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CPA and the Department of Commerce |
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Written by Stumo
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Wednesday, 04 November 2009 |
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The Coalition for a Prosperous America met with representatives from the U.S. Department of Commerce on October 21, 2009. We sent this letter as a follow-up, which describes the topics discussed.
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Dear Messrs. Siger and Sullivan:
Thank you for meeting with us on October 20, 2009. All of us attending
from the Coalition for a Prosperous America (CPA) appreciated hearing
your thoughts and future plans.
We are pleased that the Administration has placed a high priority on
enforcing trade agreements and trade laws. It is hard to justify the
position that trading partners should not abide by those rules. Lack
of enforcement hampers public confidence, and our confidence, in U.S
trade policy. However, enforcement is insufficient alone to solve the
trade deficit problem.
We fear that current federal government views on international trade strategy may be akin to fighting the last war when our competitors are fighting the next war. The old idea of tariff reduction and economic openness is not without merit, but trading partners have usurped the benefit of those concessions through alternate means. The result is a massive trade deficit and offshoring of jobs that are now unavailable to fill in an economic recovery.
We discussed three major issues:
(1) Foreign Value Added Taxes: The value added tax disparity is quantifiably the biggest trade distorting mechanism that exists in the world. Our CPA business members lose sales abroad because they cannot overcome the foreign VAT border charges even when they otherwise underbid foreign competitors. Other countries send their products here with the benefit of a substantial subsidy because of the foreign VAT rebate. While a domestic VAT is, as you said, a Treasury issue, it is within the purview of DOC to express its views on the trade distorting effects of foreign VATs. We ask that you consider doing so.
(2) Currency Misalignment: As a single factor, currency misalignment may be second only to the VAT as a major trade distorting practice. The imbalance of payments resulting from currency misalignment, particularly in East Asia, is well recognized as an underlying cause - if not the underlying cause - of the recession. Remedying the balance of payments problem requires remedying currency misalignment. While currency is also a Treasury issue, DOC again can and should weigh in on the economy harming/trade distorting effects.
(3) State-Managed Economies: U.S. trade policy has wrongly been predicated upon an assumption that other countries are free market economies. They are not. The majority of trading partners have state-managed economies. Trade distorting subsidies in those countries are massive and that many forms. U.S. trade strategy must account for those subsidies to avoid the negative results we currently are experiencing.
Thank you again for your time. We would like to follow up with you, as you suggested, perhaps with a January 2010 meeting. Thank you.
/s/
Brian O'Shaughnessy, Chief Co-Chair and Co-Chair for Manufacturing
Bob Baugh, Co-Chair for Labor
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In the news
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March 2-4, The Coalition for a Prosperous America
Legislative Fly-In
CPA will hold its Second Annual Legislative Fly-In on
March 2-4, 2010. This is a powerful opportunity for us to work
together to advance trade reform in the halls of Congress. We need to
bring the concerns of the grass roots to our legislators.
This is efficient advocacy, well worth your time. We make all the
meeting arrangements with legislators or their staff, we put together
materials, we plan a message, and we pack meetings together in a
concentrated period of time. You make a bigger impact with your time
using only three of the 365 days in the year.
Click here to sign up for the CPA Fly In.
CPA has a special offer--limited time only: the first 50 registrants
get a free copy of Ian Fletcher's new book: Free Trade Doesn't Work.
This is a highly acclaimed book about trade policy and the needed
changes therein.
Agenda:
March 2, 2010: 2p to 6p - Group meeting for training, talking points and team assignments
March 3-4, 2010: Hill visits
Place: Capitol Skyline Hotel, 10 I ("Eye") Street SW, Washington, DC 20024
Once registered, please call 202.488.7500 for hotel room reservations
and ask for the CPA room block. You should book for the evenings of
March 2 and March 3. CPA has negotiated discounted rates for a limited
number of rooms at $129 per night plus tax. Booking deadline is February 15, 2010, so reserve your room soon.
If you have questions about the events, please call Sara Haimowitz,
Development Coordinator, at 413-203-1410 or email at
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