|
President
Bush Proclaims May 18-24 World Trade Week
(2003 Trade Promotes Prosperity And Freedom, President
Says)
19
May 2003
President
Bush has proclaimed the week of May 18-24, 2003, as World
Trade Week, and is encouraging Americans to observe the week
with events, trade shows, and educational programs that celebrate
the benefits of trade to the United States and to the global
economy.
Following is the text of the proclamation:
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
May 16, 2003
WORLD
TRADE WEEK, 2003
BY
THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
A
PROCLAMATION
Trade
expands prosperity, helps raise millions from poverty, and
is an engine of economic growth within our Nation and around
the world. Trade injects new energy and vitality into the
global economy by fostering the exchange of ideas and innovations
among people around the world. Free and open trade also helps
promote peace and security. During World Trade Week, we renew
our commitment to developing and implementing trade policies
that create new opportunities and promote global economic
growth.
My
Administration is pursuing an ambitious trade agenda that
is restoring America's leadership in the global trading system.
We worked hard for the passage of the Trade Act of 2002, which
reinstated Trade Promotion Authority after an 8-year lapse.
Trade Promotion Authority re-established the ability of the
United States to credibly negotiate comprehensive trade agreements
by ensuring that agreements will be approved or rejected,
by the Congress, but not amended. This gives other countries
renewed confidence in their trade negotiations with the United
States.
To
extend the benefits of trade and to improve the lives of people
in our Nation and around the world, my Administration continues
to pursue global, regional, and bilateral trade agreements.
Through the Doha Development Agenda negotiations at the World
Trade Organization, the United States is seeking to strengthen
the multilateral trading system, increase market access opportunities,
and promote global development. Regionally, we are working
to build on the success of the North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA) with the Free Trade Area of the Americas, which will
expand free trade benefits throughout the Western Hemisphere.
We are also encouraging the free flow of trade and investment
in the Pacific among our partners in the Asia-Pacific Economic
Cooperation forum and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
In addition, we are negotiating a free trade agreement with
five Central American democracies and will soon begin free
trade agreement negotiations with the Southern African Customs
Union to help spur economic growth in these two regions. Bilaterally,
I recently signed a historic free trade agreement with Singapore
-- the first of its kind between the United States and an
Asian/Pacific country, and we are finalizing a similar agreement
with Chile. Free trade agreement negotiations are also underway
with Australia and Morocco.
In
America, trade is also critical to maintaining our economic
competitiveness in the global market. It has been estimated
that one in eleven American jobs -- over 12 million -- are
supported by exports of goods and services. In the 1990s,
exports accounted for about one-quarter of our economic growth.
Our Nation's two major trade agreements during this time,
NAFTA and the Uruguay Round, provided consumers with a greater
choice of goods at better prices, while raising living standards
for a typical American family of four by up to $2,000 a year.
My
Administration is also providing assistance to help trade-impacted
workers adapt to the challenge of international competition.
The Trade Adjustment Assistance program helps trade-impacted
workers gain or enhance job-related skills and find new jobs.
The program provides eligible workers with up to 2 years of
training, income support during training, job search assistance,
and relocation allowances.
World
trade allows all nations to share in the great economic, social,
and political progress of our age and provides a foundation
for a more peaceful and stable world. This week, we recognize
the importance of free trade in promoting prosperity and freedom
in the United States and around the world.
NOW,
THEREFORE, I, GEORGE W. BUSH, President of the United States
of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the
Constitution and laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim
May 18 through May 24, 2003, as World Trade Week. I encourage
all Americans to observe this week with events, trade shows,
and educational programs that celebrate the benefits of trade
to our Nation and the global economy.
IN
WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this sixteenth
day of May, in the year of our Lord two thousand three, and
of the Independence of the United States of America the two
hundred and twenty-seventh.
GEORGE
W. BUSH
(Distributed
by the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
|