The recent cancellation of a partially open to the public Industry Trade Advisory Committee (ITAC) on Small and Minority Business sheds light on the infrequency of ITAC meetings over the past decade, according to infojustice.org, citing the Congressional Research Service (CRS). According to infojustice.org, a blog run the American University Law School, an unspecified congressional office recently requested a compilation of the partially open meetings over that time period. The CRS compilation shows the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative has permitted only 13 partially open ITAC meetings since 2004, and the Small and Minority Business ITAC hosted all but one of those meetings, the blog said.
The U.S. and other Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) participant nations failed to close gaps during multilateral negotiations at the two-day ministerial in Singapore, Malaysia, according to a joint statement. The summit concluded on May 20. The ministers are instructing chief negotiators to meet at some point in July, indicating the participant nations do not aim to conclude negotiations prior to that summit.
U.S. and European Union trade officials convened in Arlington, Va. on May 19 for the first of five days of Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership negotiations. The officials are targeting progress on regulatory coherence, intellectual property rights and labor gaps, according to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR). Negotiators are set to begin work on May 20 on services and investment, technical barriers to trade, agricultural market access and rules of origin chapters, as well, said USTR.
U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) Michael Froman will stay in Singapore until the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) ministerial ends on May 20, the Office of the USTR said in a weekly schedule release. Froman and other USTR officials will then host the 5th round of Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership negotiators from May 19-23 in Arlington, Va.
Asia-Pacific Economic Partnership (APEC) trade ministers directed their respective trade officials to make progress on "single window" systems, Authorized Economic Operator programs and manifest data exchange initiatives, said a May 18 statement . The statement followed the end of an APEC plenary session in Qingdao, China. The ministers also instructed officials to continue work on time release analysis. The U.S. is targeting completion of its single window program by 2016 (see 14051324).
U.S. textile and fabric exports to Colombia have increased by 28 percent to $98 million in the two years since the U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Promotion Agreement took effect, said the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) in a May 15 release. U.S. companies also increased processed goods exports by 93 percent to $834 million through the agreement, it said.
The Obama administration aims to develop over the coming year initiatives to enhance trade and investment with Turkey, said U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) Michael Froman on May 14, noting the skyrocketing Turkish economy. Froman met with Turkish Minister of Economy Nihat Zeybekci, Deputy Prime Minister Ali Babacan and U.S. Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker to host a bilateral Framework for Strategic Economic and Commercial Cooperation. U.S. firms exported more than $12 billion in goods and services to Turkey in fiscal year 2013, representing a three-fold increase from ten years ago, said Froman in a press release.
The U.S. and Pakistan will work together to diversify agricultural production, increase protection for intellectual property rights and implement the World Trade Organization Agreement on Trade Agreement as part of a Joint Action plan announced by officials from both sides on May 13. The plan is established in accordance with the U.S.-Pakistan Trade and Investment Framework Agreement. “Trade with Pakistan supports good-paying jobs in the United States and is a key part of our effort to unlock opportunity for American workers, businesses, farmers, and ranchers. Our trade relationship also provides tremendous benefits to the people of Pakistan as they grow their economy and move into the future,” said U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman in a press release. The U.S. and Pakistan also signed a Memorandum of Understanding aimed at economically empowering Pakistani women, developing female entrepreneurship, and securing economic and business opportunities for women.
The U.S. and European Union should publish the draft Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) chapters on sanitary and phytosanitary and technical barriers to trade, along with the regulatory cooperation and coherence text, said more than 175 environmental groups, unions and other non-governmental organizations in a May 12 letter to U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman and European Union (EU) Commissioner Karel De Gucht. The regulatory changes the agreement will mandate will likely force alterations to both U.S. and EU law, and may include “cost-benefit” and “trade impact” analyses for regulation or legislation, said the organizations.
Assistant U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) for Southeast Asia and the Pacific, Barbara Weisel, traveled to Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam on May 12 for a Trans-Pacific Partnership chief negotiators meeting, the Office of the USTR said in a weekly schedule release. USTR Michael Froman will travel to Beijing, China on May 15 to meet with Chinese government officials. The USTR chief will then travel to Qingdao, China to attend an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) ministerial meeting and participate in a series of additional APEC events from May 16-18. Froman will wrap up the Asia tour with a May 19-20 “check-in” with TPP ministers in Singapore.