Americas

(Jim Winstead / CC BY 2.0)

In North America, the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which took effect on 1 January 1994, is the most emblematic free trade deal. It became a symbol of the neoliberal world order and served as a blueprint for agreements implemented over the following couple of decades. NAFTA expanded upon the 1989 Canada–US trade agreement and was seen as a landmark in setting new standards in areas such as agriculture, investment, intellectual property and services. However, dubbed a “death sentence” for Mexico’s campesinos and indigenous peoples, NAFTA sparked strong and sustained resistance in Mexico, including the Zapatista uprising. Thirty years of trade liberalisation under NAFTA has had dire consequences for populations. The most severe consequences have been felt in Mexico, where small-scale farming has been put in peril while jobs with low wages and poor working conditions have flourished. NAFTA was renegotiated in 2017 by the first Trump administration. The revamped version, the United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement (USMCA, or CUSMA in Canada), came into force on 1 July 2020.

Latin America is one of the most densely covered regions in the world by trade and investment agreements, it is also one of the regions where resistance is strongest.

Chile has signed over 30 trade agreements and more than 50 bilateral investment treaties (BITs). Peru has over 20 trade agreements and more than 30 BITs. Colombia, for its part, has over 15 trade agreements and more than 15 BITs. These three countries all have a trade deal with the United Statesand the European Union, while Peru and Chile have a trade agreement with China too.. Ecuador has over 10 trade agreements, including one signed with China and the European Union, and others under negotiation with the United States, the United Arab Emirates, and Canada. Ecuador denounced all of its BITs over a decade ago, as did Bolivia. Chile, Peru as well as Mexico are also members of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, a trade and investment agreement between 12 countries. 

At the regional level, the Mercosur bloc (Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Bolivia in the process of accession) has trade agreements with Israel, Egypt, and Palestine, as well as preferential agreements with India, Mexico, and the Southern African Customs Union. In 2025, Mercosur signed a trade agreement with the European Free Trade Association (EFTA), and in January 2026 it signed another with the European Union. The latter has already been ratified by all the bloc's countries and it is expected to enter into force provisionally in May 2026, until the European Union fully ratifies it. Mercosur has also announced negotiations for a trade agreement with Canada.

Faced with this expansion of the trade and investment regime, Latin America also has a long history of resistance. In 2005, one of the most important milestones was the defeat of the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA), an attempt to create a free trade agreement covering the entire American continent, marking its 20th anniversary. This victory was the result of a coalition of social movements, unions, peasant organizations, and governments that questioned the project promoted by the United States. The continental campaign against the FTAA not only managed to halt that agreement but also set a precedent for building regional resistance networks.

Another central focus of these critiques by social movements is the investor-state dispute settlement system (ISDS), present in most BITs and many investment chapters of FTAs. ISDS allows transnational corporations to sue sovereign states before international tribunals. Latin America has been one of the most sued regions in the world under this mechanism, facing multibillion-dollar litigation that affects public finances and conditions decision-making.

In response, several countries have taken action to limit or abandon these mechanisms. Bolivia (2007), Ecuador (2010), Venezuela (2012), and Honduras (2024) withdrew from the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), arguing the need to recover sovereignty. Among these countries, Ecuador returned to ICSID in 2021 and Honduras in 2026. More recently, in April 2026, Colombia has announced a review of its treaty policy and its possible withdrawal from these mechanisms.

The proliferation of these agreements has not solved the structural problems of development but has instead consolidated a model based on dependency, extractivism, and subordination. In response, social movements have proposed alternatives, drawing on the experience of resistance and raising the need for regional integration centered on the people, sovereignty, and social justice.

last update: May 2026

Photo: Jim Winstead / CC BY 2.0


Trade unions oppose privileged rights for Big Business in EU-Canada trade deal
The European Trade Union Confederation strongly opposes the inclusion of ISDS in CETA, and the subsequent creation of a parallel court system which allows multinationals to sue and threaten governments with heavy costs for doing their democratic job of regulating their societies and economies.
More than 100 organizations sign transatlantic statement opposing dangerous investor "rights" chapter in CETA
As European and Canadian trade officials meet again in Brussels today to continue negotiating an investment protection chapter in the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), transatlantic civil society groups are demanding that this chapter be removed entirely as an affront to democracy, an attack on the independent judiciary, and a threat to climate change and our shared environment.
Access to medecines and the TPP: Open letter to the PM of Canada
Delivered by the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network
#Maori culture could be trademarked by TPP multinationals
The scary thing about the TPP is that it won’t only affect indigenous free-hold land, nor will it just push our people further into poverty. The TPP will give multinationals the right to exploit and rape the ecosystem and further aid them in the acquiring of enforced trademarking and copyrighting of indigenous intellectual property and cultural/traditional knowledge.
Aussie sugar could get sweet FTA
The Australian Sugar Industry Alliance is demanding sugar's inclusion in the Trans Pacific Partnership after it was left out of the US FTA in 2008.
Trade-talk protesters push limit, then back off
Will Munger, of Utah Tar Sands Resistance, said his group wasn’t trying to get arrested. Instead they were raising their voices against what they fear will be a trade pact that encourages the export of methane gas from the United States to other nations.
Trade talks open in Utah, but secrecy spurs protests
Outside Salt Lake City’s Grand America Hotel on Tuesday, the rains fell, the speakers rose, the marchers chanted. Inside, top trade negotiators from the US and 11 other Pacific Rim nations perhaps discussed imports and exports, profits and products, prices and patents. The exact topics aren’t known. The talks were closed.
FTA increases export of US produce to S Korea
In March 2012, the South Korea- US KORUS FTA eliminated a 24 per cent tariffs on US cherries. By the end of 2012, 5,897 tonnes of US cherries had been exported to South Korea, almost double the quantity the previous year.
Bahrain-US trade doubles over FTA
Addressing a seminar at the Bahrain Chamber of Commerce and Industry (BCCI) in Sanabis yesterday, Industry and Commerce Minister Dr Hassan Fakhro said bilateral trade has grown from about $1.1 billion in 2006 to about $2bn last year, as Bahrain was given tariff-free access to the world's largest economy, reported the Gulf Daily News, our sister publication.
Mega EU-US trade talks moving ahead ‘step by step’
A second round of EU-US talks to seal the world's largest free-trade accord concluded in Brussels on Friday while a third round is scheduled for December 16-20 in Washington

Referenced sites

De pie, Costa Rica de pie!!!

Publicación del Partido Frente Amplio para informar sobre la resistencia al TLC en Costa Rica

DR-CAFTA Tratado de Libre Comercio de las Américas

Temas relevantes acerca del tratado de libre comercio, República Dominicana, Centroamérica y Estados Unidos.

EPHA news feed on TTIP

European Public Health Alliance news feed on the prospective EU-US Trade Agreement (TTIP) & its potential impact on public health - Subscribe!!

Erstes TTIP Leak

des deutschsprachigen TTIP Mandats für die Geheimverhandlungen zwischen EU und USA

EU negotiating texts in TTIP

New web page from the European Commission containing fact sheets and proposed legal text for TTIP

Expose the TPP

The TPP would expand and lock in corporate power. At the heart of the TPP are new rights allowing thousands of multinational corporations to sue the U.S. gov...

FTAA

Free Trade Area of the Americas official website (in Spanish, Portuguese, French and English)

FTA Watch

A coalition of activists, lawyers, NGOs, social movements and labour groups monitoring the US-Thailand FTA negotiations.

GMA

The Grocery Manufacturers of America is a major lobby group on US FTAs