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NPPC, others push for passage of FTAs to spur job growth
Posted March 2, 2010

Pointing out that exports generate 8,000
U.S. jobs for every $1 billion of agricultural goods exported, an ad hoc coalition of food, feed and agricultural entities urged Congress yesterday to promptly pass several pending free trade agreements.
 
Trade deals with Colombia, Panama and South Korea are awaiting congressional approval. Under each pact, many U.S. food and agricultural products would become eligible for duty-free treatment once the agreement is implemented and nearly all would receive duty-free treatment over specified phase-in periods.
 
In a letter signed by 57 companies and organizations, the coalition – led by the National Pork Producers Council – asked lawmakers to “heed the president’s call to aggressively expand market access opportunities, as our competitors are doing.”
 
Congress must act on the pending agreements soon, said the coalition, because other countries are moving forward on a host of trade deals. South Korea, for example, is negotiating or is planning to enter talks on trade agreements with 11 countries, the European Union and blocs representing southeast Asian and South American nations.
 
In addition to adding to the bottom line of producers – U.S. pork producers, for example, would see hog prices rise by $11 a head under the South Korea agreement – the trade pacts would generate thousands of U.S. jobs.
 
According to U.S. Department of Agriculture figures, 2008’s $115.4 billion of U.S. agricultural exports supported 920,000 full-time civilian jobs, including 608,000 non-farm jobs. Those economic benefits, the coalition pointed out, flow not only to rural communities, but also to people working in transportation, processing and at ports.
 
In its letter, the coalition said it “strongly supports” President Obama’s pledge, made in his Jan. 27 State of the Union address, to double U.S. exports within five years as a way to create millions of new jobs.
 
The coalition also expressed concern about legislation (H.R. 3012 and S. 2821) that would require the administration to demand the re-negotiation of all current or pending trade agreements.
 
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