In one day back in March, police from Los Angeles to Dallas to
Baltimore arrested more than 100 suspected members of the notorious
Salvadoran street gang known as Mara Salvatrucha. Gang members were
charged with a variety of crimes, from murder and kidnapping to
stealing cars and trafficking in guns, weapons and prostitutes.
Some even have been implicated in schemes to help al Qaeda
operatives and other terrorists slip into the United States.
Few question that a strong law-enforcement effort is a crucial
component of America's response to the growing problems posed by
this and other gangs with roots in Central America. But what else
might be done? How else might we go about increasing imports of
desirable products from the region and reducing imports of crime
and illegal drugs?
Congress will have an opportunity in coming weeks to strike a blow
against gang and criminal activity and for freedom, prosperity and
trade when it takes up the Dominican Republic-Central America Free
Trade Agreement. Lawmakers should remember that our security
depends not only on our prosperity but on that of our neighbors as
well, and that economic growth helps bolster political stability
and create jobs for workers who otherwise might migrate illegally
to the United States.
They also should recall that struggles to establish democracies and
market economies can cost lives and that locking in positive change
can help these emerging countries avoid having to revisit these
issues.
The agreement, modeled on those already in place with Canada and
Mexico as well as with Morocco and Jordan, would reduce barriers to
trade with the Dominican Republic as well as Honduras, Guatemala,
Costa Rica, Nicaragua and, of course, El Salvador. It would cost
the United States little because these countries already have
duty-free access to our markets for most products, but it will
reduce some barriers for them and substantial barriers for
us.
Moreover, the agreement will open sectors of those economies to
U.S. investment, which will help them overcome challenges from
Asian countries whose economies benefit from subsidies and cut-rate
or even slave labor.
The signatory countries' combined GDP of $73 billion in 2003 gives
them about one-thirtieth of the economic power of the United
States. But these small countries have an importance that outstrips
their physical or economic size. We trade more with these six
countries than with Australia, Brazil, India, Russia and many
European nations. They combined for $32 billion worth of trade with
the United States in 2003, which would make this group our 13th
largest trading partner and second only to Mexico among countries
in Latin America.
So why wouldn't Americans endorse such an agreement? One recurring
criticism of free trade, especially as embodied in such agreements,
is that it discourages countries from pursuing better labor and
environmental standards. But economic studies show that the single
greatest cause of environmental degradation and low labor standards
is poverty.
Doubt this? Consider: Which countries in the world have the
cleanest environments? The United States, Canada, Australia and
countries in Western Europe and Japan. Which have the worst? Haiti,
China and India. Today, 13 of the 15 most-polluted cities in the
world are in developing Asia. Yet, lead emissions have dropped 95
percent in the United States in the past 20 years, and SO2 and
smoke levels in London today are below those of the 16th
century.
Academic studies have found that the magic number seems to be
$5,000. Pollution rises with increased commerce -- but only until
people in the country reach $5,000 in per capita income. At that
point, the populace becomes educated and wealthy enough to demand
better treatment of the environment, and governments find the
resources to pay for this.
The same increased moral awareness leads to better labor standards.
Again, where is labor most exploited? China and developing Asia.
Where is it least exploited? The United States, Canada, Western
Europe and Japan. Thus, if we want to improve the environmental and
labor standards of the other signatories, our goal should be to
boost their economies until they achieve $5,000 in per capita
income. DR-CAFTA is the quickest, most effective way to do
this.
The other signatories need to know that the United States
understands their situations and cares about them. That the United
States can offer a different course -- one designed to build true,
long-lasting prosperity, to lock in freedom and make it immune from
political upheaval--to offer the men who have made gangs the most
notable export of the region hope for a better life, a
higher-paying job and a brighter future.
And DR-CAFTA can help pave the way.
Stephen Johnson is senior policy analyst for Latin America in
the Davis Institute for International Studies at The Heritage
Foundation.
First Appeared on FoxNews.com