The Honorable Robert C. Byrd
President Pro Tempore
U.S. Senate
Washington, DC 20510
Dear Senator Byrd:
At the direction of the President, I am pleased to notify the 
Congress of the United States’ ongoing negotiations with Singapore on a 
free trade agreement 
(FTA). This notification is in accordance with 
section 2106(b)(2)(A) of the Trade Act of 2002. It 
is crucial that we 
move forward on this and other trade agreements in order to restore 
America’s leadership on trade.
The Administration is committed to bringing back trade agreements 
that open markets to benefit our farmers, workers, businesses, and 
families. With the Congress’ 
continued help we can move promptly to 
advance America’s trade interests. Concluding our 
ongoing negotiations 
with Singapore is an important first step.
In my letter of August 22, 2002, to the Congressional leadership 
and trade committees, I outlined the reasons that it is in the United 
States’ interest to pursue an 
FTA with Singapore. An FTA with Singapore 
will foster economic growth and create higher 
paying jobs in the United 
States by reducing and eliminating barriers to trade and investment. The 
agreement will not only improve market opportunities for U.S. goods and 
services exports, but it 
may also serve as a model for the Asia-Pacific 
region, encouraging trade liberalization, regulatory 
reform and 
transparency. An FTA will offer important benefits to U.S. workers, ranchers, 
farmers, and businesses while reinforcing important American values in 
the region.
 
As with Chile, President Clinton called for and began 
negotiations 
with Singapore in December 2000. In deciding to initiate 
negotiations with Singapore, we have 
taken into account the size of its 
trade with the United States, its importance in the region, 
and its 
history as an advocate of trade liberalization. The agreement is nearing 
completion.
The negotiations on this FTA have been conducted in a transparent 
manner to ensure that businesses, labor organizations, non-governmental 
organizations, 
state and local governments, and the public are kept 
informed and have ample opportunity to 
provide views. We have completed 
draft environmental review of this agreement, and are 
accepting public 
comment on it. The Administration has endeavored to keep Congress fully 
informed on the status of negotiations. USTR staff has provided 
periodic briefings to the 
House Committee on Ways and Means and the 
Senate Committee on Finance, as well as other 
committees with interests 
in the negotiations. USTR staff has also provided focused briefings for 
individual Members’ staffs on specific issues.
We have consulted extensively with Members of Congress since 
initiation of the negotiations with Singapore, and we believe that 
there is broad bipartisan 
interest in such an agreement. The 
Administration will continue to consult closely with Congress, 
including the new Congressional Oversight Group.
Our specific objectives for the negotiations with Singapore are as 
follows:
• Trade in Goods:
– Seek to eliminate tariffs and other duties and charges on trade 
between Singapore and the United States on the broadest possible basis, 
subject to 
reasonable adjustment periods for import-sensitive products.
• Customs Matters, 
Rules of Origin and Enforcement 
Cooperation
– Seek rules to require that Singapore’s customs operations are 
conducted with transparency, efficiency, and predictability and customs 
laws, 
regulations, decisions, and rulings are not applied in a manner 
that would 
create unwarranted procedural obstacles to international 
trade.
– Seek rules of origin, procedures for applying these rules, and 
provisions to address circumvention matters that will ensure that 
preferential 
duty rates under the FTA with Singapore apply only to 
goods eligible to receive 
such treatment, without creating unnecessary 
obstacles to trade.
– Seek terms for cooperative efforts with Singapore regarding 
enforcement of customs and related issues, including trade in textiles 
and 
apparel and endangered species.
• Sanitary and 
Phytosanitary (SPS) Measures:
– Seek to have Singapore reaffirm its WTO commitments on SPS 
measures.
– Seek to strengthen bilateral collaboration in matters under the 
WTO SPS Agreement.
• Technical Barriers 
to Trade 
(TBT):
– Seek to have Singapore reaffirm its WTO TBT commitments.
– Seek to strengthen bilateral collaboration on implementation of 
the WTO TBT Agreement and create a procedure for exchanging information 
with 
Singapore on TBT-related issues.
• Intellectual 
Property Rights:
– Seek to establish standards that build on the foundations 
established in the WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of 
Intellectual Property (TRIPs 
Agreement) and other international 
intellectual property agreements, such as 
the World Intellectual 
Property Organization Copyright Treaty and 
Performances and Phonograms 
Treaty, and the Patent Cooperation Treaty.
– Seek to enhance the level of Singapore’s protection for 
intellectual property rights beyond TRIPS in new areas of technology, 
such as internet 
service provider liability, and seek commitments from 
Singapore to develop laws and 
enforcement mechanisms to eliminate 
optical disc piracy.
– In other areas, such as patent protection and protection of 
undisclosed information, seek to have Singapore apply levels of 
protection and 
practices more in line with U.S. law and practices, 
including appropriate 
flexibility.
– Seek to strengthen Singapore’s domestic enforcement procedures, 
such as by ensuring that Singaporean authorities seize suspected 
pirated and 
counterfeit goods, equipment used to make such goods or to 
transmit pirated 
goods, and documentary evidence. Seek to strengthen 
measures in Singapore 
that provide for compensation of right holders 
for infringements and to provide for 
criminal penalties under 
Singaporean law that are sufficient to have a 
deterrent effect on 
piracy and counterfeiting.
• Trade in 
Services:
– Pursue disciplines to address discriminatory and other barriers 
to trade in Singapore’s services markets. Pursue a comprehensive 
approach to 
market access, including any necessary improvements in 
access to 
financial services, professional services, express delivery 
and other sectors.
– Seek improved transparency and predictability of Singaporean 
regulatory procedures, specialized disciplines for financial services 
and 
additional disciplines for telecommunication services and other 
sectors as 
necessary.
• Temporary Entry of 
Business Persons
– Seek appropriate provisions to ensure that Singapore will 
facilitate the temporary entry of U.S. business persons into its 
territory, while ensuring 
that any commitments by the United States are 
limited to temporary entry 
provisions and do not require any changes to 
U.S. laws and regulations relating 
to permanent immigration and 
permanent employment rights.
• Investment:
– Seek to establish rules that reduce or eliminate artificial or 
trade-distorting barriers to U.S. investment in Singapore, while 
ensuring that 
Singaporean investors in the United States are not 
accorded greater 
substantive rights with respect to investment 
protections than U.S. investors in the 
United States, and to secure for 
U.S. investors in Singapore important rights comparable 
to those that 
would be available under U.S. legal principles and practice.
– Seek to ensure that U.S. investors receive treatment as 
favorable as that accorded to domestic or other foreign investors in 
Singapore and to address 
unjustified barriers to the establishment and 
operation of U.S. investments in 
Singapore. Provide procedures to 
resolve disputes between U.S. investors and 
the government of Singapore 
that are in keeping with the trade 
promotion authority goals of being 
expeditious, fair and transparent.
• Electronic 
Commerce:
– Seek to affirm that Singapore will allow goods and services to 
be delivered electronically and seek to ensure that Singapore does not 
apply 
customs duties to digital products or unjustifiably discriminate 
among products 
delivered electronically.
• Government 
Procurement:
– Both the United States and Singapore are parties to the WTO 
Government Procurement Agreement (GPA) and, thus, our objective is to 
expand 
U.S. market access to Singapore’s government procurement market, 
particularly 
for services, and to lower procurement threshold values 
for goods.
– Address coverage of Singapore’s government-linked companies.
• Transparency/Anti-Corruption/Regulatory Reform:
– Seek to make Singapore’s procedures for administering 
trade-related measures fairer and more transparent, including by 
ensuring that interested 
parties can have timely access to information 
on measures and Singapore’s 
procedures for administering them. Seek 
rules that will permit timely and 
meaningful public comment before 
Singapore adopts trade-related measures.
– Seek to ensure that Singapore enforces its prohibitions on 
corrupt practices affecting international trade.
• Trade Remedies:
– Provide a bilateral safeguard mechanism during the transition 
period.
– Make no changes in U.S. antidumping and countervailing duty 
laws.
• Competition
– Address such issues as anticompetitive business conduct, state 
monopolies, state enterprises, and government-linked companies. Seek 
cooperation 
and consultation provisions that foster cooperation on 
competition law 
and policy, and that provide for consultations on 
specific problems that may 
arise.
• Environment:
– Seek to promote trade and environment policies that are mutually 
supportive.
– Seek an appropriate commitment by Singapore to the effective 
enforcement of its environmental laws.
– Establish that Singapore will strive to ensure that it will not, 
as an encouragement for trade or investment, weaken or reduce the 
protections provided 
for in its environmental laws.
– Seek to develop ways to work with Singapore, including through 
consultative mechanisms, to address environmental issues of mutual 
interest.
• Labor, including 
Child Labor:
– Seek an appropriate commitment by Singapore to the effective 
enforcement of its labor laws.
– Establish that Singapore will strive to ensure that it will not, 
as an encouragement for trade or investment, weaken or reduce the 
protections provided 
for in its labor laws.
– Establish procedures for consultations and cooperative 
activities with Singapore to strengthen its capacity to promote respect 
for core labor 
standards, including compliance with ILO Convention 182 
on the worst forms of child 
labor.
• State-to-State 
Dispute 
Settlement:
– Encourage the early identification and settlement of disputes 
through consultation.
– Seek to establish fair, transparent, timely, and effective 
procedures to settle disputes arising under the agreement.
In addition, the FTA will take into account other legitimate U.S. 
objectives including, but not limited to, the protection of legitimate 
health or safety, 
essential security, and consumer 
interests.
We are committed to concluding these negotiations with timely and 
substantive results for U.S. ranchers, farmers, businesses, and 
families by pursuing these 
specific objectives and the overall and 
principal U.S. negotiating objectives and priorities set out 
in the TPA 
Act. We look forward to continuing to work with the Congress as we move forward 
in our 
negotiations with Singapore and bring them to a successful 
conclusion.
Sincerely,
Robert B. Zoellick