Order Code RS21846
Updated April 4, 2005
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Proposed U.S.-Bahrain Free Trade Agreement
Martin A. Weiss
Analyst in International Trade and Finance
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade
Summary
U.S. Trade Representative Robert B. Zoellick signed the U.S.-Bahrain Free Trade
Agreement (FTA) on September 14, 2004. Negotiations with Bahrain, a close U.S.
partner in the Persian Gulf, were concluded on May 27, 2004. Under the agreement, all
bilateral trade in consumer and industrial goods will be duty free and 98% of U.S.
agricultural exports will be duty free. The proposed FTA would also support economic
reform, both within Bahrain, and throughout the Middle East. For an agreement to take
effect, Congress would need to pass implementing legislation. This report will be
updated as events warrant.
Introduction
On September 14, 2004, U.S. Trade Representative Robert B. Zoellick signed a free
trade agreement (FTA) between Bahrain and the United States. Formal negotiations were
launched in Manama, Bahrain on January 26, 2004 and were completed on May 27, 2004.
In accordance with the Trade Act of 2002, the President must notify Congress at least 90
days prior to signing any FTA agreement.
For a U.S.-Bahrain FTA to go into effect, Congress would need to ratify the
agreement and pass implementing legislation. It is expected that the U.S. Congress may
consider implementing legislation shortly.1 A Bahrain FTA would be the third agreement
reached with an Arab country following FTAs with Jordan and Morocco, signed in 2000
and 2004 respectively. This FTA is also an integral part of President Bush’s strategy to
create a Middle East Free Trade Area by 2013.
To date, there has been no significant U.S. opposition to a U.S.-Bahrain FTA. The
FTA is supported by the National Association of Manufacturers, the Bankers’ Association
1 Pejman, Peyman, “U.S. Eyes Bilateral FTAs in Gulf,” Inter-Press News Agency, March 29,
2005
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress
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for Finance and Trade, the Motion Picture Association of America, and PhRMA, the
association of pharmaceutical manufacturers, among other groups.2
Saudi Arabia, a member of the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC),3 has alleged that
GCC countries that sign bilateral trade agreements with the United States violate a GCC
economic agreement that members cannot grant greater trade preferences to non-GCC
countries. According to press reports, Saudi Arabia has threatened imposing a 5% duty
on any U.S. goods that are imported into the GCC and then exported to Saudi Arabia.
According to one source, Saudi Arabia may be concerned that U.S. agricultural products,
especially wheat, may be exported to Saudi Arabia via other GCC countries such as
Bahrain. Bahrain officials have argued that Saudi Arabia has not contested other bilateral
FTAs that Bahrain has signed, and alleges that Saudi Arabia’s complaints are political,
not economic, in nature.4
Some analysts have raised concern that the U.S. government strategy of completing
FTAs with countries such as Bahrain, whose U.S. trade is relatively small, is not
necessarily the best use of USTR’s resources.5 Others argue that the USTR should be
investing more resources into potentially more economically significant agreements such
as the proposed Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). The Administration contends
that its FTA agreements are effective as building blocks to future agreements and
increased political and economic reform.
Why Bahrain?
Many attribute Bahrain’s selection as the first proposed U.S. free trade agreement
in the Persian Gulf to (1) the strong U.S.-Bahrain political military relationship, and (2)
political and economic reform in Bahrain. This FTA is intended to be a building block
for President Bush and Congress’s Middle East free trade initiatives.6
U.S.-Bahrain Political/Military Relationship. Bahrain is a close U.S. partner
in the Persian Gulf. It consists of 35 islands along the Persian Gulf between the east coast
of Saudi Arabia and Qatar along the Persian Gulf. Virtually its entire domestic population
of 667,000 is Muslim (70 % Shi’a / 30% Sunni). It is a constitutional monarchy, ruled
by the al-Khalifa family since 1783.
Bahrain has hosted a U.S. military presence since World War II. It currently hosts
the Fifth Fleet, which is the headquarters for the U.S. Persian Gulf naval forces. The Fifth
Fleet headquarters is a command and administrative facility only; no U.S. warships are
2 Elizabeth Becker, “U.S. and Bahrain Reach a Free Trade Agreement,”New York Times, May
28, 2004.
3 Other GCC members are Bahrain, Oman, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Kuwait, and Qatar
4 “Saudi Arabia Threatens Tariff Hikes in Retaliation for U.S. Middle East FTAs,”Inside U.S.
Trade, January 28, 2005.
5 See General Accounting Office (GAO) Report, GAO-04-233 International Trade, Intensifying
Free Trade Negotiating Agenda Calls for Better Allocation of Staff and Resources, January 2004.
6 See CRS Report RL32335, Middle East Trade Initiatives: S. 1121/H.R. 2267 and the
Administration’s Plan.
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actually based in Bahrain’s ports. In October 2001, Bahrain was designated a Major Non-
NATO Ally (MNNA).7 Bahrain endorsed the U.S. campaign in Afghanistan and deployed
a frigate to support allied operations during Operation Enduring Freedom. While Bahrain
did not endorse the Iraq campaign, King al-Khalifa did not criticize it.
In FY2002, the United States provided $28.5 million in Foreign Military Financing
(FMF) to Bahrain. No FMF was requested for FY2003. Bahrain also receives assistance
under the International Military Education and Training (IMET) program. For FY2004,
$600,000 has been allocated for Bahrain in IMET and close to $25 million in FMF. For
FY2005, the Administration is requesting $650,000 in IMET and $20 million in FMF for
Bahrain.8
Political Reform and the Bahraini Economy. King al-Khalifa, installed in
1999, has pushed for political and economic liberalization. In February 2001, Bahraini
voters approved a referendum on the National Action Charter — the centerpiece of the
King’s political liberalization program. Since then, parliamentary elections have been
held (October 2002), and in December 2002, the first legislative session since 1975 was
held.
Oil was discovered in Bahrain in 1932 by Standard Oil Company of California.
Current production is around 40,000 barrels per day (b/d). The Bahrain National Gas
Company operates a gas liquification plant that utilizes gas piped directly from Bahrain’s
oilfields. Gas reserves should last about 50 years at present rates of consumption.
Revenues from oil and natural gas currently account for 16.5% of GDP and provide about
60% of government income. Among the Cooperation Council of the Arab States of the
Gulf (GCC) — Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab
Emirates — Bahrain has the smallest proven oil reserves. The International Monetary
Fund (IMF) estimates that Bahrain will run out of petroleum in 2018 if pumping continues
at current levels.9 Bahrain and Saudi Arabia share ownership of the Abu Saafa oilfield,
and since 1997, Saudi Arabia has given Bahrain the entire proceeds of the 140,000 b/d
field.
Financial institutions operate in Bahrain, both offshore and onshore,10 without
impediments, and the financial sector is currently the second largest contributor to GDP.
7 MNNA Status does not entail the same mutual defense and security guarantees afforded to
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) members. Title 10 U.S. Code Section 2350a
authorizes the Secretary of Defense, with the concurrence of the Secretary of State, to designate
MNNAs for purposes of participating with the Department of Defense (DOD) in cooperative
research and development programs. Section 517 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (FAA),
as amended, authorizes the President to designate a country as a MNNA after 30-days notification
to Congress, for purposes of the FAA and the Arms Export Control Act (AECA).
8 For more information, see CRS Report 95-1013, Bahrain: Post-Was Issues and U.S. Policy, by
Kenneth Katzman.
9 Ugo Fasano and Zubair Iqbal, GCC Countries: From Oil Dependence to Diversification,
International Monetary Fund, 2003, available at
[http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/med/2003/eng/fasano/]
10 Onshore financing is the provision of financial services to residents, offshore finance is the
provision to non-residents.
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There are no restrictions on capital flows. More than 100 offshore banking units and
representative offices are located in Bahrain, as well as 65 American firms. In the past
two years, Bahrain has passed laws liberalizing foreign property ownership and tightening
its anti-money laundering laws.
U.S. exports to Bahrain totaled $407 million in 2002. Aircraft, miscellaneous
manufactures and agricultural products account for the majority of U.S. exports. In 2002,
the largest categories of U.S. imports from Bahrain were textiles and apparel and refined
petroleum products. Since tariffs between the United States and Bahrain are already low,
the USTR estimates that the proposed FTA will have little effect on U.S. imports from
Bahrain.
As a member of the Arab League, trade between Bahrain and Israel is technically
subject to the Arab boycott. However, in the case of Bahrain, this is not strictly enforced
and of little commercial significance. The Arab League boycott of Israel was raised at a
June 2003 joint press conference by USTR Robert Zoellick and Bahraini Minister of
Finance Abdullah Saif. Both Ambassador Zoellick and Minister Saif stressed that
Bahrain was a member in good standing of the WTO, which does not permit boycotts of
any kind. Nonetheless, neither specifically addressed if Bahrain would officially remove
itself from the boycott.11
Promoting Middle Eastern Economic Reform. In May 2003, President Bush
announced his goal of creating a free trade area of the Middle East by 2013, by
accumulating bilateral agreements with individual countries in the region. A Middle East
Free Trade Area (MEFTA) is an Administration strategy to create a free trade area among
20 Middle Eastern and North African countries and the United States by 2013. Currently,
the United States has signed FTAs with Jordan, Morocco, and Israel. The Morocco
agreement is pending congressional action. The proposed MEFTA plan was announced
by President Bush on May 9, 2003. Later that month, Senators Max Baucus and John
McCain, and Representatives Adam Smith and Cal Dooley introduced legislation (S.
1121/H.R. 2267), to authorize trade preferences to many Middle Eastern countries to act
as a “stepping stone to an FTA.” These preferences would expire in 2011, two years
before President Bush’s target MEFTA completion date of 2013. In 2004, the United
States will push Saudi Arabia to pursue needed economic reforms in order to gain entry
into the WTO.12
The United States also plans to expand its network of trade and investment
framework agreements (TIFAs) and bilateral investment treaties (BITs)13 throughout the
11 In September 1994, Bahrain and the other five Persian Gulf monarchies agreed to stop
enforcing the secondary and tertiary boycotts while retaining the primary (direct) boycott.
12 Saudi WTO Bid on “Faster Track” - USTR Zoellick, Reuters, March 3, 2004.
13 A Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT) is an agreement establishing the terms and conditions for
private investment by nationals and companies of one country in the another. The objective is
to create a legal environment conducive to cross-border investment. For more information on
BITs, see [http://www.ustr.gov/agreements/bit.pdf].
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region.14 The United States now has nine TIFAs in the region, most recently signing
agreements with Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Yemen, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates.
The Road to the Agreement and Key Provisions15
In May 2001, the United States and Bahrain entered into a bilateral investment
treaty, the first BIT between the United States and a Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)
country. In June 2002, the U.S. and Bahrain signed a Trade and Investment Framework
Agreement (TIFA). The TIFA created a joint U.S.-Bahrain council to consider a wide
range of commercial issues and set out basic principles underlying the U.S.-Bahrain trade
and investment relationship. The TIFA established a permanent dialogue with the
expectation of expanding trade and investment between the United States and Bahrain.
The BIT and TIFA set the stage for the May 2003 announcement by the USTR to seek to
negotiate a free trade agreement with Bahrain.
The FTA negotiations included thirteen working groups: Services, Financial
Services, Telecommunications and E-Commerce, Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures
(SPS), Environment, Government Procurement, Legal, Technical Barriers to Trade
(TBT), Customs, Market Access (both industrial and agricultural products), Intellectual
Property Rights (IPR), Textiles, and Labor.
Upon entering into force, the proposed agreement would eliminate tariffs on all
consumer and industrial products. For agricultural products, 98% of U.S. exports to
Bahrain would be immediately duty free, with 10-year phase-outs for the remaining items.
Textiles and apparel trade will be duty free immediately if the product contains either U.S.
or Bahraini yarn. A temporary transitional allowance would allow duty free trade in
products that do not yet meet these standards.
Services. According to the USTR, the proposed agreement would provide U.S.
firms among the highest degree of access to service markets of any U.S. FTA to date.
Key services sectors covered by the Agreement include audiovisual, express delivery,
telecommunications, computer and related services, distribution, healthcare, services
incidental to mining, construction, architecture and engineering. U.S. financial service
suppliers will have the right to establish subsidiaries, branches, and joint ventures in
Bahrain and enjoy the benefits of strong regulatory transparency, including prior notice
and comment and license approval within 120 days. For life and medical insurance,
Bahrain agreed to allow access upon entry into force of the Agreement, and for non-life
insurance will allow access within six months after entry into force of the Agreement.
Bahrain has agreed that in revising its insurance laws and regulations, it will not
discriminate against U.S. insurance suppliers and will allow existing insurance suppliers
to continue current business activities.
The agreement underscores Bahrain’s open and developed financial sector, which
includes both conventional and Islamic financial services. Bahrain will allow U.S.-based
14 Office of the United States Trade Representative, Middle East Trade Initiative: Trade Facts,
June 23, 2003.
15 Office of the United States Trade Representative, “Free Trade With Bahrain: Trade Facts,”May
27, 2004.
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firms to offer services cross-border to Bahrainis in areas such as financial information and
data processing, and financial advisory services. Bahrain will also allow U.S.-based asset
managers (including insurance companies) to manage the portfolios of collective
investment schemes established in Bahrain.
Under the proposed FTA, each government agreed that users of the telecom network
will have reasonable and nondiscriminatory access to the network, preventing local firms
from having preferential or “first right” of access to telecom networks. U.S. phone
companies will have the right to interconnect with former monopoly networks in Bahrain
at nondiscriminatory, cost-based rates, and will be able to build a physical network in
Bahrain with nondiscriminatory access to key facilities, such as telephone switches and
submarine cable landing stations.
Intellectual Property Rights (IPR). The Agreement requires each government
to criminalize end-user piracy, providing strong deterrence against piracy and
counterfeiting. Each government commits to having and maintaining authority to seize,
forfeit, and destroy counterfeit and pirated goods and the equipment used to produce
them. IPR laws will be enforced against goods-in-transit, to deter violators from using
U.S. or Bahraini ports or free-trade zones to traffic in pirated products. Ex officio action
may be taken in border and criminal IPR cases, thus providing more effective
enforcement. The Agreement mandates both statutory and actual damages under Bahraini
law for IPR violations, which will deter piracy. Under these provisions, monetary
damages can be awarded even if actual economic harm (retail value, profits made by
violators) cannot be determined.
According to both countries, the intellectual property chapter does not “affect the
ability of either Party to take necessary measures to protect public health by promoting
access to medicines for all, in particular concerning cases such as HIV/AIDS,
tuberculosis, malaria, and other epidemics as well as circumstances of extreme urgency
or national emergency.” The FTA also expressly states that it will not prevent effective
utilization of the 2003 WTO consensus allowing developing countries that lack
pharmaceutical manufacturing capacity to import drugs under compulsory licenses.16
Workers Rights. According to the Bush Administration, the agreement fully
meets the labor objectives set out by the Congress. Labor obligations are part of the core
text of the Agreement. Each government commits to strive to ensure that its laws provide
for labor standards consistent with internationally recognized labor rights. The
Agreement includes a cooperative mechanism to promote respect for the principles
embodied in the ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work, and
compliance with ILO Convention 182 on the Worst Forms of Child Labor. The labor
ministries, together with other appropriate agencies, agree to establish priorities and
develop specific cooperative activities.
16 Office of the United States Trade Representative,”U.S.-Bahrain FTA: Fact Sheet on Access
to Medicines,” September 14, 2004.