The U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement: Background and Issues

March 28, 2018 (RL34470)
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Summary

The U.S.-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement entered into force on May 15, 2012. It is a comprehensive free trade agreement (FTA) between the United States and Colombia, which will eventually eliminate tariffs and other barriers in bilateral trade in goods and services. On October 3, 2011, during the 112th Congress, President Barack Obama submitted draft legislation (H.R. 3078/S. 1641) that was introduced by request in both houses of Congress to implement the agreement. On October 12, 2011, the House passed H.R. 3078 (262-167) and sent it to the Senate. The Senate passed the implementing legislation (66-33) on the same day. The agreement was signed by both countries almost five years earlier, on November 22, 2006. The Colombian Congress approved it in June 2007 and again in October 2007, after it was modified to include new provisions agreed to in the May 10, 2007, bipartisan understanding between congressional leadership and President George W. Bush.

The United States is Colombia's leading trade partner. Colombia accounts for a very small percentage of U.S. trade (approximately 1%), ranking 22nd among U.S. export markets and 27th among foreign exporters to the United States in 2017. Because the FTA has been in effect for only five and a half years, the economic effects of the agreement are not yet clear. Some economic studies estimated that, upon full implementation, the impact on the United States would likely be positive but very small due to the small size of the Colombian economy.

The congressional debate surrounding the US-Colombia FTA mostly centered on violence, labor, and human rights issues in Colombia. Numerous Members of Congress opposed passage of the agreement because of concerns about alleged targeted violence against union members in Colombia, inadequate efforts to bring perpetrators to justice, and weak protection of worker rights. However, other Members of Congress supported the FTA and took issue with these charges, stating that Colombia had made great progress over the last 10 years to curb violence and enhance security. They also argued that U.S. exporters were losing market share of the Colombian market and that the agreement would further open the Colombian market for U.S. goods and services.

To address the concerns related to labor rights and violence in Colombia, the United States and Colombia agreed upon an "Action Plan Related to Labor Rights" that included specific and concrete steps to be taken by the Colombian government with specific timelines. It included numerous commitments to protect union members, end impunity, and improve worker rights. The Colombian government submitted documents to the United States in time to meet various target dates listed in the Action Plan.

The U.S. business community generally supports the FTA with Colombia because it contends that FTAs help increase U.S. exports. At the time of the debate, U.S. exporters urged policymakers to move forward with the agreement, arguing that the United States was losing market share of the Colombian market, especially in agriculture, as Colombia entered into FTAs with other countries. Colombia's FTA with Canada, which was implemented on August 15, 2011, was of particular concern for U.S. agricultural producers. Critics of the agreement expressed concerns about violence against union members and the lack of protection of worker rights in Colombia, especially in labor cooperatives. Labor unions in general remain highly opposed to the agreement. They argue that Colombia's labor movement is under attack through violence, intimidation, and harassment, as well as legal challenges.


The U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement: Background and Issues

Introduction

The U.S.-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement entered into force on May 15, 2012. It is a comprehensive free trade agreement (FTA) between the United States and Colombia that eventually will eliminate tariffs and other barriers in bilateral trade in goods and services. During the 112th Congress, President Obama submitted the draft legislation on October 3, 2011 that was then introduced by request in both houses of Congress (H.R. 3078/S. 1641) to implement the U.S.-Colombia FTA. On October 12, 2011, the House passed H.R. 3078 (262-167) and sent it to the Senate. The Senate passed the legislation (66-33) on the same day. The President signed the legislation into law on October 21, 2011 (P.L. 112-42). The FTA entered into force after several months of work by both governments to review each other's laws and regulations related to implementation of the agreement, in addition to Colombia's efforts to fulfill its set of commitments under the Action Plan Related to Labor Rights.1

The U.S.-Colombia FTA negotiations grew out of a regional effort in 2004 to produce a U.S.-Andean free trade agreement between the United States and the Andean countries of Colombia, Peru, and Ecuador. After negotiators failed to reach an agreement, Colombia continued negotiations with the United States for a bilateral FTA. On February 27, 2006, the United States and Colombia concluded the U.S.-Colombia FTA, and finalized the text of the agreement on July 8, 2006. On August 24, 2006, President Bush notified Congress of his intention to sign the U.S.-Colombia FTA. The two countries signed the agreement on November 22, 2006. The Colombian Congress approved the agreement in June 2007 and again in October 2007, after the agreement was modified to include new labor and environmental provisions.

Rationale for the Agreement

Since the 1990s, the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean have been a focus of U.S. trade policy as demonstrated by the passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), the U.S.-Chile Free Trade Agreement, the Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR), and the U.S.-Peru Trade Promotion Agreement. After 2004, U.S. trade policy in the Western Hemisphere focused on completing trade negotiations with Colombia, Peru, and Panama and on gaining passage of these free trade agreements by the U.S. Congress. The U.S.-Peru FTA was approved by Congress and signed into law in December 2007 (P.L. 110-138). The U.S.-Panama FTA was approved by Congress shortly after the U.S.-Colombia FTA on October 12, 2011, and signed into law on October 21, 2011 (P.L. 112-43). It went into effect on October 31, 2012.

The major expectation among proponents of the free trade agreement with Colombia, as with other trade agreements, is that it provides economic benefits for both the United States and Colombia as trade expands between the two countries. Another expectation among proponents is that it helps improve investor confidence and increase foreign direct investment in Colombia, which may bring more economic stability. For Colombia, a free trade agreement with the United States has been part of the country's overall development strategy and efforts to promote economic growth and stability.

Colombian Tariffs on Goods from the United States

Before the U.S.-Colombia FTA entered into force, the U.S. average tariff on Colombian goods was 3%, while Colombia's average tariff on U.S. goods was 12.5%. Prior to the agreement, about 90% of U.S. imports from Colombia came into the country duty-free under trade preference programs or through normal trade relations. Most of Colombia's duties on U.S. exports were consolidated into three tariff levels: 0% to 5% on capital goods, industrial goods, and raw materials not produced in Colombia; 10% on manufactured goods, with some exceptions; and 15% to 20% on consumer and "sensitive" goods. Exceptions included automobiles, which were subject to a 35% duty; beef and rice, which were subject to an 80% duty; and milk and cream, which were subject to a 98% duty through August 11, 2010.2

Table 1. Colombian Tariff Rates on U.S. Products before the U.S.-Colombia FTA Entered into Force

Tariff Base Rate (%)

Number of Tariff Lines

% of Total Tariff Lines

0

173

2.5

> 0 to 5

2,083

30.2

> 5 to 10

1,225

17.7

> 10 to 20

3,282

47.5

> 20 to 35

97

1.4

> 35

46

0.7

Total

6,906

100.0

Source: U.S.-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement, Colombia Tariff Schedule, reported by United States International Trade Commission (USITC), U.S.-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement: Potential Economy-wide and Selected Sectoral Effects, Investigation No. TA-2104-023, USITC Publication 3896, December 2006. Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement, Colombia Tariff Schedule.

Notes: Does not include tariff lines with base rate value of blanks. Total of 6,906 tariff lines includes 5,986 industrial and textile tariff lines and 920 agricultural tariff lines.

Table 1 provides a summary of Colombian tariffs on goods coming from the United States before the free trade agreement entered into force. Other agricultural products fell under the Andean Price Band System (APBS), a system in which Colombia applied a variable levy on imports by increasing tariffs when world prices fall, and lowering tariffs when world prices rise.3 The APBS included 14 U.S. product groups and covered more than 150 tariff lines. The system resulted in high duties, sometimes exceeding 100%, on certain U.S. exports to Colombia, including corn, wheat, rice, soybeans, pork, poultry parts, cheeses, and powdered milk. However, upon entry into force of the U.S.-Colombia FTA, Colombia stopped imposing variable tariffs on U.S. agricultural exports.4

Review of the U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement

The comprehensive free trade agreement was reached after numerous rounds of negotiations over a period of nearly two years. Some issues that took longer to resolve were related to agriculture. Colombia had been seeking lenient agriculture provisions in the agreement, arguing that the effects of liberalization on rural regions could have adverse effects on smaller farmers and drive them to coca production. The United States agreed to give more sensitive sectors longer phase-out periods to allow Colombia more time to adjust to trade liberalization. Sectors receiving the longest phase-out periods include poultry and rice.

Key Provisions5

This section summarizes several key provisions in the original agreement text as provided by the United States Trade Representative (USTR), unless otherwise noted.6

Market Access

Upon entry into force, the agreement eliminated 80% of duties on U.S. exports of consumer and industrial products to Colombia. An additional 7% of U.S. exports received duty-free treatment after the five-year mark (2017), and most remaining tariffs are to be eliminated within 10 years after entry into force.

Tariff Elimination and Phase-Outs

Upon entry into force, the U.S.-Colombia FTA eliminated most tariffs immediately and is to phase out the remaining tariffs over periods of up to 19 years. Tariff elimination for major sectors includes the following:

Agricultural Provisions

Prior to the FTA entering into force, Colombia applied some tariff protection on all agricultural products. The trade agreement provided immediate duty-free access on 77% of all agricultural tariff lines. Colombia will eliminate most other tariffs on agricultural products within 15 years, by 2027.11 U.S. farm exports to Colombia that received immediate duty-free treatment include high-quality beef, cotton, wheat, soybeans, soybean meal, apples, pears, peaches, cherries, and many processed food products including frozen french fries and cookies. U.S. farm products that have received improved market access include pork, beef, corn, poultry, rice, fruits and vegetables, processed products, and dairy products. The agreement also provides duty-free tariff rate quotas on standard beef, chicken leg quarters, dairy products, corn, sorghum, animal feeds, rice, and soybean oil.12

The FTA removed Colombia's price band system on U.S. products upon the agreement's entry into force. However, if the rates under the price band system result in a lower rate than that given under the FTA, the United States will be allowed to sell the product to Colombia at the lower rates.13

Information Technology

Under the agreement, Colombia agreed to join the World Trade Organization's Information Technology Agreement (ITA), and remove its tariff and non-tariff barriers to information technology products. Colombia agreed to allow trade in remanufactured goods, which increases export and investment opportunities for U.S. businesses involved in remanufactured products such as machinery, computers, cellular telephones, and other services.

Textiles and Apparel

In textiles and apparel, products that meet the agreement's rules of origin requirements received duty-free and quota-free treatment immediately upon entry into force. The United States and Colombia have cooperation commitments under the agreement that allow for verification of claims of origin or preferential treatment, and denial of preferential treatment or entry if the claims cannot be verified. The rules of origin requirements are generally based on the yarn-forward standard to encourage production and economic integration. A "de minimis" provision allows limited amounts of specified third-country content to go into U.S. and Colombian apparel to provide producers in both countries flexibility. A special textile safeguard provides for temporary tariff relief if imports prove to be damaging to domestic producers.

Government Procurement

In government procurement contracts, the two countries agreed to grant non-discriminatory rights to bid on government contracts. These provisions cover the purchases of Colombia's ministries and departments, as well as its legislature and courts. U.S. companies are assured access to the purchases of a number of Colombia's government enterprises, including its oil company.

Services

In services trade, the two countries agreed to market access in most services sectors, with very few exceptions. Colombia agreed to exceed commitments made in the WTO and to remove significant services and investment barriers, such as requirements that U.S. firms hire nationals rather than U.S. citizens to provide professional services. Colombia also agreed to eliminate requirements to establish a branch in order to provide a service and unfair penalties imposed on U.S. companies for terminating their relationships with local commercial agents. U.S. financial service suppliers have full rights to establish subsidiaries or branches for banks and insurance companies. Portfolio managers are allowed to provide portfolio management services to both mutual funds and pension funds in the partner country, including to funds that manage privatized social security accounts.

Investment

Investment provisions are designed to help establish a stable legal framework for foreign investors from the partner country. All forms of investment are protected, including enterprises, debt, concessions and similar contracts, and intellectual property. U.S. investors are treated as Colombian investors with very few exceptions. U.S. investors in Colombia have substantive and procedural protections that foreign investors have under the U.S. legal system, including due process protections and the right to receive fair market value for property in the event of an expropriation. Protections for U.S. investments are backed by a transparent, binding international arbitration mechanism. In the preamble of the agreement, the United States and Colombia agreed that foreign investors would not be accorded greater substantive rights with respect to investment protections than domestic investors under domestic law.14

IPR Protection

The agreement provides intellectual property rights (IPR) protections for U.S. and Colombian companies. In all categories of IPR, U.S. companies are to be treated no less favorably than Colombian companies. In trademark protection, the agreement requires the two countries to have a system for resolving disputes about trademarks used in internet domain names; to develop an on-line system for the registration and maintenance of trademarks and have a searchable database; and to have transparent procedures for trademark registration.

In protection of copyrighted works, the agreement has a number of provisions for protection of copyrighted works in a digital economy, including provisions that copyright owners will maintain rights over temporary copies of their works on computers. Other agreement provisions include rights for copyright owners for making their work available on-line; extended terms of protection for copyrighted works; requirements for governments to use only legitimate computer software; rules on encrypted satellite signals to prevent piracy of satellite television programming; and rules for the liability of Internet service providers for copyright infringement.

In protection of patents and trade secrets, the U.S.-Colombia FTA limits the grounds on which a country could revoke a patent, thus protecting against arbitrary revocation. In protection of test data and trade secrets, the agreement protects products against unfair commercial use for a period of 5 years for pharmaceuticals and 10 years for agricultural chemicals. In addition, the agreement requires the establishment of procedures to prevent marketing of pharmaceutical products that infringe patents, and provides protection for newly developed plant varieties. The parties expressed their understanding that the intellectual property chapter would not prevent either party from taking measures to protect public health by promoting access to medicines for all.

On music and motion picture property piracy, the agreement's IPR provisions include penalties for piracy and counterfeiting and criminalize end-user piracy. It requires the parties to authorize the seizure, forfeiture, and destruction of counterfeit and pirated goods and the equipment used to produce them. The agreement mandates both statutory and actual damages for copyright infringement and trademark piracy. This is to ensure that monetary damages could be awarded even if a monetary value to the violation is difficult to assess.

Customs Procedures and Rules of Origin

The agreement includes comprehensive rules of origin provisions to ensure that only U.S. and Colombian goods benefit from the agreement. The agreement also includes customs procedures provisions, including requirements for transparency and efficiency, procedural certainty and fairness, information sharing, and special procedures for the release of express delivery shipments.

Labor Provisions

The labor and worker rights obligations are included in the core text of the agreement. The United States and Colombia reaffirmed their obligations as members of the International Labor Organization (ILO). The two countries agreed to adopt, maintain and enforce laws that incorporate core internationally recognized labor rights, as stated in the 1998 ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work, including a prohibition on the worst forms of child labor. The parties also agreed to enforce labor laws with acceptable conditions of work, hours of work, and occupational safety and health. All obligations of the labor chapter are subject to the same dispute settlement procedures and enforcement mechanisms as other chapters of the agreement.

The agreement includes procedural guarantees to ensure that workers and employers have fair, equitable, and transparent access to labor tribunals or courts. It has a labor cooperation and capacity building mechanism to pursue bilateral or regional cooperation activities, which may include the principles embodied in the 1998 ILO Declaration and activities to promote compliance with ILO Convention 182 on the Worst Forms of Child Labor. The United States and Colombia agreed to cooperate on activities on laws and practices related to ILO labor standards; the ILO convention on the worst forms of child labor; methods to improve labor administration and enforcement of labor laws; social dialogue and alternative dispute resolution; occupational safety and health compliance; and mechanisms and best practices on protecting the rights of migrant workers.

Environmental Provisions

The environmental obligations are included in the core text of the agreement. The agreement requires the United States and Colombia to effectively enforce their own domestic environmental laws and to adopt, maintain, and implement laws and all other measures to fulfill obligations under covered multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs). Both countries committed to pursue high levels of environmental protection and to not derogate from environmental laws in a manner that will weaken or reduce protections. The agreement includes procedural guarantees to ensure fair, equitable, and transparent proceedings for the administration and enforcement of environmental laws. In addition, the agreement includes provisions to help promote voluntary, market-based mechanisms to protect the environment and to ensure that views of civil society are appropriately considered through a public submissions process. All obligations in the environmental chapter of the agreement are subject to the same dispute settlement procedures and enforcement mechanisms as obligations in other chapters of the agreement.

Dispute Settlement

The core obligations of the agreement, including labor and environmental provisions, are subject to dispute settlement provisions. The agreement's provisions on dispute panel proceedings include language to help promote openness and transparency through open public hearings; public release of legal submissions by parties; and opportunities for interested third parties to submit views. The provisions require the parties to make every attempt, through cooperation and consultations, to arrive at a mutually satisfactory resolution of a dispute. If the parties are unable to settle the dispute through consultations, the complaining party will have the right to request an independent arbitral panel to help resolve the dispute. Possible outcomes could include monetary penalties or a suspension of trade benefits.

Labor and Environmental Provisions after May 10, 2007, Bipartisan Trade Framework

In early 2007, some Members of Congress indicated that some of the provisions in pending U.S. FTAs would have to be strengthened to gain their approval, particularly relating to core labor standards. After several months of negotiation, bipartisan congressional leadership and the Bush Administration reached an understanding on May 10, 2007, on a new bipartisan trade framework that calls for the inclusion of internationally recognized labor rights and environmental provisions in the text of pending free trade agreements. On June 28, 2007, the United States reached an agreement with Colombia on legally binding amendments to the U.S.-Colombia FTA on labor, the environment, and other matters to reflect the bipartisan understanding of May 10.

The amendments to the FTA are similar to the amendments that were made to the U.S.-Peru free trade agreement, which was approved by Congress in December 2008. Some of the key amendments include obligations related to five basic ILO labor rights, multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs), and pharmaceutical intellectual property rights (IPR). These provisions would be enforceable through the FTA's dispute settlement mechanism. On October 30, 2007, the Colombian Senate approved the labor and environmental amendments to the U.S.-Colombia FTA, marking the end of the approval process for the agreement in Colombia.15

Basic Labor Provisions

After the bipartisan agreement, the Administration reached an agreement with Colombia to amend the FTA to require the parties to "adopt, maintain and enforce in their own laws and in practice" the five basic internationally recognized labor principles, as stated in the 1998 ILO Declaration. The amendments to the agreement strengthened the earlier labor provisions which only required the signatories to strive to ensure that their domestic laws would provide for labor standards consistent with internationally recognized labor principles.

The amendments that resulted from the bipartisan trade framework were intended to enhance the protection and promotion of worker rights by including enforceable ILO core labor principles in the agreement. These include (1) freedom of association; (2) the effective recognition of the right to collective bargaining; (3) the elimination of all forms of forced or compulsory labor; (4) the effective abolition of child labor and a prohibition on the worst forms of child labor; and (5) the elimination of discrimination in respect of employment and occupation. These obligations would refer only to the 1998 ILO Declaration on the Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work. Another change to the agreement relates to labor law enforcement. A decision made by a signatory on the distribution of enforcement resources would not be a reason for not complying with the labor provisions. Under the amended provisions, parties would not be allowed to derogate from labor obligations in a manner affecting trade or investment. Labor obligations would be subject to the same dispute settlement, same enforcement mechanisms, and same criteria for selection of enforcement mechanisms as all other obligations in the agreement.

Other Provisions

Other amendments to the FTA include provisions on intellectual property, government procurement, and port security. On intellectual property rights (IPR) protection, some Members of Congress were concerned that the original commitments would have impeded the entry of generic medicines to treat AIDS or other infectious diseases. The amended agreement was a way of trying to find a balance between the need for IPR protection for pharmaceutical companies to foster innovation and the desire for promoting access to generic medicines to all segments of the population. The amended text of the agreement maintains the five years of data exclusivity for test data related to pharmaceuticals. However, if Colombia relies on U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of a given drug, and meets certain conditions for expeditious approval of that drug in Colombia, the data exclusivity period would expire at the same time that the exclusivity expired in the United States. This could allow generic medicines to enter more quickly into the market in Colombia.

In government procurement, the amended provisions allow U.S. state and federal governments to condition government contracts on the adherence to the core labor laws in the country where the good is produced or the service is performed. Government agencies also will be allowed to include environmental protection requirements in their procurements. Concerning port security, an added provision ensures that if a foreign-owned company were to provide services at a U.S. port that would raise national security concerns, the agreement would not be an impediment for U.S. authorities in taking actions to address those concerns.16

Labor Affairs Council

The Labor Affairs Council (Council) of the U.S.-Colombia FTA convened its first meeting on June 4-5, 2013, in Washington, DC.17 Pursuant to Article 17.5 of the FTA, the Council is responsible for overseeing the implementation of the labor chapter, including reviewing each party's progress under the chapter. The Council is comprised of senior officials from labor ministries and other appropriate agencies. During the meeting, the Council, which includes the U.S. Secretary of Labor and Colombia's Minister of Labor, reaffirmed the parties' commitments under the labor chapter, such as the commitment to adopt and maintain in law and practice the rights as stated in the ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work. The Council further clarified the domestic mechanisms, institutions, and procedures that each party has established to advance the fulfillment of the FTA's labor provisions. Other topics addressed during the meeting include the following: the vision of Colombia's new Ministry of Labor; activities to strengthen institutional capacity and labor law enforcement and compliance in Colombia; and areas of particular concern regarding the implementation of the labor chapter. The Council recognized the significant progress that Colombia has made while recognizing that certain challenges remain.18 Article 17.5 of the FTA indicates that Council can meet as often as is considered necessary; however, the Council has not convened since June 2013.

U.S.-Colombia Trade Relations

With a population of 49 million people, Colombia is the third-most populous country in Latin America, after Brazil and Mexico. Colombia's economy, the fourth-largest economy in Latin America, after Brazil, Mexico, and Argentina, is small when compared to the U.S. economy. Colombia's gross domestic product (GDP) in 2017 in purchasing power parity (PPP) basis19 was estimated at $714 billion, or about 3.7% of U.S. GDP of $19.4 trillion in 2017 (see Table 2). Colombia's exports of goods and services were equal to 14% of its GDP in 2017, compared to 12% for the United States. Colombia's imports of goods and services equaled 19% of its GDP in 2017, compared to 15% for the United States.

The United States is Colombia's dominant trading partner in both imports and exports. Changes in Colombia's market in the past 13 years, however, have resulted in gradual reductions in overall trade with the United States. Colombia has regional trade agreements with most countries in Latin America, including the Central America Northern Triangle (Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador); Mexico; Mercosur (Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay); and Chile. An FTA with Canada, approved by both countries in 2010, entered into force on August 15, 2011. Colombia signed an FTA with the European Union, which entered into force in August 2013, and recently saw its trade agreement with South Korea enter into force in July 2016. In addition, Colombia is one of four countries comprising the Pacific Alliance, an evolving regional trade integration arrangement that also includes Chile, Mexico, and Peru.20 In February 2014, the presidents of all four countries signed a protocol to eliminate tariffs on 92% of goods traded within the Alliance; the outstanding 8% of items with tariffs remaining are in the agricultural sector and will be phased out over a period of 17 years. The United States has observer status within the Alliance.21

Table 2. Key Economic Indicators for Colombia and the United States

 

Colombia

United States

 

2007

2017

2007

2017

Population (millions)

44

49

302

327

Nominal GDP ($ billions)a

207

316

14,478

19,374

GDP, PPPa Basis ($ billions)a

431

714

14,478

19,374

Per Capita GDP ($)

4,675

6,439

48,006

59,342

Per Capita GDP in $PPPb

9,711

14,550

48,006

59,340

Exports of goods and services ($ billions)

34

46

1,665

2,370

Exports as % of GDPb

17%

14%

12%

12%

Imports of goods and services ($ billions)

41

61

2,383

2,945

Imports as % of GDPb

20%

19%

17%

15%

Source: Compiled by CRS based on data from the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) on-line database. 2017 amounts are estimates. Figures are rounded to nearest whole number.

Notes:

a. Nominal GDP is calculated by EIU based on figures from World Bank and World Development Indicators. PPP refers to purchasing power parity, which attempts to factor in price differences across countries when estimating the size of a foreign economy in U.S. dollars.

b. Exports and Imports as percentage of GDP are derived by the EIU and include trade in both goods and services.

U.S.-Colombia Merchandise Trade

Colombia accounts for a very small percentage of U.S. total trade (about 1% in 2017). In 2017, Colombia ranked 22nd among U.S. export markets and 27th among foreign exporters to the United States. U.S. merchandise exports to Colombia totaled $13.3 billion in 2017, while U.S. imports totaled $13.4 billion. As shown in Table 3, the dominant U.S. import category from Colombia in 2017 was crude oil and gas (43.1% of total imports from Colombia), followed by gold, coffee, non-crude petroleum oil products, and fresh-cut flowers. The leading U.S. export categories to Colombia were non-crude petroleum products (15.9% of total exports to Colombia), corn, telephone sets, automatic data processing machines, and halogenated derivatives of hydrocarbons.

U.S. exports to Colombia increased in 2017 to $13.3 billion, from $13.1 billion in 2016, but did not outperform the 2015 figure of $16.3 billion. In 2009, exports to Colombia decreased to $9.5 billion from $11.4 billion in 2008, following international trends in global trade after the financial crisis. Between 2003 and 2008, U.S. exports to Colombia increased from $3.8 billion to $11.4 billion. In 2009, exports dropped to 9.5 billion, but steadily increased through 2014 before dropping to $16.3 billion in 2015 (see Figure 1). In 2017, U.S. imports from Colombia decreased to $13.4 billion, down from $13.8 billion in 2016. Between 2014 and 2016, imports decreased from $17.2 billion in 2014 to $13.9 billion in 2015 and $13.8 billion in 2016. In the four-year period leading to 2013, imports had been increasing steadily, from $11.2 billion in 2009 to $24.6 billion in 2012, as shown in Figure 1.

Table 3. U.S. Merchandise Trade with Colombia in 2017

U.S. Exports

U.S. Imports

Leading Items
(HTS 4 Digit Level)

$ Millions

Share

Leading Items
(HTS 4 Digit Level)

$ Millions

Share

Petroleum oil products (other than crude)

2,111.2

15.9%

Crude petroleum oil

5,781.4

43.1%

Corn

786

5.9%

Gold

1,208.2

9%

Telephone sets (including wireless)

450

3.4%

Coffee

1,304.1

9.7%

Automatic data processing machines

339

2.6%

Petroleum oil products (other than crude)

915.7

6.8%

Halogenated derivatives of hydrocarbons

276.2

2.1%

Cut flowers

699.3

5.2%

All other

9,310

70.1%

All other

3,514.4

26.2%

Total exports

13,272.4

Total imports

13,423.1

Source: Compiled by CRS using USITC Interactive Tariff and Trade DataWeb at http://dataweb.usitc.gov.

Figure 1. U.S. Merchandise Trade with Colombia: 1996-2017

(Billions of dollars)

Source: Compiled by CRS using USITC Interactive Tariff and Trade DataWeb at http://dataweb.usitc.gov.

U.S. Colombia Services Trade

Trade in services with Colombia totaled $9.2 billion in 2016 (latest data available). U.S. services exports to Colombia totaled $6.2 billion, and services imports totaled $3.0 billion. The U.S. services trade surplus with Colombia was $3.2 billion in 2016. As shown in Table 4, the dominant U.S. services import category from Colombia in 2016 was travel (39% of total services imports from Colombia) followed by air transport, miscellaneous business services, and telecommunications, computers, and information services. The leading U.S. services export categories to Colombia were travel (42% of total exports to Colombia), air and sea transport, telecommunications, computer, and information services, and charges for the use of intellectual property.

U.S. services exports to Colombia decreased in 2016 to $6.2 billion, from $6.4 billion in 2015. In 2014, U.S. services exports to Colombia peaked at $6.7 billion, but have since declined (see Figure 2). In 2016, U.S. services imports from Colombia decreased to $3.2 billion, down from $3.3 billion in 2015. Between years 2013 and 2015, services imports increased from $2.3 billion in 2013, to 2.8 billion in 2014 and to $3.3 billion in 2015.

Table 4. U.S. Services Trade with Colombia in 2016

U.S. Exports

U.S. Imports

Leading Items

$ Millions

Share

Leading Items

$ Millions

Share

Travel (for all purposes including education)

2,634

42%

Travel (for all purposes including education)

1,185

39%

Air and Sea Transport

990

16%

Air Transport

1,150

38%

Telecommunications, computer, and information services

616

10%

Other Business Services

279

9%

Charges for the use of intellectual property

562

9%

Charges for the use of intellectual property

155

5%

Financial services

407

7%

Telecommunications, computer, and information services

94

3%

All other

1,002

16%

All other

146

5%

Total exports

6,211

Total imports

3,009

Source: Compiled by CRS using U.S. Department of Commerce Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA)

Notes: The table above was created using the 2017 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) from the Office of Management and Budget's (OMB. Not all items listed correspond to a specific NAICS code, as some service items were combined under larger categories to allow for comparison.

Figure 2. U.S. Services Trade with Colombia: 2013-2016

Source: Compiled by CRS using U.S. Department of Commerce Bureau of Economic Analysis, International Economic Accounts at https://www.bea.gov.

Notes: Graph shows all available data.

U.S. Foreign Direct Investment in Colombia

U.S. foreign direct investment in Colombia on a historical-cost basis totaled $6.2 billion in 2016, down from $7.1 billion in 2014 and $6.5 billion in 2015. In 2016, the largest amount was in mining, which accounted for 37%, or $2.3 billion, of total U.S. FDI in Colombia. The second-largest amount, $1.16 billion (19% of total), was in manufacturing, followed by $970 million in finance and insurance (16% of total). The U.S.-Colombia FTA is expected to improve investor confidence in Colombia and increase foreign investment from the United States and from other countries. The stock of U.S. FDI in Colombia decreased by 8% in 2015 and 5% in 2016 (see Figure 3).

Figure 3. U.S. Foreign Direct Investment in Colombia

Historical-cost Basis

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, International Economic Accounts.

FTA Potential Economic Impact

Upon full implementation, the U.S.-Colombia FTA will likely have a small, but positive, net economic effect on the United States. However, there will likely be some adjustment costs, especially in Colombia as industries adapt to the lower trade barriers on U.S. exports to Colombia. The net overall effect on the United States is expected to be minimal because Colombia's economy is very small when compared to the U.S. economy and the value of the U.S. trade with Colombia is a very small percentage of overall U.S. trade. Most of the economy-wide trade effects of trade liberalization from the FTA will likely arise from Colombia's removal of tariff barriers and other trade restrictions. Approximately 90% of U.S. imports from Colombia entered the United States duty-free before the agreement entered into force, either unconditionally or under the ATPA or other U.S. provisions; hence, the marginal effects of the FTA on the U.S. economy likely will not be significant.

USITC Study Findings on Economic Impact

A 2006 study by the United States International Trade Commission (USITC) assessed the potential effects of a U.S.-Colombia FTA on the U.S. economy. The study found that, in general, the primary impact of an FTA with Colombia would be increased U.S. exports to Colombia as a result of enhanced U.S. access to the Colombian market.22 Major findings of the USITC study on the likely effects of a U.S.-Colombia FTA on the U.S. economy, should the agreement be fully implemented, include the following:23

The USITC reviewed seven studies that it found on the probable economic effects of a U.S.-Colombia FTA.24 The results of the studies reviewed by USITC varied. One study found that U.S. exports to Colombia would increase by 2.4% to 8.3%, while another study assessed that the expected increase would be 44%. Two studies found that the largest increases in U.S. exports would be in agriculture products, metal and wood, and food products. In assessing the impact on U.S. imports from Colombia, the results of the studies also varied. One study found that U.S. imports from Colombia would increase by 2.0% to 6.2%, while another found that U.S. imports would increase by 37%. The largest increases would be in apparel and leather goods, textile products, and metal and wood. The studies also assessed that an FTA would result in small overall welfare gains for both the United States and Colombia and a positive impact on the U.S. agricultural sector despite an increase in U.S. sugar imports.25

The nongovernmental Institute for International Economics (IIE)26 did a study in 2006 assessing the possible impact of a U.S.-Colombia FTA on both the U.S. and Colombian economies.27 The study found that a U.S.-Colombia FTA would be expected to result in an increase in total trade between the two countries. The total value of U.S. imports from Colombia would increase by an estimated 37% while the value of U.S. exports to Colombia would increase by an estimated 44%.28 In terms of welfare gains, the study assessed that a U.S.-Colombia FTA would result in small welfare benefits for both partners, though the gains would be larger for Colombia. On a sectoral level, the study found that an agreement would have minor sectoral effects on the U.S. economy, but the effect would be more significant for Colombia because it is the smaller partner. The study indicated that Colombia would face certain structural adjustment issues with a displacement of low-skilled workers in some sectors, but that these workers would all be able to find job possibilities in the expanding sectors.29

One of the drawbacks to the bilateral free trade agreement is that it may result in trade diversion because it is not fully inclusive of all regional trading partners.30 Trade diversion results when a country enters into an FTA and then shifts the purchase of goods or services (imports) from a country that is not an FTA partner to a country that is an FTA partner even though it may be a higher cost producer. In the case of the United States and Colombia, for example, goods from the United States may replace Colombia's lower-priced imports from other countries in Latin America. If this were to happen, the United States would now be the producer of that item, not because it produces the good more efficiently, but because it is receiving preferential access to the Colombian market. The IIE study assessed that a U.S.-Colombia FTA probably would not cause trade diversion in the United States, but that it could cause some trade diversion in Colombia. The IIE study estimated that an FTA with the United States would result in a decrease in Colombia's imports from other countries of approximately 9%.31

Possible Economic Impact on Agriculture

The USITC study found that one of the impacts of a U.S.-Colombia FTA would be increased U.S. agricultural exports to Colombia as a result of enhanced U.S. access to the Colombian market.32 In the agricultural sector, key findings of the study include the following:

According to the IIE study, the main gains to Colombia in agricultural trade would likely be more secure and preferential market access to the U.S. market. U.S. agricultural exports would gain a small but not insignificant preference in the Colombian market for temperate-zone agricultural produce. The study's authors state that the long time periods for phasing out tariffs for sensitive products and safeguard provisions that would replace Colombia's price band system would lessen the impact of increased imports from the United States. One section of the study describes the results of a global applied general equilibrium model on the pending FTA. In terms of the overall effects on Colombia's economy, the results of the study imply that, in the medium term, Colombia would lose a net amount of $63 million, or about 0.06% of GDP. In the longer term, however, Colombia would gain $550 million each year, or about a 0.5% permanent increase to GDP.34

Issues Related to Violence and Labor

Colombia has a long tradition of civilian, democratic rule, yet has been plagued by violence throughout its history.35 The debate on U.S. free trade agreement with Colombia brought attention to the issue of labor rights violations in Colombia and whether the government was doing enough to curb violence, especially against union members; address the problem of human rights abuses; and end impunity.

Numerous Members of Congress opposed the FTA with Colombia because of concerns about violence in Colombia against labor union members and other human rights defenders. Policymakers who voiced opposition to the agreement generally were concerned about the impunity issue in Colombia, the lack of investigations and prosecutions, and the role of the paramilitary. The Obama Administration also expressed concerns about the level of violence in Colombia and negotiated the "Action Plan Related to Labor Rights" discussed later in this report.

Some Republican and Democratic supporters of the FTA took issue with these charges against the Colombian government and contended that Colombia has made significant progress in recent years to curb the violence. Some policymakers stated that Colombia was a crucial ally of the United States in Latin America and that if the FTA with Colombia did not enter into force, it would have led to further problems in the country and other Latin American countries.

The Colombian government responded to U.S. concerns and acknowledged that, while there continued to be killings in Colombia, the situation had improved significantly since 2002. According to government data, assassinations of labor union activists and teachers decreased by 86% between 2002 and 2009, from 106 murders to 28 murders. In 2010, however this number increased to 37. Data on the number of labor leaders murdered may vary by source. In 2006, the Colombian government estimated that 60 labor union members were killed, while the National Labor School (ENS), a Colombian labor organization, estimated that 78 labor union members were killed.36 In 2010, the Colombian government recorded 34 murders, while the ENS recorded 51. According to the ENS, there were 24 murders of labor union members in 2012, 36 in 2013, and 20 in 2014.37 In 2017, Colombia's Ministry of Labor stated that the homicide rate for labor union members had decreased 51% between years 2010-2016.38 The ENS, meanwhile pointed to a 31% jump in homicides between years 2015-2016.39 According to the government, about 475 unionists benefit from state-funded security services.40 Whether labor activists are being targeted because of their union activity or for other reasons is an issue that continues to be debated.

Colombia Action Plan related to Labor Rights

The United States and Colombia negotiated to develop an "Action Plan Related to Labor Rights" (the Action Plan) to help resolve the following U.S. concerns related to labor-related issues in Colombia: alleged violence against Colombian labor union members; inadequate efforts to bring perpetrators of violence to justice; and insufficient protection of workers' rights in Colombia. The governments of the United States and Colombia announced the plan on April 7, 2011. It includes numerous specific commitments made by the Colombian government to address U.S. concerns. The Obama Administration's announcement of the plan stated that the successful implementation of key elements of the plan was a precondition for the agreement to enter into force.41 The plan includes a number of obligations with target dates throughout 2011, and with a final target date of 2014 for the completion of hiring extra labor inspectors. The most significant target dates were April 22, 2011, and June 15, 2011.

Details of the Action Plan

This section summarizes the details of the Action Plan as reported by the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR).42

Creation of a Labor Ministry

One of Colombia's key commitments under the Action Plan was to create a new Labor of Ministry. By November 2011, the Colombian government had established the new ministry. On October 31, 2011, the Colombian government had established the new ministry. On October 31, 2011, President Santos announced the appointment of Liberal Party leader Rafael Pardo to lead the country's newly formed Labor Ministry, with the goal of implementing a broader and more effective regime to protect labor rights. The Colombian government expected that the Labor Ministry would provide the framework to mobilize resources and strengthen enforcement of labor laws. During the Uribe Administration, Colombia's labor-related functions were managed under the Ministry of Social Protection (MSP), which was created in 2002 by President Alvaro Uribe. The MSP had combined Colombia's Ministry of Health and previous Ministry of Labor into one central agency.

The Action Plan's target dates for the measures related to the labor ministry ranged from April 22, 2011, to December 15, 2011.43 The Action Plan included the following as part of the Colombian government's commitments:

Criminal Code Reform

The Colombian government submitted legislation to the Colombian Congress to reform the country's criminal code by establishing criminal penalties for employers that undermine the right to organize and bargain collectively. The new article in the criminal code encompasses a wide range of practices that adversely affect fundamental labor rights and would penalize violators with up to five years of imprisonment. The Colombian government committed to have the legislation enacted by the Colombian Congress by June 15, 2011. Legislation on this matter entered into force on June 24, 2011.

Cooperatives

The Colombian government agreed to accelerate the effective date of the provisions of Article 63 of the 2010 Law of Formalization and First Employment, passed in December 2010. This provision of the law prohibits the misuse of cooperatives or any other kind of labor relationship that affects labor rights, and imposes significant fines for violations. The government submitted legislation to the Colombian Congress to move the effective date from July 1, 2013, to June 15, 2011. The Colombian congress approved the bill.

The Labor Ministry was to direct 50 of the 100 new labor inspectors referenced above to be assigned exclusively to cases involving cooperatives. The hiring and training of these inspectors was to be completed by December 15, 2011. Most of these inspectors had been hired as of early December 2011. A second group of 50 labor inspectors specializing in cooperatives were to be hired during 2012. The priority sectors for labor inspections will be the palm oil, sugar, mines, ports, and flower sectors. The Colombian government agreed to confirm to the U.S. government by April 22, 2011, that these inspections had begun.

The Colombian government agreed to issue regulations implementing the 2010 cooperatives law by June 15, 2011. The purpose of these regulations is to

The Colombian government agreed to work with the U.S. government to ensure that the agreed objectives are addressed and provide quarterly reports on the enforcement results to all interested parties.

Temporary Service Agencies

The Colombian government committed to implement a regime to prevent the use of temporary service agencies to circumvent labor rights. This would include actions such as improving the inspection process, designing a new training program for labor inspectors, and building databases to identify regions and sectors where there have been abuses. The enforcement regime is to include a monitoring and reporting mechanism in which all interested parties could verify progress and compliance with labor laws. As a first step, the MSP was to issue quarterly reports for interested parties that include the results of preventive inspections, penalties, fines, the cancellation of licenses and permits, and the list of those agencies found to be in violation. The Colombian government agreed the MSP, and later the Labor Ministry, would share a draft of the enforcement plan with the U.S. government by April 22, 2011; work with the U.S. government to ensure that the agreed upon objectives are addressed; conduct a series of preventive inspections by June 15, 2011; and fully implement the enforcement plan by December 15, 2011, which according to the USTR, was accomplished.

Collective Pacts

The Colombian government committed to include in the bill on criminal code reform a provision stating it is a crime, subject to imprisonment, to use collective pacts to undermine the right to organize and bargain collectively. Approval of the criminal code reform took place in June 2011. The provision prohibits collective pacts from extending better conditions to non-union workers. The MSP/Labor Ministry began conducting a public outreach campaign after the criminal code reform was approved to promote awareness. Colombia's Labor Ministry is enforcing the reforms through preventive inspections and the new labor complaint mechanisms to detect and prosecute violations. The Colombian government committed to request technical assistance from the International Labor Organization (ILO) to monitor the use of collective pacts and work with the U.S. government to ensure that the agreed objectives are addressed.

Essential Services

Colombia agreed that the MSP would collect the body of Colombian doctrine, case law, and jurisprudence that has narrowed the definition of essential services. The MSP disseminated this information and relevant guidelines to labor inspectors, the judicial branch, unions, and employers by the target date of April 22, 2011.

ILO Office

The Colombian government's formal request to the ILO for technical assistance was accomplished by the target date of September 15, 2011. The Colombian government had committed to request cooperation, advice, and technical assistance from the ILO to help in the implementation measures in the Action Plan. It committed to work with the ILO to strengthen the presence and expand the capacity and role of the ILO in Colombia. The U.S. and Colombian governments committed to working together to identify the necessary resources and sources of support.

Protection Programs

Colombia's Ministry of Interior and Justice issued a Ministerial Resolution, by the target date of April 22, 2011, to broaden the definition of who is covered by its protection program. The broader definition includes (1) labor activists; (2) persons who are engaged in active efforts to form a union; and (3) former unionists who are under threat because of their past activities. The Colombian government planned and budgeted for necessary additional resources for this expansion by increasing the FY2011 allocation by 50% (approximately US $6 million) to provide adequate support for the expansion in the protection program. For FY2012, the Colombian government assessed the level of funding necessary to support the program and presented the requested budget to the Colombian Congress before the target date of July 30, 2011.

The Ministry of Interior and Justice committed to eliminate the backlog of risk assessments on union member applications for protection, by July 30, 2011, through an emergency plan that had begun earlier. After the backlog elimination, the Colombian government committed to a national policy on conducting risk assessments to comply with the law to process all risk assessments within a 30-day period. On May 1, 2011, the Colombian government committed to providing monthly updates to interested parties.

The Colombian government committed to issue a decree to reform the scope and functioning of the interagency committee that reviews risk assessments by September 15, 2011. The new committee was to include representatives from the Inspector General's Office and the Public Defender's Office to enhance objectivity in the assessment process. The Colombian government agreed to share with the U.S. government the relevant parts of the draft decree by April 22, 2011, and agreed to work with the U.S. government to ensure that the agreed objectives are addressed. The Colombian government also committed to strengthen the existing protection system by immediately implementing administrative measures.

Colombia agreed to amend its teacher relocation and protection program, contained in Resolution 1240 (Resolución 1240) of 2010, to ensure that meritorious requests are granted to teachers and to eliminate sanctions against teachers not found to be under extraordinary risk. The Colombian government agreed to work with the U.S. government to ensure that the program is achieving the objective of effectively protecting those covered by it and to ensure that the agreed objectives are addressed. Colombia began the sharing of quarterly reports on the program with interested parties beginning July 1, 2011.

Criminal Justice Reform

The Colombian government agreed to assign 95 additional full-time judicial police investigators to exclusively support prosecutors investigating criminal cases involving union members and activists. The first 50 of these judicial police were assigned by June 30, 2011, and most of the remaining police were assigned by December 15, 2011. The government stated that it would approve a request to increase funding for the Prosecutor General's Office for necessary resources to reduce impunity and for implementing the Action Plan. The Prosecutor General submitted the budget request by May 20, 2011.

The Prosecutor General's Office of Colombia informed the Colombian government of numerous actions it had taken or plans to take to combat impunity in cases involving union members and labor activists:

Action Plan Follow-Up Mechanism

The U.S. and Colombian governments agreed to assess progress in implementing the Action Plan and agreed to meet on a periodic basis through 2013 at the technical level and at the senior official level. In November 2013, the United States and Colombia agreed to continue bilateral meetings to discuss progress on commitments under the Action Plan. Both governments agreed to additional technical-level meetings and possible future meetings if both parties agree to it.44

Colombia's Action's in Meeting Milestones As Reported by the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR)

Major Actions Taken by April 22, 2011

Began hiring 100 additional labor inspectors and budgeted for the hiring of 100 more labor inspectors in 2012.

Improved systems for citizens to file labor-related complaints via phone or internet.

Implemented an inspection system to detect improper use of temporary service agencies to circumvent labor rights and developed an enforcement plan to prevent abuses.

Established enforcement regime to detect and prosecute the use of collective pacts to undermine worker rights.

Began workshops to train labor inspectors and other government personnel in conflict resolution and launched a related outreach program to the public, employers, and workers.

Expanded government protection program and increased funding to provide protection for labor activists, workers who are trying to organize or join a union, and former unionists who are under threat because of past activities.

Strengthened the teacher relocation and protection program.

Mandated early identification in all new homicide cases of whether the victim was a union member or activist.

Developed a plan for training judicial police investigators and prosecutors on cases involving unionists.

Improved public reporting of completed cases by posting labor violence cases on the Prosecutor General's website.

Began process to reconcile discrepancies in the number of outstanding unionist homicide cases.

Major Actions Taken by June 15, 2011

Obtained congressional approval of legislation to establish a new Labor Ministry.

Obtained congressional approval of legislation to establish criminal penalties for employers undermining labor rights.

Enacted legal provisions prohibiting the misuse of cooperatives or other types of labor relationships.

Issued regulations implementing a new cooperatives law, including provisions to clarify earlier cooperatives laws, ensure coherence among these laws, and impose significant fines for companies violating these laws.

Launched a public outreach program to inform workers of their labor rights, with a focus on the new laws governing cooperatives; criminal anti-union conduct and abuse of collective pacts; and courses of action available to workers.

Developed and disseminated legal information regarding definition of essential services, especially with regard to laws establishing a public service as essential and exempt from the right to strike.

Reduced by 75% the backlog of risk assessments for unionists applying for the government protection program.

Issued internal guidance to prosecutors to accelerate action on cases with leads, especially those related to labor.

Developed a plan to strengthen the institutional capacity in regional offices of the Prosecutor General.

Developed a plan and identified budgetary needs for victims' assistance centers, including labor cases.

Submitted a budget request for the necessary government resources to end impunity and implement the Action Plan.

Developed a methodology for public posting of information regarding completed criminal cases involving labor.

Major Actions Taken by September 15, 2011

Completed an analysis by the Prosecutor General's Office of closed homicide cases of unionists for the purpose of extracting lessons to improve the investigation and prosecution of future cases.

Formally submitted a request for technical assistance to the ILO for implementation of Action Plan measures.

Eliminated the backlog of risk assessments for applicants to the protection program for union members and activists.

Completed the reassignment of 50 judicial police investigators to criminal cases involving unionists.

Other Actions as of February 2015

Increased the budget for hiring additional personnel for protection of union members and labor activists.

Increased the size of the labor inspectorate from 424 inspectors to 718 inspectors, with an additional 188 slated to be hired; completed first round of training for inspectors in alternative dispute resolution; and implemented temporary service agency enforcement plan. Increased inspections in the five priority sectors of palm oil, sugar, mines, ports and flowers for illegal subcontracting; and imposed fines for unlawful subcontracting.

Source: USTR, Colombian Embassy, Colombian Action Plan Related to Labor Rights: Accomplishments to Date, at htt://www.ustr.gov; USTR and U.S. Department of Labor, Standing up for Workers: Promoting Labor Rights through Trade, Special Report, February 2015.

Responses to the Action Plan in Colombia

After the announcement of the Action Plan, at least two of Colombia's labor confederations responded favorably to working with the Santos Administration and with business representatives to come to an agreement on labor issues. Labor unions in Colombia have responded favorably to at least some elements that were included in the Action Plan, especially those related to work cooperatives. The Secretary General of Colombia's National Labor Confederation remarked in November 2010 that President Santos' proposal under the 2010 labor cooperatives law was a "great achievement" for the trade union movement in Colombia.45

Although initial responses to the Action Plan from Colombian unions were mostly favorable, some labor unions continue to oppose the FTA with the United States. The ENS stated that the Action Plan was the most significant advance for the labor movement in Colombia in 20 years, but has also stated that it has gaps, such as not going far enough to address the labor abuses that are occurring in labor cooperatives.46 The Solidarity Center in the Andean Region contends that Colombia has not met its full commitment in the Action Plan to implement the 2010 Cooperatives Law because the decree that was signed in June 2011 is only a "partial decree." The Center argues that the decree leaves out other forms of contracting, other than cooperatives, that are included in the original decree.47 Some unions continue to oppose the FTA with the United States. Public sector unionists, in particular, protested plans of the Colombian and U.S. governments to enter into the FTA, even while the two presidents met in Washington, DC, on April 7, 2011, to announce the agreement on the Action Plan.

On May 26, 2011, a tripartite labor agreement was reached among representatives of the Colombian government, the private sector, and some labor representatives. The agreement, which is the first concluded since June 2006, includes a consensus to request the ILO to provide cooperation, advice, and technical assistance on the implementation of the Action Plan measures. Two of Colombia's major labor confederations, however, the Confederation of Workers of Colombia (CTC) and the Central Union of Workers (CUT), did not sign the agreement because they felt they did not have sufficient time to analyze the agreement or to put forth their own proposals in the agreement. Two other confederations, the General Labor Confederation (CGT) and the Colombian Pensioners Confederation (CPC), signed the agreement and stated that it was one of the most significant advances in many years in strengthening labor movement in Colombia.48

Policy Issues

Market Access for U.S. Exporters

Proponents of the agreement contend that it improves market access for U.S. exporters. Much of the U.S. business contends that the agreement helps increase exports of U.S. products, especially in agriculture. The National Pork Producers Council, for example, argues that the trade agreement provides significant new export opportunities for U.S. pork producers.49

Prior to passage of the agreement, U.S. exporters were concerned that they were losing market share in the Colombian market as a result of passage of FTAs that Colombia has negotiated with other countries. Some U.S. exporters were especially concerned about the Colombia-Canada FTA that entered into force in August 2011. U.S. wheat producers estimated that the agreement resulted in a decline in the U.S. share of Colombia's wheat as Canada's share increased.50

Numerous policymakers voiced concern about the United States losing market share of the Colombian market if Congress did not approve the U.S.-Colombia FTA. Over the ten years prior to the U.S.-Colombia FTA entering into force, Colombia entered into five FTAs with 12 countries in Latin America, in addition to the Colombia-Canada FTA. Colombia also signed FTAs with the European Union, and the EFTA (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland). Colombia also joined an effort to create the Pacific Alliance, a regional trade integration agreement with Chile, Mexico, and Peru.51

Colombian Farmer Concerns

Farmers in Colombia and their supporters are concerned that the FTA with the United States is hurting small farmers. Colombia's relatively high tariff structure of agricultural imports from the United States is to be phased out over a 19-year period under the U.S.-Colombia FTA, but tariffs on certain products, such as wheat and soybeans, were removed immediately upon the agreement's entry into force. Many in Colombia's farming sector argue that the agreement and other liberal trade policies are "undermining local food production and putting small farmers out of business" as lower cost imports enter the Colombian market.

In August 2013, a nationwide strike in Colombia lasted over a week as more than 200,000 coffee growers, dairy farmers, and other agricultural workers and their supporters blocked roads and launched protests against the U.S.-Colombia FTA.52 Protesters stated that President Santos' policies of trade liberalization and privatization are forcing small farmers in Colombia to compete with subsidized U.S. products and making them more vulnerable to market fluctuations. Rural farmers are concerned that these policies are decreasing their incomes and were striking to ask for more protection and services from the government. Police reportedly fired tear gas at the protestors while the army patrolled the streets.53 Human rights organizations contend that Colombian military personnel were violating human rights of the protestors through beatings and unwarranted arrests.54

Some observers argue that the problems that farmers are facing go beyond the free trade agreement with the United States. For example, farmers in rural areas face extremely expensive credit rates and production supplies. Many also face challenges in transporting their goods to the main producers because of the poor state of supply routes. While there may be opportunities for some agriculture producers by exporting other goods, such as Colombia's array of exotic fruits, the mounting challenges for smaller producers may be too large for them to handle.55

In response to the protests, the President reshuffled his cabinet by replacing the agriculture minister, as well as several others. The government also negotiated a deal with the protestors in which the government said it would do more to protect the livelihoods of farmers and modernize the agricultural sector. The President announced that his administration would promote a "National Pact" for the agriculture industry that would include all stakeholders, including those in non-agricultural sectors. Some of the concessions made to the strikers included regulated fertilizer prices, a freeze on imports of certain produce, a suspension of a resolution that made it illegal for them to produce seeds from their own harvests, and a temporary freeze on proposed price hikes for diesel fuel.56

Labor Group Views

Numerous U.S. labor groups oppose the U.S.-Colombia FTA. They maintain that Colombia's labor movement is under attack through violence, intimidation, and harassment, as well as legal channels. The American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) contends that Colombian labor union members continue to face daily legal challenges to their rights to organize and bargain collectively and that these challenges threaten the existence of the Colombian labor movement. While the AFL-CIO acknowledges that Colombia has made progress in protecting union members, it continues to have concerns regarding the government's commitment to protect fundamental worker rights.57 The AFL-CIO remained opposed to the FTA even after the Action Plan negotiated by the Obama Administration and the Colombian government was announced on April 6, 2011.

The position of Colombian labor unions on passage of the U.S.-Colombia FTA was mixed, with some unions in favor of the agreement and others opposed. In May 2007, 17 Colombian unionists representing the textiles, flower, mining, and other Colombian industries visited the U.S. Congress to speak out in favor of the agreement. They represented the General Labor Confederation of Colombia (CGT), which acknowledged progress in protecting worker rights by the Colombian government. Union members in support of the FTA argued that it would provide jobs in the coffee, flower, textiles, and other industries in Colombia. They contended that the Uribe Administration made much progress in protecting worker rights and that the Santos Administration was making these positive changes "more concrete." Some CGT representatives stated they did not believe that union workers were being targeted for their labor activities and believed that the violence was due to the ongoing conflict in Colombia caused by guerrillas and paramilitaries.58

Other Colombian union representatives, however, many of whom are government employees, spoke out against the agreement. They argued that the FTA would interfere with the Colombian government's right to govern the country, and that it would have a negative effect on Colombia's agriculture sector and the economy in general.59 A major labor confederation in Colombia, the Central Union of Workers (CUT) strongly opposed U.S.-Colombia FTA and argued that it would not be effective in protecting worker rights in Colombia because the labor chapter in the agreement did not go far enough to protect worker rights. The CUT also contended that the Action Plan Related to Labor Rights would not be effective in ending the impunity of crimes against unionists in Colombia. According to a CUT representative, the main problem in Colombia was due to the high levels of impunity and the lack of justice in the legal system.60

Progress on Labor Issues and Labor Action Plan Implementation

The United States, Colombia, and the ILO worked to implement the Labor Action Plan, including supporting the establishment of a separate Ministry of Labor to elevate the importance of labor issues within the Colombian Government. Regular meetings and ongoing engagement between the two governments focus on achieving the goals of the plan, including providing technical assistance and cooperative efforts to build the institutional capacity of Colombia's Ministry of Labor. The two governments have recognized advances made by Colombia, and at the same time continue to underscore several areas of concern, including collection of fines imposed for labor violations; targeted inspections in priority sectors; investigation and sanction of all forms of abusive contracting; and violence and threats against trade unionists and continued impunity for the perpetrators. U.S. and Colombian officials continue to participate in technical-level and senior official meetings.

Colombia has made progress in lowering its unemployment rate since the U.S.-Colombia FTA entered into force. Between 2012 and 2017, the unemployment rate went from 10.4% to 9.4%.61 The government is also making efforts to protect vulnerable groups. The annual budget to protect union leaders increased from $100 million in 2012 to $165 million in 2013 and to $155 million in 2014, 2015, and 2016.62 The number of union leaders protected went from 542 in 2012 to 677 in 2014 and currently stands at around 400.63 Colombia was excluded from the 2015, 2016, and 2017 lists of member states invited to appear for the annual International Labor Conference's Committee on the Application of Standards, indicating the progress Colombia has made in applying international labor standards.64 Exclusion from the list means that Colombia is considered as a case of progress in the observation of labor rights and labor inspection. Colombia was included in the 2014 list, however. The 2017 announcement took place in the framework of the 106th International Labor Conference in Geneva, Switzerland, in June 2017, which addressed labor migration governance, fair labor recruitment, and the promotion of decent work for people in conflict zones or disaster areas.65 Colombia continues to work with the ILO to promote job creation. On June 6, 2015, the Colombian government and the International Labor Organization (ILO) signed a memorandum of understanding to establish a framework for cooperation on job creation in rural areas. The ILO Director Guy Rider emphasized the importance of such cooperation to create jobs in the formal sector of the Colombian economy and move away from informality.66

Some Members of Congress expressed concerns about implementation of the Labor Action Plan. An October 2013 congressional staff report to the Congressional Monitoring Group on Labor Rights in Colombia acknowledged that the Colombian government had undertaken important measures to protect worker rights and was working at the highest levels of government to implement the plan and improve working conditions in Colombia. The report, however, stated that, despite the "best intentions" by the Colombian government, the actions had not resulted in improved conditions for workers and activists in Colombia.67 The report's findings include the following: (1) indirect employment is still pervasive and growing; (2) the inspection system is ineffective, and worker protections are weak; and (3) the right to organize is being denied, and a lack of justice prevails.68

Indirect Employment Arrangements

Prior to approval of the U.S.-Colombia FTA, labor groups raised concerns regarding the widespread practice of indirect employment relationships in Colombia such as labor cooperatives. Colombian cooperatives are work arrangements mostly found in the sugar cane, palm oil, flower, mining, and port industries. Critics of the programs contend that these indirect employment relationships lead to a lack of protection of worker rights, wages below the minimum wage, and lower health and pension benefits.69 The Colombian government established such work arrangements years ago to help generate employment, but later recognized these pacts could lead to an erosion of worker rights. Subsequently, it undertook a series of reforms since 2004. A key law was passed by Colombia's Congress on December 12, 2010. Article 63 of Ley 1429, a law for formalizing the labor force and generating employment, has new and stronger measures to help ensure that worker rights are not being violated and to impose sanctions on businesses that are violating Colombian laws.70 The major changes in this law are increased sanctions on companies for violations of the law from about $25,000 to $1.5 million; accountability for inspectors if they do not enforce the law; and enhanced bargaining rights for workers belonging to a cooperative. The law was to have a transition period and not enter into effect until July 2013. However, in an agreement with the United States under the Action Plan Related to Labor Rights, the Colombian government agreed to accelerate implementation of the law to June 2011.71

Critics of the cooperative work arrangements contend that the arrangements lead to worker oppression, prevent workers from joining unions, and result in a denial of basic benefits. Critics also contend that certain marginalized groups, especially the Afro-Colombian population, are particularly vulnerable to unfair treatment. Colombian labor representatives urged Congress to delay passage of the FTA until Colombia improved its labor laws.72 Labor groups contend that indirect employment relationships in Colombia persist, even after implementation of the Action Plan, preventing workers from exercising their rights to free association and collective bargaining.73

According to the Colombian government, cooperatives are required by law to provide health benefits, worker rights protections, and pension benefits, but they have had numerous cases of non-compliance with the law. The government contends that it has increased inspections and imposed sanctions for non-compliance. For example, according to government documents, between 2007 and January 2011, inspectors made 4,787 visits to work areas, conducted 4,052 investigations, and imposed sanctions 816 times. As a result, the number of workers participating in cooperatives reportedly decreased from 2 million in 2007 to 600,000 in 2010, and the number of cooperatives reportedly decreased from 12,317 to 4,555 between 2007 and 2010.74

The government also contends that in 2012 and 2013, thousands of Colombian workers have benefitted from "formalization agreements" between employers and workers as a direct result from the Labor Action Plan. A 2013 Colombian government document states that numerous employers in the transportation, sugar cane, palm tourism, health, and other sectors reached agreement with their workers in which 15,700 workers moved from indirect working arrangements to permanent direct employment.75

Violence and Protection of Worker Rights

In response to U.S. concerns regarding worker right protection in Colombia, the Embassy of Colombia in the United States reported on the progress that Colombia made since 2001 in strengthening the rights, benefits, and security of unions. According to progress reports issued by the embassy, government reforms in Colombia since 2002 helped protect Colombian worker rights to form unions, bargain collectively, and strike. Reforms include enhanced efforts to open dialogue with union members, including meetings with Colombia's President and Vice-President.76 A September 2011 report provided indicated that homicides dropped by 45% since 2000 and homicides of union members decreased 81% during the same period. Another report stated that a protection program aimed at vulnerable groups, including union members, and the creation of the special unit at the Prosecutor General's Office led to an 86% reduction in the level of homicides of union members.

Regarding allegations that Colombia is the world's most dangerous country for union members, the Colombian government contends that because other countries use different methods for tracking this data, it cannot be compared among countries. The government argues that union membership in certain professions in Colombia is almost universal, including teachers and judicial branch employees. Government representatives have stated that many of victims of violence are union members, but that does not necessarily mean that they were targeted because of their union activities.77

Bilateral Cooperation on Labor

April 2016 marked the fifth anniversary of the Colombian Action Plan Related to Labor Rights. A report commemorating the occasion by the Obama Administration stated that Colombia had made "meaningful" progress since the plan's inception. Major achievements, according to the report, include reductions in the number of fake worker cooperatives and a doubling of labor inspectors within the Colombian Ministry of Labor. The report also listed certain issues that require attention going forward. According to the text, other forms of illegal subcontracting have started to replace worker cooperatives, threatening the improvements made over the past five years. Similarly, the report found that the government has been slow to address the culture of impunity that surrounds labor law violations and that the government has not been effective in collecting fines levied against employers.78

The Obama Administration continued to work closely with Colombia on issues of ongoing concern and devoted resources to address these matters. The Department of Labor sent a labor attaché to be stationed at the U.S. Embassy in Bogota. Colombia is the second country to which DOL has sent an attaché, which highlights the importance placed on worker rights in Colombia.79 Some Colombian government officials contend that the U.S.-Colombia FTA and the Labor Action Plan demonstrate an unprecedented level of cooperation between two countries on labor issues and can serve as an example for other free trade agreements on labor issues.80

Complaint Filed with the Office of Trade and Labor Affairs (OTLA)

In 2016, the U.S. Office of Trade and Labor Affairs (OTLA) received a complaint from five Colombian labor organizations and the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO). The group alleged that the Colombian Government had failed to comply with the terms described in the labor chapter of the U.S.-Colombia FTA. Those alleged failures, according to the complaint, were especially damaging, as they helped undermine the fundamental labor rights of Colombian workers, particularly their rights to freedom of association and collective bargaining. The group provided examples from the petroleum and sugar sectors to illustrate specific shortcomings.81

The OTLA investigated the group's claims and published its findings on January 11, 2017. It wrote that the Colombian government, despite making progress in certain aspects of the labor question, was marred by inconsistencies that endangered recent advances in labor rights. The OTLA specifically highlighted problems with the Labor Inspectorate, the inspection process, and the process for collecting fines.82 The OTLA also stated that Colombia's "high rate of impunity" in cases of violence against unionists, its unlawful collective labor pacts, and pervasive subcontracting practices were major obstacles for worker rights in the country.83

The OTLA included a list of 19 recommendations in its investigation report to help the Government of Colombia address its labor rights issues. These included, among other things, strengthening the Ministry of Labor's labor inspection system; investigating and prosecuting cases of violence against unionists more thoroughly; and combating abusive subcontracting practices and collective pact agreements. The OTLA also encouraged the Secretary of Labor of the United States to "initiate consultations" with the Government of Colombia and indicated it would seek to involve relevant members of civil society in the consultation process. OTLA stated it would reevaluate the government's progress "within nine months and thereafter, as appropriate."84

In January 2018, OTLA published an assessment of the actions taken by Colombia in response to the recommendations included in the January 2017 report. According to the assessment, Colombia has "taken several steps" toward satisfying some of the recommendations found in the 2017 report.85 The Ministry of Labor, for example, mandated the installation and use of an electronic case management system in all regional offices and two special administrative offices.86 It also took steps to address high turnover rates within the inspectorate body by converting close to 90 percent of its existing inspector positions into career civil servant positions.87

The OTLA assessment also noted other changes that, if fully implemented, would contribute to addressing the issues and questions raised in the 2017 report. Some of these include remedial training for ministry employees, and a larger budget appropriation from the Colombian Congress for 2018. Despite some positive signs, however, the OTLA warns that not all listed recommendations have received full attention. The OTLA stated it would continue to monitor Colombia's progress with the help of the U.S. Department of State and the U.S. Trade Representative.88

Author Contact Information

[author name scrubbed], Specialist in International Trade and Finance ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])
[author name scrubbed], Research Assistant ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])

Footnotes

1.

The Colombian Action Plan Related to Labor Rights is a set of commitments related to worker rights protection by the Colombian government that the United States and Colombia agreed upon prior to approval of the U.S.-Colombia free trade agreement by the U.S. Congress. See Colombian Action Plan Related to Labor Rights, April 7, 2011, at https://ustr.gov/sites/default/files/uploads/agreements/morocco/pdfs/Colombian%20Action%20Plan%20Related%20to%20Labor%20Rights.pdf.

2.

Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR), 2010 National Trade Estimate Report on Foreign Trade Barriers, March 2010; and USTR 2015 National Trade Estimate Report on Foreign Trade Barriers, March 2015.

3.

The Andean Price Band system is applied by the four countries belonging to the Andean Community, a regional trade integration agreement formed by Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. The four countries entered into the Andean Community as a form of trade integration through the removal of trade barriers and the application of common external tariffs, and a goal to eventually form a common market.

4.

USTR, 2017 National Trade Estimate Report on Foreign Trade Barriers, March 2017, available at https://ustr.gov.

5.

The text of the U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement is available online at the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR) website: http://ustr.gov.

6.

USTR, "United States-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement," February 12, 2015.

7.

United States International Trade Commission (USITC), U.S.-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement: Potential Economy-wide and Selected Sectoral Effects, USITC Publication 3896, December 2006, pp. 2-1 and 2-2.

8.

Ibid.

9.

Tariff rate quotas are limits on the quantity of imports that can enter a country duty-free before tariff-rates are applied.

10.

USDA, Foreign Agricultural Service, U.S.-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement: Benefits for Agriculture, May 2012.

11.

Ibid.

12.

Ibid.

13.

USTR, 2017 National Trade Estimate Report on Foreign Trade Barriers, March 2017, p 98, available at https://ustr.gov/.

14.

USTR, "U.S.-Colombia Trade Agreement: Increasing American Competitiveness," October 12, 2012, available at https://ustr.gov/uscolombiatpa/investment.

15.

Organization of American States (OAS), Foreign Trade Information System (SICE), Colombia-United States: Background and Negotiations, 2018, available at http://www.sice.oas.org.

16.

USTR, Colombia FTA Briefing Materials, "The United States–Colombia FTA Protects U.S. Ports," October 2008, p. 33, available at https://ustr.gov/archive/.

17.

Joint Statement of the Labor Affairs Council of the United States-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement, Washington, DC, June 5, 2013, available at https://ustr.gov.

18.

Ibid.

19.

Purchasing power parity (PPP) is an estimate at measuring gross domestic product (GDP) by attempting to factor in price differences across countries when estimating the size of a foreign economy in U.S. dollars. Many economists attempt to calculate a PPP exchange rate, based on price surveys that are conducted across countries, to reflect the actual purchasing power of each currency relative to the dollar in real terms.

20.

See CRS Report R43748, The Pacific Alliance: A Trade Integration Initiative in Latin America, by [author name scrubbed].

21.

Lucien O. Chauvin, "Eliminating Tariffs on 92% of Goods," International Trade Daily, February 11, 2014.

22.

United States International Trade Commission (USITC), U.S.-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement: Potential Economy-wide and Selected Sectoral Effects, Investigation No. TA-2104-023, USITC Publication 3896, December 2006. (Hereinafter USITC, December 2006). Findings are based on a projected 2007 baseline.

23.

USITC, December 2006, pp. 2-1 and 2-2.

24.

In its review of the seven economic studies, the USITC noted that these studies analyzed a proposed, possible, or hypothetical U.S.-Colombia free trade agreement (FTA) and not the final text of the actual FTA that was the subject of its investigation. Therefore, the underlying assumptions made in the reviewed studies may be different than those of the USITC's analysis.

25.

USITC, December 2006, pp. 7-1 to 7-4.

26.

Now known the Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE).

27.

Jeffrey J. Schott, editor, Institute for International Economics (IIE), Trade Relations Between Colombia and the United States, August 2006. (Hereinafter IIE, August 2006).

28.

IIE August 2006, Chapter 4, "Potential Benefits of a U.S.-Colombia FTA," by Dean A. DeRosa and John P. Gilbert. This chapter uses empirical and applied methods of economic analysis to examine the potential quantitative impact of a U.S.-Colombia FTA and is one of the studies reviewed by the USITC in its assessment of a U.S.-Colombia FTA.

29.

IIE, August 2006, p. 112.

30.

When a trade agreement lowers trade barriers on a good, production may shift from domestic producers to lower cost foreign producers and result in substituting an imported good for the domestic good. This process is called trade creation. Trade creation provides economic benefits as consumers have a wider choice of goods and services available at lower costs. Trade creation also results in adjustment costs, however, usually in the form of domestic job losses as production shifts to another country.

31.

IIE, August 2006, pp. 88-89.

32.

USITC Publication 3896, p. xv.

33.

USITC Publication 3896, pp. xvi-xvii.

34.

IIE, August, 2006.

35.

For more information, see CRS Report R43813, Colombia: Background and U.S. Relations, by [author name scrubbed].

36.

U.S. Department of State, "Memorandum of Justification Concerning Human Rights Conditions with Respect to Assistance for the Colombian Armed Forces," September 9, 2010. The State Department reports that the ENS revised its figures upward to 47 after initially reporting 39 homicides for 2009.

37.

Escuela Nacional Sindical (ENS), Report on the First Four Years of the Implementation of the Labor Action Plan (2011), 2015, p. 49, available at http:// http://ens.org.co/.

38.

Ministerio del Trabajo, "Tasa de homicidios de sindicalistas se ha reducido 51% en los últimos seis años," Comunicados 2017, July 17, 2017, available at http://www.mintrabajo.gov.co/web/guest/prensa/comunicados/2017/julio/.

39.

Escuela Nacional Sindical (ENS), "31% crecieron casos de violencia antisindical en Colombia en el último año. Informe especial." July 12, 2017, available at http://ail.ens.org.co/informe-especial/31-crecieron-casos-violencia-antisindical-colombia-ultimo-ano-informe-especial/.

40.

Ministerio del Trabajo, "Tasa de homicidios de sindicalistas se ha reducido 51% en los últimos seis años," Comunicados 2017, July 17, 2017, available at http://www.mintrabajo.gov.co/web/guest/prensa/comunicados/2017/julio/.

41.

The White House, Office of the Press Secretary, "Leveling the Playing Field: Labor Protections and the U.S.-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement," April 6, 2011, available at https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/sites/default/files/09302011_labor_protections_and_the_colombia_trade_agreement.pdf.

42.

Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, Colombian Action Plan Related to Labor Rights, April 7, 2011, available at http://ustr.gov.

43.

On April 6, 2011, the Colombian Congress overwhelmingly approved to split three fused ministries and grant President Juan Manuel Santos extraordinary powers over the following six months to restructure parts of the Colombian government. President Santos has six months to divide the three ministries and reconstruct certain departments. The new ministries will be: Interior, Justice and the Law, Health and Social Protection, Labor, Environment and Sustainable Development, and Housing, Cities, and Territory.

44.

Office of the United States Trade Representative and U.S. Department of Labor, UPDATE: The Colombian Labor Action Plan: Three Years Later, April 7, 2014.

45.

ENS, "Trade Unions Comment on Government Proposal to Dismantle Associated-Work Cooperatives (Cooperativas de trabajo asociado), November 26, 2010.

46.

In-person interview with ENS on June 1, 2011.

47.

Solidarity Center for Andean Region, June 16, 2011.

48.

ENS, "Labor Agreement: CGT and CPC signed it, the CTC and the CUT did not sign it but presented proposals," June 1, 2011.

49.

National Pork Producers Council, NPCC Applauds President for Sending Trade Deal to Congress, April 7, 2008.

50.

National Association of Wheat Growers, Fact Sheet: U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement, April 2011.

51.

See CRS Report R43748, The Pacific Alliance: A Trade Integration Initiative in Latin America, by [author name scrubbed].

52.

Matthew Bristow, "Colombia President Approval Plunges as Protests Roil Nation," Bloomberg Government, September 4, 2013.

53.

Matthew Bristow, "Colombia President Approval Plunges as Protests Roil Nation," Bloomberg Government, September 4, 2013.

54.

Sarah Lazare, "Colombia Nationwide Strike Against Free Trade, Privatization, Poverty," Common Dreams, August 25, 2013.

55.

NTN24 Nuestra Tele Noticia, "Colombia in Focus: Why Colombian Farmers Hate the US Free Trade Agreement," August 29, 2013.

56.

"Protests in Colombia, Unpopular Dismay," The Economist, September 6, 2013.

57.

See AFL-CIO statements on Colombia, available at https://alfcio.org/tags/colombia.

58.

In-person interview with representatives of the General Labor Confederation (CGT) of Colombia on June 2, 2011.

59.

Central Union of Workers of Colombia (CUT), Rechazamos el TLC Por Ello, Desautorizamos toda Opinión Sindical que Contrarie la Postura Institucional, April 12, 2007. CUT, TLC: Todos Limosnearemos Comida, April 2008.

60.

In-person interview with CUT representatives on June 1, 2011.

61.

Colombia National Administrative Statistics Department (DANE), "Mercado Laboral: Principales Resultados, Diciembre de 2017," January 30, 2018, p. 23, available at https://www.dane.gov.co.

62.

United States Department of Labor and Office of the United States Trade Representative, The Colombian Labor Action Plan: A Five Year Update, April 11, 2016, available at https://www.dol.gov/ilab/reports/pdf/2016_colombia_action_plan_report_final.pdf.

63.

Colombia Ministry of Labor, "MinTrabajo en Cali Comisión que evalúa medidas de protección a sindicalistas del Valle y del Cauca," February 8, 2018.

64.

The International Labor Organization's Committee on the Application of Standards is an independent tripartite body of the International Labor Conference and an essential component of the ILO's supervisory system. It examines the annual report published by the Committee of Experts on the Application of Conventions and Recommendations. The 2017 report is available at http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/—ed_norm/—normes/documents/publication/wcms_57287.pdf

65.

ILO, Application of International Labor Standards 2015, International Labor Conference, 104th Session, 2015.

66.

ILO, ILO Development Cooperation Strategy 2015-17: Report on progress, February 20, 2017, p. 3, available at http://www.ilo.org.

67.

The U.S.-Colombia Labor Action Plan: Failing on the Ground, A Staff Report on behalf of U.S. Representatives George Miller and Jim McGovern to the Congressional Monitoring Group on Labor Rights in Colombia, October 2013.

68.

Ibid., pp. 1-2.

69.

Mark Gruenberg, "Colombian labor leader seeks trade pact delay," People's World, January 21, 2011.

70.

In-person interview with Colombian Embassy staff in Washington, DC, and the Vice Minister of Labor from the Colombian government on March 10, 2011.

71.

The White House, Office of the Press Secretary, "Leveling the Playing Field: Labor Protections and the U.S.-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement," April 6, 2011, available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/04/06/fact-sheets-us-colombia-trade-agreement-and-action-plan.

72.

Mark Gruenberg, "Colombian labor leader seeks trade pact delay," People's World, January 21, 2011.

73.

AFL-CIO, The Colombian Action Plan Related to Labor Rights: The View Through Workers' Eyes, July 2012.

74.

Data obtain from an in-person interview with a Vice-Minister from the Colombian government's Ministerio de la Protección Social on March 10, 2011.

75.

Ministry of Labor of Colombia, Free Trade Agreement: Colombia/United States, pp. 10-11, 2013.

76.

Embassy of Colombia, Washington, DC, Colombia: A Progress Report: Strengthening the Rights, Benefits, and Security of Unions, October 2007.

77.

Embassy of Colombia, Washington, DC, Answers to Frequent Allegations about Colombia and Labor Violence, September 2011.

78.

United States Department of Labor and Office of the United States Trade Representative, The Colombian Labor Action Plan: A Five Year Update, April 11, 2016, available at https://www.dol.gov/ilab/reports/pdf/2016_colombia_action_plan_report_final.pdf.

79.

Office of the United States Trade Representative, "The Colombian Labor Action Plan at Four Years: Progress and Continuing Challenges," Tradewinds, The Official Blog of the United States Trade Representative, April 2015, available at https://ustr.gov.

80.

Personal interview with staff at the Embassy of Colombia in Washington, DC on June 3, 2015.

81.

United States Department of Labor, Bureau of International Labor Affairs (ILAB), Office of Trade and Labor Affairs (OTLA), Public Report of Review of U.S. Submission 2016-02 (Colombia), January 11, 2017. Available online at DOL website: http://www.dol.gov.

82.

The Labor Inspectorate (Unidad Especial de Inspección, Vigilancia, y Control de Trabajo) enforces Colombia's labor, employment, and social security laws. It is composed of two specialized offices at the national level and 32 regional offices.

83.

United States Department of Labor, Bureau of International Labor Affairs (ILAB), Office of Trade and Labor Affairs (OTLA), Public Report of Review of U.S. Submission 2016-02 (Colombia), January 11, 2017, p. ii. Available online at DOL website: http://www.dol.gov.

84.

United States Department of Labor, Bureau of International Labor Affairs (ILAB), Office of Trade and Labor Affairs (OTLA), Public Report of Review of U.S. Submission 2016-02 (Colombia), January 11, 2017, p. iii. Available online at DOL website: http://www.dol.gov.

85.

OTLA, "First Periodic Review of Progress to Address Issues Identified in the U.S. Department of Labor's Public Report of Review of Submission 2016-02 (Colombia)," January 8, 2018.

86.

The electronic case management system was created to integrate all statistics and documents handled by Colombia's Ministry of Labor. Although ILO designed the project in 2011, the offices of the ministry only recently adopted the system.

87.

OTLA, "First Periodic Review of Progress to Address Issues Identified in the U.S. Department of Labor's Public Report of Review of Submission 2016-02 (Colombia)," January 8, 2018.

88.

Ibid.