Modern History Sourcebook:
United States Department of State Press Statement:
On the European Common Market And The Free Trade Area, January 15, 1957
Belgium, France, the German Federal Republic, Italy, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands
have been engaged in negotiations with a view to establishing a common market among them.
The common market would involve the elimination of substantially all of the barriers to
trade among these six countries and the establishment by them of a common external tariff
toward outside countries. The United Kingdom has expressed a desire to associate itself
with the envisaged six-country common market in a free-trade-area relationship. Under this
arrangement barriers to trade between the United Kingdom and the six countries of the
common market would be eliminated on a wide range of products. However, the United Kingdom
would continue to maintain its own tariff against countries outside the free trade area,
and the six countries of the common market would do the same with their unified tariff.
Other Western European countries have indicated an interest in associating themselves with
these arrangements on a basis similar to that of the United Kingdom.Following is a statement of U.S. policy with respect to the proposed European common
market and free trade area. This is a summary of views which have been communicated to the
governments concerned.The attitude of the United States with respect to current Western European proposals
for a common market and free trade area is determined by two traditional policies of the
U.S. Government: our consistent support of moves to further the political and economic
strength and cohesion of Western Europe within an expanding Atlantic community and our
long-standing devotion to progress toward freer nondiscriminatory multilateral trade and
convertibility of currencies.It is in the light of these complementary objectives that the United States welcomes
the initiatives for a common market and free trade area in Western Europe. The details of
the common-market treaty are being worked out in negotiations now taking place in Brussels
among Belgium, France, the German Federal Republic, Italy, Luxembourg, and the
Netherlands; the governments of these countries have indicated that it is their intention
that the common market which they envisage should result in the expansion of their trade
not only with each other but also with other countries.A European common market based on provisions which hold the promise of attaining this
objective will have the support of the United States. This would be consistent with U.S.
support of such arrangements as the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and the
Articles of Agreement of the International Monetary Fund, both of which have as their
objective the expansion of nondiscriminatory multilateral trade.Certain aspects of the common-market arrangements will be of particular interest to the
U.S. Government: those relating to agriculture, those having a bearing on the
liberalization of import controls affecting dollar goods, and measures both public and
private which bear on international trade. The European market for agricultural exports
from the United States is important, and we will wish therefore to study carefully the
possible impact of common-market arrangements on it. The progress which Western European
countries have made in recent years in liberalizing imports from the dollar area has been
encouraging; it is hoped that this progress will be continued as rapidly as the
circumstances permit. Since the six countries are also participants in the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, it is assumed that such import restrictions as may be
found necessary to maintain will be consistent with the standards of the general
agreement.Thc United Kingdom has made known its preliminary decision to associate itself with the
common-market countries in a free-trade-area arrangement. The association of the United
Kingdom in such an arrangement would further strengthen the unity of the Atlantic
Community and the free world. The United States hopes that such free-trade-area
arrangements as may be concluded among the proposed common market, the United Kingdom, and
other OEEC countries would also encourage the expansion of international trade from which
all of the free-world countries, and not only those participating in the common market and
free trade area, would benefit.In summary it is our hope and expectation that the negotiations on the common market
and free trade area will be carried forward and concluded in such a manner that from these
European initiatives will come a new contribution to the unity and prosperity of Europe
and the Atlantic Community and to the welfare of the entire free world.
Source:From The Department of State Bulletin, XXXVI, 919, (Feb 4, 1957), p. 182
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