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CalChamber Urges Opposition to Legislation Hindering U.S.-Colombia Trade Agreement

 

(March 30, 2010) The California Chamber of Commerce is urging members of the business community to oppose a state resolution that memorializes Congress to oppose the U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement (FTA).

AJR 27 (Torrico; D-Fremont) has been scheduled to be considered by the Assembly Jobs, Economic Development and the Economy Committee on April 20.

AJR 27, a California Assembly Joint Resolution opposing the U.S.-Colombia FTA, would cast the FTA and Colombia in an unproductive light if it were to pass.

Colombia is an important trading partner with California and the United States and also a partner in stopping drug trafficking.

The U.S.-Colombia FTA, signed in 2006, is a critical element of the U.S. strategy to liberalize trade through multilateral, regional and bilateral initiatives. The agreement will also increase momentum toward lowering trade barriers and set a positive example for other small economies in the Western Hemisphere.

The FTA is pending approval by the U.S. Congress.

Colombia Trade

Colombia is a dynamic economy with a pro-U.S. government, and with whom U.S. trade has nearly doubled in recent years. More than 9,000 U.S. companies export their products to Colombia and more than 85 percent of these are small and medium-sized companies. U.S. farmers and ranchers sell agricultural products to these markets, and U.S. manufacturers are enjoying double-digit sales growth that will only grow when the tariffs are removed.

The FTA will eliminate tariffs and other barriers to trade in goods and services, promote economic growth and enhance trade between the United States and Colombia. In 2009, the United States exported more than $9.5 billion worth of goods to Colombia, with total trade amounting to more than $20.7 billion.

California Benefits

The U.S.-Colombia FTA offers tremendous opportunities for California’s exporters. Colombia is California’s 35th largest trading partner, exporting more than $320 million in goods in 2009.

The agreement offers tremendous opportunities for California’s exporters, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce International Trade Administration. When the FTA enters into force, 80 percent of U.S. consumer and industrial exports to Colombia, including nearly all information technology products, mining, agriculture, construction equipment, medical and scientific equipment, auto parts, paper products and chemicals, will be duty-free immediately. The remaining tariffs phase out over 10 years.

Action Needed

The U.S.-Colombia FTA will benefit California and the United States as a whole. Please write the Assembly Jobs, Economic Development and the Economy Committee and your legislators and urge them to oppose AJR 27.

For a sample letter, visit www.calchamber.com/colombia.

Staff Contact: Susanne Stirling


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