Hey Folks,

Just wanted to let you know that I've read the NAFTA report and the
resulting BDN article, which have some of its facts wrong. Actually, the
fault is the report which misled the paper into thinking that there were
only 4,400 jobs lost due to NAFTA. Wrong, wrong wrong! I'm happy to discuss
this with anyone who's interested.

-Rachel

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Jon Falk
Sent: Monday, January 12, 2004 2:18 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [ftaadelegation] Fwd: Message from Bob Kates


Hi everyone-

The following message bounced to me, because the attached report made it 
too big (800Kb+) to be distributed to the list.  I'm forwarding it without 
the attachment, so those of you interested in reading the report will have 
to go to www.mitc.com.  Sorry for the inconvenience.

Jon


>Date: Mon, 12 Jan 2004 13:52:50 -0500
>Subject: NAFTA report
>From: Robert Kates <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: reality tour listserve <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
>Today's BDN carried this story and I have attached the report. Do we want
to
>discuss this on Saturday?
>
>
>Bangor Daily News - Print this Article By Deborah Turcotte, Of the NEWS
>Staff e-mail Deborah
>Last updated: Monday, January 12, 2004
>
>Economy's ills beyond NAFTA
>
>
>
>BANGOR - Any of the 18,000 manufacturing workers statewide who lost their
>jobs in the last three years will say their positions were eliminated as a
>result of increased foreign trade. Usually the angry cry from the workers
is
>just one acronym - NAFTA.
>
>
>
>But that's only partly true, according to a report issued last week by
>Planning Decisions Inc., a public policy consulting group in South
Portland.
>NAFTA - the 10-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement that will phase
>out tariffs on imports and exports among the United States, Canada and
>Mexico over 15 years - is not the sole reason for the ailing economy in at
>least two-thirds of the state.
>
>
>Only 4,400 jobs were directly lost because of trade pressures from Canada
>and Mexico between 1993 and early 2003, according to the report, which
>outlines winners and losers throughout the state as a result of NAFTA. The
>other 13,600 manufacturing job losses, and the reduction of thousands of
>other jobs in communities that were supported by manufacturing purchases
and
>wages, are attributable to other foreign economic pressures. Those include
>U.S. companies moving production overseas, to the Caribbean or Asia, or
>low-priced imports from foreign countries.
>
>
>The U.S. Department of Labor certified the NAFTA-related unemployment
>numbers after reviewing applications for trade adjustment assistance
>benefits for laid-off workers which were submitted to the federal
government
>by the Maine Department of Labor.
>
>
>The report, titled "The Effects of NAFTA on the Maine Economy," was
>commissioned by the Legislature and prepared by Planning Decisions for the
>Maine International Trade Center. Its 73 pages outline increased imports
and
>investments primarily from Canada into Maine's economy, and gains in
exports
>from Maine to Canada. Maine experienced export gains in fishing and related
>products, while lumber, wood and paper exports have dropped off by 12
>percent.
>
>
>"Since 1993 Maine's exports and imports have more than doubled, creating
>more export-based jobs and providing wider purchasing choices to Maine's
>businesses and consumers," according to the report. "Canadian firms have
>made important investments in Maine's natural resource industries.
Increased
>specialization within the geographically natural economy that Maine and the
>Canadian Maritimes comprise has strengthened the global competitiveness of
>potatoes, blueberries and aquaculture."
>
>
>Yet the report's writer, economist Charles Lawton, admits in the
publication
>that not every positive or negative impact of NAFTA on the state could be
>identified, and that some highly visible industries are hurting more than
>others as a result of the trade policy. Wood products, food processing and
>some segments of the metals industries have experienced tremendous net job
>losses, Lawton said.
>
>
>"This study is not a comprehensive analysis of gains and losses from
NAFTA,"
>Lawton wrote. "Such a study would require greater analysis of consumption
>gains and investment flows as well as job and trade flows."
>
>
>What's evident, however, is that Maine and the rest of the country have
>benefited from increased investment from Canada. Between 1993 and 2000,
>Canadian investment increased nine fold to more than $27 billion, according
>to the report.
>
>
>Canadian companies are viewing Maine as an entry point into the American
>marketplace even though U.S. companies don't look to the state as a place
to
>do business because of its high energy rates and taxes. Numerous companies,
>such as Emera Corp. of Halifax, Nova Scotia, J.D. Irving of Saint John, New
>Brunswick, Brascan Corp. of Toronto and its subsidiary, NexFor-Fraser
>Papers, and McCain Foods of Florenceville, New Brunswick, have invested
>hundreds of millions of dollars in businesses throughout Maine.
>
>
>Three major paper mills and eight lumber mills are owned by Canadian firms,
>while half of Maine's forestland still in industry hands is owned by
>Canadian paper companies, according to the report. Maine and Canadian
>blueberry growers and processors participate in joint branding and
marketing
>programs, and the flow of petroleum and wood pulp products through the port
>of Portland has created new jobs, the report stated.
>
>
>Timothy Woodcock, a Bangor attorney who is active in promoting an economic
>union of New England and Atlantic Canada as a cooperative marketplace, said
>Maine is attractive to Canadian firms because its natural environment is
>similar to that of the Maritimes.
>
>
>"Maine is a logical place for them to expand," Woodcock said. "They have
the
>capital to do it. As much as we are seeing the Canadian investment, what
>we're not seeing is commensurate U.S. investment. NAFTA has nothing to do
>with the U.S. investing in Maine."
>
>
>He said that when Georgia-Pacific Corp. announced last year that it would
>shut down a machine at its Old Town mill, it also announced an $80 million
>investment in a machine in Louisiana. The loss of jobs in Old Town wasn't
>attributable to NAFTA and wasn't included in economist Lawton's report.
>
>
>The reasons U.S. companies aren't investing in Maine - such as business
>permitting, high taxes and energy rates - are something state policy-makers
>"have to get their hands around" and turn around, Woodcock said.
>
>
>The Legislature's recent request to review NAFTA, he said, was long overdue
>and actually should have been started in 1988, when Canada and the United
>States entered a pre-NAFTA era with the U.S.-Canada Free Trade Agreement.
>That agreement contributed to a "largely permanent alteration of Maine's
>economic terrain," Woodcock said.
>
>
>Not included in the report were the thousands of jobs lost at Great
Northern
>Paper Inc., Kent Inc. in Fort Kent, and Hathaway Shirts in Waterville.
>Increased foreign trade or a company's desire to move production overseas
>were the reasons for the job losses, but the pressures came from countries
>other than NAFTA members Canada and Mexico, according to the report.
>
>
>"During the same time that NAFTA has been implemented, the U.S. and world
>economies have gone through a full business cycle from recovery to boom to
>bust and now back to recovery, the value of the Canadian dollar has dropped
>18 percent, and U.S. trade with China has doubled," Lawton wrote.
>
>
>U.S. Rep. Michael Michaud said all foreign competition, whether from
Canada,
>Mexico or China, is having a negative impact on Maine that isn't measured
in
>the report. He said he believes the unemployment numbers to be "woefully
>inaccurate" because they don't reflect the small businesses dependent on
>manufacturers that had to lay off workers when business slowed or closed
>altogether. Those small businesses, he said, weren't eligible for trade
>adjustment assistance and therefore the federal or state government
wouldn't
>know about them.
>
>
>"I think there are holes in some of the analyses that need to be flushed
>out," Michaud said.
>
>
>For example, Great Northern in the 1980s employed 4,500 people and produced
>75 percent of directory paper sold in the United States. Now, 50 percent of
>the directory paper sold in the United States is imported, Michaud said.
>
>
>The true price of products can be perceived as a double-edged sword under
>NAFTA, according to the report. The trade agreement offers Maine consumers
>and businesses lower prices from lower-cost imports, which frees up
personal
>income for other uses. Yet, the substitution of lower-cost imports from
>Canada and Mexico for U.S. goods reduces jobs and income in Maine, the
>report stated.
>
>
>Michaud said that under NAFTA, consumers actually do not save any money
>because of lower-cost imports. The reduction of good-paying manufacturing
>jobs means less tax revenue into the state and more people dependent on
>state services such as unemployment benefits and health care coverage.
>
>
>"We've got to look at the rippling effect of losing these good-paying
jobs,"
>he said. "Are the [lower-cost imports] really less or a figment of people's
>imaginations?"
>
>
>Michaud has co-sponsored bipartisan legislation to repeal NAFTA, introduced
>legislation to repeal the Trade Promotion Authority Act of 2002, which
>allows the up or down vote in Congress for the passage of a trade agreement
>without any amendments, and signed on to at least seven other measures he
>believes are detrimental to Maine's ability to compete with foreign
>competitors.
>
>
>On the state level, the report suggests that the Legislature:
>
>
>- Establish a working group on the competitive effects of comparable state
>and provincial tax and regulatory policies;
>
>
>- Promote a Maine-Atlantic Canada economic corridor, an effort already
under
>way by Gov. John Baldacci, MITC, Woodcock and others;
>
>
>- Link federal trade adjustment assistance programs to longer-term
education
>in the state's university and college systems, and link the assistance
>programs for firms to other state economic development assistance programs;
>
>
>- Mandate an annual "State of Globalization in Maine" report to be
delivered
>to the Legislature by MITC.
>
>
>
>The report can be found at www.mitc.com.

Jonathan Falk
RR 2, Box 7162
Carmel, ME  04419
(207)848-2433
          

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