Alabama Farmers Will Benefit.
Exports of farm products help boost Alabama’s farm prices and
income. Such exports help support about 6,020 jobs both on and off the farm in
food processing, storage, and transportation. In 2003, Alabama's farm cash
receipts were $3.4 billion, and agricultural exports were estimated at $381
million, putting its reliance on agricultural exports at 11
percent. Implementation of the U.S.-Central America-Dominican Republic
Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) will increase Alabama’s exports of agricultural
products.
Alabama Benefits From the U.S.- DR-CAFTA Free Trade Agreement
(FTA)
Despite over $1.6 billion in U.S. farm exports in 2003, DR-CAFTA
countries continue to impose high tariffs and other barriers on most
agricultural products, including Alabama’s key exports. A primary U.S. objective
was to change the "one-way-street" of duty-free access currently enjoyed by most
DR-CAFTA exports into a "two-way-street" that provides U.S. suppliers with
access to these markets and levels the playing field with other competitors.
This objective was achieved. Over 50 agricultural industry and farm groups,
including the American Farm Bureau support the FTA.
Poultry. With over $2 billion in
total sales and the nation’s 4th largest exporter, Alabama poultry
producers and processors benefit from the FTA.
- U.S. poultry exporters currently face duties as high as 164
percent on both fresh and frozen products, and the WTO permits duties as high
as 250 percent.
- Each DR-CAFTA country will provide immediate duty-free
access on chicken leg quarters, a product where the United States is the
world’s most competitive exporter, through country-specific TRQs that expand
annually as duties are eliminated in 17 to 20 years.
- Costa Rica and the Dominican Republic will establish
duty-free TRQs for chicken leg quarters totaling 850 metric tons, each
expanding by 10 percent annually. The other four Central American countries
will establish a total regional duty-free TRQ of 21,810 metric tons (with
individual country minimum quota levels). After year 12, the TRQ quantity will
be no less than 5 percent of regional chicken production.
- Duties on poultry products such as wings, breast meat and
mechanically de-boned poultry meat will be reduced more quickly, with many
eliminated within 10 years.
- DR-CAFTA countries are working toward the recognition of
the U.S. meat inspection and certification systems in order to facilitate U.S.
exports.
- The National Chicken Council, the USA Poultry and Egg
Export Council, and the National Turkey Federation have expressed support
publicly for the DR-CAFTA FTA.
Beef. Providing the 2nd
largest source of state farm cash receipts, Alabama cattle and calve operators
benefit from the FTA.
- Current import duties on U.S. beef exports are as high as
30 percent, and the WTO permits duties as high as 79 percent.
- Duties on the products most important to the U.S. beef
industry – Prime and Choice cuts – will be eliminated immediately in Central
American countries, while the Dominican Republic will establish a zero duty
TRQ of 1,100 metric tons which expands annually as duties are eliminated.
- Some immediate duty-free access will be provided by certain
countries on other beef cuts through an initial TRQ totaling 1,165 metric
tons, expanding annually until duties are fully phased-out.
- Duties currently applied to other beef products and beef
offals will be phased-out in 5 to 10 years.
- DR-CAFTA countries are working toward the recognition of
the U.S. meat inspection and certification systems in order to facilitate U.S.
exports.
- The American Meat Institute, the National Cattlemen’s Beef
Association, the National Renderers Association, and the U.S. Meat Export
Federation have expressed support publicly for the DR-CAFTA FTA.
Peanuts. As the nation’s 4th
largest exporter, Alabama benefits from the new openings the FTA provides in
markets already importing $1.2 million of U.S. peanuts and products.
- Peanut tariffs will be eliminated immediately in El
Salvador, Honduras, and the Dominican Republic, with duties in other countries
eliminated in 5 to 15 years.
- Peanut butter duties are eliminated immediately in Costa
Rica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, and Honduras. Nicaragua and Guatemala
will eliminate duties on this product over 10 years.
- Except where current duty treatment under CBI grants
duty-free access, the U.S. duties on peanuts and peanut butter will be phased
out over a 15-year period. During the phase-out period, the United States will
establish TRQ access totaling 10,500 metric tons for two countries – El
Salvador and Nicaragua - growing by 5 percent per year, and a TRQ for
Nicaragua for peanut butter of 280 metric tons, growing at 10 percent per
year.
Cotton. Providing the 5th
largest source of state farm cash receipts and the 2nd largest state
agricultural export, Alabama’s cotton farmers benefit from zero tariffs that the
FTA locks-in immediately for markets worth over $73.1 million to U.S. cotton
suppliers. Under the WTO, DR-CAFTA countries could raise duties on cotton to 35
to 60 percent, depending on the country.