and know that the agreement is going to be
the agreement. It is either going to be that agreement or no agreement
at all.
Since the TPA lapsed in 2006, we haven't negotiated a single new
free-trade agreement. If that doesn't tell us how important it is that
we move back to a way to get these agreements done, I don't know what
would.
Second, the Trans-Pacific Partnership. These negotiations seem to me
to be languishing right now and need senior administration attention in
order to gather the steam they need. A strong Trans-Pacific Partnership
is the most effective way to consolidate our leadership in that part of
the world.
At a time when China is aggressively moving into east Asia, we also
need to look at the Philippines. Senator Inouye and I have a bill that
would strengthen our relationship with the Philippines called the SAVE
Act. I would like to see the administration work with the two of us to
see what we could get done to have that relationship that has been so
strong and has lasted so long become even closer as we figure out how
to trade with that economy in a way that makes them more stable and
closer friends of the United States. Frankly, we will benefit, our
workforce will benefit from that agreement.
There is a Trans-Atlantic Free Trade Agreement that puts us in a
better situation to trade with the European Union. This should be one
of the easiest agreements we have ever done because we have two mature
economies trying to trade with each other. The normal negotiations
about labor and environment and other things that sometimes take so
long in these agreements, frankly, shouldn't take long. The Presiding
Officer has spent a lot of time with our NATO partners, and they would
be the same partners that would be our EU trading partners if we will
move forward there.
Finally, we need fresh trade policies with the Americas. We now have
trade agreements with six countries that were part of the Dominican
Republic CAFTA agreement with Mexico, Canada, Panama, Colombia, Chile,
and Peru, and we have a trading preferences agreement with Haiti. But
we really need to look to see what we can do to trade in this
hemisphere, improve our economic relationship with the South American
giant country and giant economy of Brazil.
Your best trading partners should be your neighbors. Certainly,
Canada and Mexico have proved that. When we send Canada $1, they
traditionally send us back somewhere in the neighborhood of $1. Right
now it is about 91 cents. In our trade with Mexico, Mexico now sends us
back, a year ago probably--and this number continues to grow--75 cents.
That is why on the energy front, when we deal with them, it makes a
difference. So they have proven that your neighbors should be your best
trading partners.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator's time has expired.
Mr. BLUNT. I ask unanimous consent for an additional 30 seconds.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. BLUNT. We need to expand the economic partnerships to our
neighborhood. The Western Hemisphere needs more attention. Trade makes
sense for America. Trade creates jobs. Trade creates opportunity. I am
glad we are voting on this trade agreement today.
I yield the floor.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Maine.
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