The Editor
Europe's Parliament has moved
to revitalize the continent's weak economy by clearing the way for a free-trade
agreement with the U.S. A baby step, yes, but if it succeeds, it'll be the
mother of all trade pacts.
By a vote of 526-94, the
European Parliament approved its first resolution calling for talks on a
U.S.-European free-trade agreement, starting in the first half of 2013.
"We wanted to send a
strong political signal in favor of opening negotiations with the United States
in order to create a real trans-Atlantic market with enormous opportunities for
growth," said EU's Vital Moreira before the vote.
It was a smart move coming
from a continent that has long protected its industries through high tariffs
and tangled regulations. It also comes just as a bill urging U.S.-EU free
trade, "The Economic Freedom Alliance Act," is gaining support in
Congress.
Two-way trade between the U.S.
and Europe in 2011 stood at $1 trillion, and free trade will heap another $200
billion onto both economies.
Thousands of jobs will come of
it and consumers will be in hog heaven, with Americans buying duty-free Italian
Guccis, Greek seafood or German BMWs while Europeans will snap up no-tariff
Texas-made computers, Ohio-made drill bits and California almonds — to give
just a few examples.
"The EU has taken a major
step toward upgrading the pivotal trans-Atlantic relationship," Rep. Devin
Nunes, a California Republican who sponsored the U.S. bill, told IBD. "An
agreement for free and fair trade would greatly benefit the economies on both
sides, binding Europe and America closer together through peaceful
commerce."
That's progress, and with a
troubled Europe now taking its first step, it can't start soon enough.
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