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The three trade bills are predicted to increase U.S. farming and manufacturing exports by some $13 billion a year and create tens of thousands of jobs. But the Obama administration has held up on submitting the agreements to Congress while it reopened talks with the partner nations to increase access to South Korea for U.S. autos, persuade Panama to change laws that fostered tax havens, and prod Colombia to take action to stop violence against union groups. There's now a sense of urgency in finalizing the agreements as South Korea implements a trade agreement with the European Union and Colombia and Canada prepare to put a trade deal into effect. The Trade Adjustment Assistance program, first enacted in 1962, was expanded as part of the 2009 economic stimulus package to offer help to service industry workers and increase subsidies so laid-off workers can buy health insurance. Those expanded portions expired in February, and the White House and Democrats have pressed for their renewal. Baucus, along with Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp, R-Mich., and the White House, worked out a compromise that provides somewhat less generous benefits for the displaced workers. Last year more than 200,000 workers made use of the program at a cost of almost $1 billion.
[Associated
Press;
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