Trade
Facts
Office of the United States Trade
Representative
Washington, DC
February 8, 2004
U.S. Australia Free Trade
Agreement
Brief Summary of the
Agreement
An FTA for America’s Manufacturing
Sector: More than 99 percent of U.S.
manufactured exports to Australia will become duty-free immediately upon entry
into force of the Agreement. This
is the most significant immediate reduction of industrial tariffs ever achieved
in a U.S. FTA, and will provide benefits for America’s manufacturing workers and
companies; U.S. manufacturers estimate that the elimination of tariffs could
result in $2 billion per year in increased U.S. exports of manufactured
goods. There will be significant
benefits for such key U.S.
manufacturing sectors as autos and auto parts; chemicals, plastics and
soda ash; information technology products; electrical equipment and appliances;
non-electrical machinery; fabricated metal products; construction equipment;
paper and wood products; furniture and fixtures; and medical and scientific
equipment.
|
Two-way
annual Goods and
services Trade with Australia
is about $28 billion,
and the U.S. has
a $9 billion trade
surplus with
Australia. Australia is
America’s 9th largest goods
export market. |
New Opportunities for U.S.
Farmers: All U.S. agricultural exports to
Australia, totaling more that $400 million, will receive immediate duty-free
access. Key agricultural products
that will benefit from immediate tariff elimination include processed foods,
soups and bakery products, fruits and vegetables, dried onions, fruit and
vegetable juices, dried plums, potatoes, almonds, tomatoes, cherries, raisins,
olives, fresh grapes, sweet corn, frozen strawberries, and walnuts. Food inspection procedures that have
posed barriers in the past will be addressed, benefiting sectors such as pork,
citrus, apples and stone fruit.
Sensitive to Agricultural
Concerns: The FTA is sensitive to concerns that
have been expressed by Congress and U.S. beef and dairy farmers, and the
agreement uses tariff-rates quotas (TRQ) to respond to these concerns while
increasing trade. Beef: U.S.
above-quota duties will be phased out over an 18-year period, and initial
increased imports from Australia under the TRQ quota will amount to about 0.17%
of annual U.S. beef production, and 1.6% of annual U.S. beef imports. The quota increases will take effect
when U.S. beef exports return to their 2003 (pre-BSE) levels, or three years
after effective date of the agreement, whichever comes first. Safeguards will be available, including
a price-based safe guard after the transition period. Dairy: There will be no change in the U.S. MFN
above-quota tariff on dairy products subject to quotas, and initial increases in
imports from Australia under the TRQ quota will amount to about 0.17% of the
value annual U.S. dairy production, and about 2% of the value of total U.S.
dairy imports.
Access to Services and
Investment: Australia will accord
substantial market access across its entire services regime, offering access in
sectors such as telecommunications, express delivery, computer and related
services, tourism, energy, construction and engineering, financial services,
insurance, audio/visual and entertainment, professional, environmental,
education and training, and other services sectors. In broadcasting and audiovisual
services, the FTA contains important and unprecedented provisions to improve
market access for U.S. films and television programs over a variety of media
including cable, satellite, and the Internet. Most U.S. investments would be exempted
from screening by the Australian Foreign Investment Review
Board.
Recognizing the Importance of
innovative Pharmaceuticals:
The U.S. and Australia note the
importance of ongoing research and development; of recognizing and appropriately
valuing the therapeutic benefit of innovative drugs; and of transparent,
expeditious, and accountable procedures.
In implementing these principles, Australia will make a number of
improvements in its Pharmaceuticals Benefits Scheme (PBS) procedures that will
enhance transparency and accountability in the operation of the PBS, including
establishment of an independent process to review determinations of product
listings. The FTA establishes a
Medicines Working Group to further promote the agreement’s public health
principles through an ongoing dialogue between the United States and
Australia. In addition, the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration and the Australia Therapeutic Goods Administration
will work together to make innovative medical products available more
quickly.
Open and Fair Government
Procurement: U.S. suppliers are granted
non-discriminatory rights to bid on contracts from 80 Australian central
government entities, including key ministries and government enterprises. These commitments are particularly
significant and commercially important, because Australia is one of the only
developed countries that is not a party to the WTO Agreement on Government
Procurement. Both countries are
also committed to extending coverage of the agreement to sub-central entities,
and will be working with their respective states to refine the extent of the
coverage in the next few weeks.
Australia will eliminate its central government industry development
programs, under which suppliers have had to provide various types of offsets as
a condition of their contracts.
A Trade Agreement for the Digital
Age: U.S. and Australian authors, performers,
inventors, and other producers of creative material will benefit from the higher
and extended standards the FTA requires for protecting intellectual property
rights such as copyrights, patents, trademarks, and trade secrets and enhanced
means for enforcing those rights.
The agreement calls for each government to adopt state-of-the-art
protection for digital products such as software, music, text, and videos, and
encourages adoption of measures to promote trade through electronic
commerce.
Strong Protections for Worker
Rights and the Environment: Ensures effective enforcement of labor
and environment laws and establishes labor and environmental cooperative
mechanisms.
Increased
Transparency: The agreement’s dispute settlement
mechanisms call for open public hearings, public access to documents, and the
opportunity for third parties to submit views. Transparency in customs operations will
aid express delivery shipments and will require open and public processes for
customs rulings and administration.