Assistant U.S. Trade Representative
for Africa
Florizelle
(Florie) Liser is the Assistant U.S. Trade Representative for Africa in the
Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR). In this position, she
leads U.S. trade efforts in sub-Saharan Africa, oversees implementation of the
African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), and serves as chief U.S. negotiator
for a free trade agreement with the five member countries of the Southern
African Customs Union.
Ms. Liser has an
extensive background in trade negotiations and Africa. She previously served as
Assistant U.S. Trade Representative for Industry, Market Access, and
Telecommunications. In that position, she was responsible for developing and
coordinating U.S. trade policy as it affects industrial and manufacturing
interests – including telecommunications, electronic commerce, steel, chemicals,
forest products, semiconductors, aircraft, and shipbuilding, among others. Ms.
Liser was responsible for negotiating the resolution of bilateral trade issues
in these sectors, and traveled, among other places, to South Africa to consult
with South African telecom officials and regulators.
As head of USTR's
Office of Industry, Market Access and Telecommunications, Ms. Liser also
coordinated industrial market access negotiations in bilateral and regional free
trade agreements and in the WTO. As part of the ongoing WTO market access
negotiations of the Doha Development Agenda, Ms. Liser met with the African
diplomatic community and African Ambassadors to the WTO, and held various
bilateral consultations with African nations to discuss market access proposals
presently being considered.
Prior to serving
as Assistant U.S. Trade Representative for Industry, Market Access and
Telecommunications, Ms. Liser worked at the Department of Transportation and
served as senior trade policy advisor to the Secretary in the Office of
International Transportation and Trade. In this capacity, Ms. Liser coordinated
trade and transportation issues of importance to developing countries, with a
particular focus on Africa. She organized the first U.S.-Africa Transportation
Ministerial, helped in developing the Safe Skies for Africa initiative, and
played a key role in preparing former Secretary Rodney Slater for a number of
trips to Africa.
From 1980 to
1987, Ms. Liser worked in the USTR GATT Affairs office on WTO developing country
trade issues, including the Committees on Trade and Development, Least Developed
Countries, and Balance-of-Payments, and coordinated USG participation in a
number of balance-of-payments consultations – including the first-ever Nigeria
balance-of-payments consultations.
As an Associate
Fellow at the Overseas Development Council (ODC) from 1975-1980, Ms. Liser
served as the ODC source person on Africa and organized seminars on relevant
African issues related to ODC's mission of increasing official development
assistance to and improving U.S. trade relations with developing countries.
Ms. Liser was a
founding member of TransAfrica (participating in the early planning sessions for
its national launch), co-chair of the Education Committee of the Washington, DC
Chapter of TransAfrica, and has over many years been actively involved in
promoting trade and development policies that recognize Africa's growing
importance to the U.S. and its African-American citizens.
Ms. Liser holds a
M.A. in International Economics from Johns Hopkins University, School of
Advanced International Studies (SAIS), and a B.A. in International Relations and
Political Science from Dickinson College. She was born in Colon, Republic of
Panama and raised in Brooklyn, New York.