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WTO Symposium on GATS Mode 4 The Jamaican Experience with the Movement of Natural Persons. Presenter: Enos A. Brown HEART Trust/NTA - Jamaica. Developing Country Perspective. Developing countries are particularly concerned with Mode 4 Comparative advantage in labour-intensive services
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WTO Symposium on GATS Mode 4The Jamaican Experience with the Movement of Natural Persons Presenter: Enos A. Brown HEART Trust/NTA - Jamaica
Developing Country Perspective Developing countries are particularly concerned with Mode 4 • Comparative advantage in labour-intensive services • Negative impact of the earlier phases of trade liberalization Developing countries have a clear interest in promoting significant liberalization under Mode 4
The Presentation • Jamaican programmes for trade in services through the movement of natural persons (MNP) • Formal • Informal • CARICOM Protocol II and the MNP • Regional TVET Strategy
Formal MNP Programmes Prior to the 1900’s Jamaica was an net importer of labour Since the early 1900’s Jamaica is a net exporter of labour Formal programmes include: • Farm Work Programme • Hospitality Work Programme • Schoolteacher Work Programme
Farm Worker Programme • Temporary/Seasonal work – 3 to 9 mths • Low skilled agriculture workers • Abundant home country supply • Significant host country demand • Home – Win, Host – Win, Global – Win --------EXPAND-------
Hospitality Worker Programme • Temporary/Seasonal work – 3 to 9 mths • Low and semi skilled workers • Limited home country supply • Home country capacity to produce supply • Significant host country demand • Home – Win, Host – Win, Global – Win ------Controlled Expansion-----
Schoolteacher Programme • Temporary work – 2 years and over • Skilled and professional workers • Scarcity in home country supply • Limited home country capacity to produce schoolteachers • Significant host country demand • Home – Lose, Host – Win, Global – Lose ------ Limit Expansion-----
GATS Considerations • Movement of low-skilled and semi-skilled persons must be considered along with skilled professionals • MNP should not be tied to commercial presence in the host country • Government control on MNP should be reduced • Economic needs tests should be removed • Temporary short-term safeguards should be available to home and host countries
Informal MNP Programmes • Jamaicans are highly migratory in nature • Significant numbers return to Jamaica • Significant numbers maintain economic ties with Jamaica – labour related transfers (remittances)
Movement of Professionals • Permanent migration is encouraged through host country immigration laws • Permanent migration has a “brain drain” effect on home countries and contributes to social polarization • Temporary movement of professionals is in the interest of home and host countries
Movement of Non-Professionals • Unofficial access to temporary employment in host country – homecare & personal care services • Market conditions exist to promote the temporary MNP in these services • Fully represents the objective of Mode 4 – an efficient natural person service provider satisfying market demand in another member’s territory
GATS Considerations • GATS should provide for clear differentiation between temporary work movement and permanent migration • Immigration policies that favour permanent migration of professionals should be replaced with Mode 4 type movement • Consideration must be given to host country public policy concerns • The market should determine efficient allocation of labour. However, short-term safeguards are required
CARICOM Protocol II and MNP Protocol II – Right of Establishment, Services and Capital • Promote free movement of services, capital and select skilled workers; and the right to set up business • Ensure national treatment and non-discrimination in carrying out business • Facilitate access to resources within CARICOM • Create more business & employment opportunities; open opportunities for trade in services
CARICOM Protocol II and MNP • Free MNP initially limited to graduates from approved universities and select professionals • Vast majority of CARICOM nationals are excluded from this facility • Absence of a formal mechanism recognize the work competencies of its nationals
Move to Regional TVET Strategy • TVET covers a broader spectrum of occupations including professional qualifications • Based on establishment of National Training Agency in each territory • Regional TVET framework – competency based, industry led. • Emphasis on accreditation, articulation and certification
The National Training Agency • Development and approval of occupational performance standards for delivery by any training provider • Regional and national framework for articulation of programmes across institutions and territories (Modular training standards and delivery) • Valid and reliable national certification of competence • Regional recognition of national certification through the CARICOM Vocational Qualification (CVQ) CVQ is the facility for free movement of nationals within CARICOM, full implementation 2005
CARICOM Model Relevant to GATS • Occupational certification based on documented standards that facilitate evaluation and articulation is desirable. • Some level of harmonization across countries is required for the MNP. The Mutual Recognition Model is ideal • Occupation certification is preferred to a professional certification framework. It incorporates the range from low-skilled to highly skilled professionals and recognizes on-the-job experience and academic qualifications
Concluding Comments • Greater liberalization under Mode 4 is in the long-term interest of both developed and developing countries • Greater liberalization should focus on occupational certification in addition to professional credentialing • A strengthened mechanism for the cross-border recognition of occupational competence is required. CARICOM Regional TVET Strategy is one such model