Pubdate: 17 May 1999 Source: Washington Report on the Hemisphere (US) Copyright: 1999, Council on Hemispheric Affairs Contact: 1444 I Street, NW, Suite 211 Washington, DC 20005 Fax: (202) 216-9193 Website: http://www.coha.org/ Author: Roy Assanah THE CARIBBEAN'S TANGLED PATH AFTER DEFEAT Since the 1960s prior to political independence from Europe, most Caribbean economies have relied upon primary products, such as bananas, and a sprinkling of services, such as tourism, to provide the hard currency needed to service foreign debts and secure imported necessities. To supplement the area's income, much of the developed world, such as the U.S. with its CBI and Europe through the LOME agreement, offered these dependent nations preferential access to their markets and lucrative aid packages. However, this scenario is clearly at an end as the Caribbean micro-economies ostensibly are too prosperous to qualify for foreign assistance, which has plummeted in recent years due to domestic pressures in both the U.S. and Europe. After a blistering U.S. campaign, the WTO recently ruled that Europe's preferential banana regime violates free trade provisions by providing unjustifiable quotas to such islands as Dominica, St. Lucia and St. Vincent. These events have highlighted the need for the Caribbean to quickly create a global marketplace survival plan, just at a time when U.S. interest in the region seems to be faltering, as evidenced by Madeline AIbright's recent absence at a follow-up meeting with Caribbean foreign ministers on May 13th in St. Kitts. Despite the official U.S. explanation that she was occupied by the crisis in Kosovo, Caribbean officials argue that she was not too preoccupied to find time to see other foreign dignitaries during the time period. They believe her absence has far more to do with their threats to pull the plug on their so-called "ship rider" anti-drug cooperation agreements with the U.S., because of what they consider to be Washington's single-minded advocacy of Chiquita Brand's banana interests before the WTO. According to the meeting's host, St. Kitts Prime Minister Denzil Douglas, AIbright's absence was a severe blow to the Partnership for Prosperity and Security, an agreement signed by President Clinton and Caribbean leaders in Barbados some two years ago. Douglas argues that while the agreement has increased security, the region's economy remains anemic. Caribbean leaders want a firm assistance plan from the U.S. and Europe in the wake of the WTO banana ruling. As the St. Kitts meeting was occurring, the WTO deadline on the EU-U.S. beef trade dispute came to head, leaving Caribbean officials to conclude that their banana defeat was a precursor of a more tangled Transatlantic trade epoch in which they will be losers. PROPOSED REFORM PLANS In St. Kitts, Douglas called for Caribbean leaders to better coordinate their foreign policies in order to play a more pivotal role in the selection of sympathetic heads of the WTO, the OAS, and the Commonwealth, who would be more likely to act on their behalf. Dominica's Prime Minister, Edison James, perhaps has the most to lose from the WTO banana ruling, since his nation's economy earns about 60% of its GNP from the fruit. James recently made a whirlwind tour of European capitals, signing agreements with distributors and chain stores interested in purchasing Caribbean bananas. Some U.S.- Caribbean analysts have argued that, despite the alleged Albright rebuff, the Caribbean should try similar tactics in the U.S. In addition to suffering a nasty banana scenario, Caribbean economies are also bedeviled by the throes of globalization. Barbados Finance Minister Allan Eustius recently said that major players in the region do not want a free market regime and a level playing field as much as they want a managed environment. At a recent preparatory meeting for a UN conference scheduled for the end of September, the region blasted the larger countries and multinational corporations as being the real winners from globalization. At a 1994 conference in Barbados, the international community agreed to a program to attend to the needs of the vulnerable Small Island Developing States (SIDS), such as those in the Caribbean. Local island leaders called for outside help based on their limited economic base, lack of economic diversity, and susceptibility to natural disasters. Another assistance plan came from the Caribbean Development Bank (CDB) and Barbadian Prime Minister, Owen Arthur, who called on the CDB to lead the Caribbean economic reconstruction. The Bank has come up with a 5-year, $1 billion plan to springboard the economies and help deal with poverty. However, the CDB noted that the bank's traditional donors are under siege to be less altruistic, calling for greater savings and reliance upon the region's population. As this discussion was occurring, both Jamaica and Guyana, two of CARICOM's larger nations, were reeling from intense labor unrest and rising crime rates, which could have lasting effects on their debt-laden economies. Roy Assanah (The author is a veteran diplomatic correspondent covering the Caribbean.) - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea