ID | 085187 |
Title Proper | Transnational capital, the US state and latin American trade agreements |
Language | ENG |
Author | Cox, Ronald |
Publication | 2008. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This paper examines the role of US-based transnational corporations in advancing trade, investment, regulatory and intellectual property rights provisions within NAFTA and DR-CAFTA. I explore the linkages between US firms, the US state and investment patterns in Mexico, Central America and the Dominican Republic in order to develop a framework for understanding the political economy of these regional trade agreements. I locate the timing of each of these agreements within the context of the goals of a transnational interest bloc that includes US-based transnational firms, US state officials and regional business interests and state bureaucracies in Latin America, with each trying to utilise regional agreements as a substitute for failed multilateral initiatives as well as a springboard for advancing a more aggressive set of protections for investors within bilateral investment treaties. In order to determine the extent to which transnational firms based in the USA have influenced these trade agreements, I explore three interrelated aspects of business influence: the extent to which transnational firms with investment interests in Mexico and Central America were involved in organisations that had regular access to key US policy makers; the historical development of a transnational interest bloc that has linked US firms and the US state to transnational capital and state bureaucracies in Mexico, Central America and the Dominican Republic; and the extent to which the same group of transnational firms has been attempting without success to advance a policy agenda in the WTO that incorporates many of the provisions of NAFTA and DR-CAFTA. The failure of this transnational interest bloc to effect substantial changes in WTO policies has led the bloc to rely on regional trade agreements to pursue its interests. |
`In' analytical Note | Third World Quarterly Vol. 29, No. 8; 2008: p1527-1544 |
Journal Source | Third World Quarterly Vol. 29, No. 8; 2008: p1527-1544 |
Key Words | Transnational Capital ; Latin American Trade ; U S Trade ; U S - Trade Agreements - Latin America ; Latin America - Trade Agreements - U S ; NAFTA |