New warnings on TPP, free trade ‘regime’ fostering ‘global emergency situation’

 

– Andrea Germanos, staff writer   http://www.commondreams.org

September 10, 2013

As secretive talks over the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP)—the pending free trade agreement slammed as “NAFTA on steroids” and “a quiet coup for the investor class“—continue, new warnings highlight the corporate winners and global losers at stake.

(Photo: GlobalTradeWatch/cc/flickr)

As Kristen Beifus, director of the Washington Fair Trade Coalition, wrote,

The corporate powers granted in the TPP can override domestic laws on environmental health and safety, and labor and citizens’ rights. Not only that, but multinationals can claim that those domestic laws hamper free trade and sue member countries for millions of dollars. The TPP is in many ways an attempt to revive the stalled expansion of the World Trade Organization.

In other words, as Food & Water Watch’s Mitch Jones explained, TPP would be a “permanent power grab by corporations” that “would permanently enshrine the very economic system that has lead to greater imbalances in income and wealth and increasing economic crises.”

Save the climate, ditch ‘free trade’

Charging that “To confront the climate emergency we need to dismantle the WTO and the free trade regime,” groups including La Via Campesina, Focus on the Global South and Oilwatch International explain that the logic of free trade policies, including the TPP,

promotes the construction of market-oriented and imbalanced economies that focus on the demands of the market rather than the needs of their people on the ground. These export-oriented economies also bleed Mother Nature in order to exploit the most out of it provoking disruptions in the environment as we are seeing now with climate change, biodiversity loss and the destruction of ecosystems. This is the capitalist logic – nature is just a thing to be exploited for profit.

The real beneficiaries of this [sic] imbalanced trade rules of the WTO are the transnational corporations since in reality, they are the ones that have more “comparative advantages” than fledgling national and domestic infant industries. In a world of free trade flows – as the WTO aspires – transnational corporations are free to enter and move between countries, choosing those with cheap labor and relaxed regulations and at the same time able to exit and move out just as easily after it has exhausted and grabbed the natural resources, leaving in several cases, their toxic waste.

At the same time, the losers are many – the farmers who lose their farms as they cannot compete with cheap food imports that flood the local markets, the workers whose jobs are made even more unstable and precarious with the pressure to lower labor standards, the persons who are forced to migrate because of loss of livelihood, the women who are most times those who bear the brunt of economic distress on the family and community, the indigenous people who are displaced from their lands, and Mother Earth.

And as Common Dreams contributor and organic dairy farmer Jim Goodman points out, with TPP,

Policies promoting sustainably produced foods sourced from local small-scale farmers for consumption in schools or institutions, could be deemed to unfairly discriminate against foreign suppliers.

Trade liberalization and elimination of local control will promote more intensive fossil fuel based agricultural production that is the exact opposite of the type of farming we must promote to reverse agriculture’s contribution to climate change.

Uprisings against such trade agreements and their effects are taking place now, as small-scale farmers in Colombia, joined by gorwing numbers of civil society, have launched a series of protests against the U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement that has devastated local agriculture.

More losers:  public health, and probably you

Among the losers of the TPP,  according to the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), are most U.S. workers.  In a report released Tuesday, CEPR economist David Rosnick looks at projections for the effect of trade on inequality and finds that

in fact, most workers are likely to lose — the exceptions being some of the bottom quarter or so whose earnings are determined by the minimum wage; and those with the highest wages who are more protected from international competition. Rather, many top incomes will rise as a result of TPP expansion of the terms and enforcement of copyrights and patents.

Another potential loser:  public health, thanks to a potential cave to Big Tobacco.

(Photo: Caelie_Frampton/cc/flickr)As Vietnam’s Thanh Nien Daily reports,

The US government has sought to include tobacco in a regional free-trade pact, which would enable tobacco companies to use trade rules to compromise government anti-smoking regulations.

In talks that began August 23 in Brunei for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), if the US proposal is accepted, Big Tobacco could sue countries that enact anti-smoking laws deemed to be in breach of the TPP, health groups say.

Watchdog group Public Citizen notes that “The Obama administration has drawn sharp criticism from leading health organizations, U.S. state representatives, and New York mayor Michael Bloomberg” for this cave to Big Tobacco.  Public Citizen continues:

The TPP’s extreme investor privileges would empower tobacco corporations to skirt domestic legal systems and attack tobacco control policies before extrajudicial tribunals as a means of intimidating policymakers who would dare to enact such safeguards. The Obama administration’s proposal does nothing to limit, or even to address, this empowerment of Big Tobacco.

Unfortunately, the investor-state threat is not a hypothetical one. Phillip Morris has already used such investor privileges in other treaties to attack landmark anti-smoking laws in Australia and Uruguay after failing to undermine those health laws in domestic courts.  As Andrew Martin points out in Bloomberg, Philip Morris has been leading Big Tobacco’s battle to pressure the Obama administration to weaken tobacco-control safeguards in the TPP.

The Obama administration’s caving to that pressure makes clear the TPP’s very real threat to public health.  As Laurent Huber of Action on Smoking and Health stated, the new tobacco-friendly proposal for TPP “will mean more lives lost, both here in the US and abroad.” It is more crucial than ever to expose the TPP and to stop it from being fast tracked through Congress. Our health depends on it.

* * *

“We are living a global emergency situation,” the environmental justice groups write, and the solution will come from nothing short of a paradigm shift away from free trade policies that threaten the climate, food sovereignty and the global “99%.”

“If we are to save nature and humanity, we need to change the system and changing the system means dismantling the free trade regime.”

Push To Have New Zealand Cut Lose From Trans- Pacific Partnership Agreement

Groser and Key must reject ongoing US assault on Pharmac in the TPPA

Posted on September 11, 2013 by Admin2    http://www.nznotforsale.org/

New Picture (6)

‘There are further reports that the US informally proposed a two-tier approach to pharmaceuticals during the recent Brunei round’, said Professor Jane Kelsey, referring to an article in Inside US Trade published yesterday.

The US continues to target the availability of generic medicines on which the Pharmac system relies.

The revised US proposal would give Malaysia, Vietnam, Peru and Brunei more flexibility on the grounds they are non–OECD countries – even though Brunei’s per capita GDP is over US$50,000 and New Zealand’s is US$28,800.

Those countries would still have to accept stricter intellectual property rules than they have now and may eventually have to accept the extreme version the US wants to impose on the TPPA countries that are part of the OECD.

‘This two-tier approach does not mean they suddenly have a conscience about the impact of the TPPA on access to affordable medicines in poorer countries of the TPP’, said Professor Kelsey.

‘The US is clearly using the TPPA to establish a “gold standard” for its drug companies across the OECD’, according to Professor Kelsey. ‘They don’t give a damn about what that means for access to affordable medicines and the sustainability of our public health system or that of any other country.’

New Zealand, along with Australia, Chile, Canada, Malaysia and Singapore have reportedly made a much more conservative counter-proposal.

This counter-proposal is likely to be discussed at the forthcoming ‘intersessional’ meeting on intellectual property in Mexico from 23 September to 2 October and probably at the meeting of chief negotiators immediately before that in Washington.

‘The US may tactically hold back the discussion of its own proposal until after that meeting. They can then elevate it directly to the level of ministers and leaders when they meet in Bali during APEC in early October and in Brunei immediately after that for ASEAN’, Professor Kelsey observed. ‘Ominously, the US is expected to chair those meetings.’

‘Trade Minister Groser and Prime Minister Key must stand firm behind the New Zealand negotiators. They cannot give way to US demands and still claim to have defended Pharmac’s “fundamentals’’.’

 

TPPA goes into overdrive and underground

Moves to get the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) to the point of sign-off by the end of the year went into overdrive at the round just ended in Brunei, according to Professor Jane Kelsey who was present as a ‘stakeholder’ for the final few days.

Only the most problematic chapters met in Brunei. They included intellectual property (which discussed patents on medicines), state-owned enterprises, environment, investment and market access for goods, including agriculture.

New Picture (20)

Most other chapters are ‘closed’. That means the technical work is complete and ready for political deals on the controversial matters that remain unresolved.

‘Some countries report that little progress was made in Brunei. But that should not lull anyone into complacency’, Professor Kelsey warned.

‘While many negotiators were exhausted and some were incredulous about concluding their chapter by the end of the year, the politicians seem determined.’

‘To have any chance of pulling off an outcome, groups negotiating some chapters will have to meet every month between now and December.’

Detective work indicates that informal ‘inter-sessional’ meetings on six chapters* are scheduled within the next four weeks – all in North America.

‘“Inter-sessional” is a misnomer’, says Professor Kelsey, ‘because they are not planning any more formal sessions. There will be no access for the media or stakeholders to these smaller meetings.’

‘Past inter-sessionals have been shrouded in secrecy to ensure we can’t find out what’s happening and we don’t have access to those negotiators who see value in talking with us.’

‘The last three years of the TPPA have been widely condemned for their lack of transparency. The process is now going further underground’.

The chief negotiators will apparently meet in Washington DC from 22-24 September, with the US in the chair. They will report to their trade ministers who meet on the margins of APEC in Bali in early October.

The ministers are expected to begin the political horse-trading then. They will report, in turn, to their leaders who are in Bali on 6-7 October for APEC and immediately after that in Brunei for the ASEAN summit. Obama will apparently chair their meetings.

‘It remains to be seen what they can settle by December. The US is expected to table a new text on patents for medicines. There are rumours that this aims to divide and rule its opponents and could leave New Zealand out in the cold.’

‘But the biggest obstacle to a deal is the US-driven chapter on state-owned enterprises, where discussions on the text have barely begun. A new version that combines US and Australian proposals is beset with political, conceptual and technical problems. Almost no progress was made on it in Brunei.’

New Picture (21)

‘Finishing in December may mean the Obama administration has to give this chapter away’, Professor Kelsey speculated. ‘Yet the SOE chapter has been a centrepiece of their sales pitch to Congress on the TPPA. Without it, Congress may refuse to give the President “fast track” authority and retain their power to pick apart any final deal.’

‘There are still many twists and turns to go in these negotiations. The problem is that we will have even less chance to know what they are and what political deals are being made to eliminate them.’

* These appear to be labour (especially on enforcement) in Ottawa; intellectual property (including patents for medicines) Mexico City; e-commerce (including privacy and data protection) San Francisco; investment (mainly schedules of exclusions), location unknown; technical barriers to trade (labelling and technical standards) Mexico City; legal issues (including medical pricing and tobacco) Washington DC.

Will threat to pull out of Vietnam give more power to corporate lobby?

 

Wednesday, September 11, 2013     http://www.thanhniennews.com

Analysts fear foreign companies could twist policymakers’ arms to ensure their profits get priority over people’s interest

                            Factory workers change shifts at the Thang Long Industrial Park outside of Hanoi. Foreign executives have said Vietnam’s minimum wage hikes and new restrictions on overtime are their major concerns. But consumer advocacy nonprofit groups dismiss such claims, saying foreign companies will always argue that more protections for workers, families, or the environment unfairly harm them and threaten to push them to locate investment elsewhere. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

To shore up the sagging confidence of foreign investors, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has pledged to forge ahead with overhauling Vietnam’s business climate.

Dung’s message came at a recent trade fair in China that brought together regional leaders and foreign investors. At an investment conference in Ho Chi Minh City on August 29, investment officials had also promised to apprise the government about all the difficulties expressed by foreign firms.

The government is in fact working on a circular to guide relevant ministries on simplifying the licensing process and eliminating superfluous formalities (*).

Clearly, in a bid to resuscitate an economy that grew at its slowest rate in 13 years last year, Vietnamese leaders are taking serious note of foreign businesses’ threats to pull out of the country or scale down and go to other countries with a better business climate.

Analysts concede it is reasonable for any government that wants to be seen as business-friendly to consult businesses on issues affecting them.

But with the corporate sector becoming a stakeholder in the lawmaking process in Vietnam in recent years, they raise two important questions: Which laws and in what directions are Vietnamese laws being amended to improve the investment environment? Are the people being taken into confidence and involved in the debate?

“If laws and regulations critical to defending public health, environment, food security, incomes, or rights will be weakened, this is cause for worry and should be challenged,” Shalmali Guttal, a senior researcher at the Bangkok-based NGO Focus on the Global South, says.

“If the Vietnamese government itself is weakening its regulatory regimes in order to attract foreign investment, then there is no point in blaming foreign companies,” she adds, however. 

Corporate benefit vs public health

In June 2012 the National Assembly, Vietnam’s legislature, resisted pressure from the US embassy and American formula companies and amended a law to prohibit the advertising of formula products for children under two. The law had earlier set the age limit at one year.

But it was a close-run thing.

In a letter to Vietnamese lawmakers that was leaked to the media, the US embassy in Hanoi had said: “Several US companies have contacted the US Embassy regarding their serious concerns about this proposed prohibition on advertising of formula milk products, which could have a significant negative impact on their business in Vietnam.

“We ask that the National Assembly fully consider the implications of any changes to the draft [law] and engage in a full decision with affected stakeholders before making any such changes.”

The pressure seemed to have worked, with a lawmaker admitting to Vietweek that the drafters of the bill decided not to table it until as late as the night before the vote.

“But thanks to strong advocacy [by health groups], the house did a U-turn,” he said on condition of anonymity, citing the “sensitivity” of the issue.

Also in June last year the house passed Vietnam’s first comprehensive tobacco control laws, which health groups called a “big win for public health.”

But another lawmaker said the people who drafted the law had come under huge pressure from the tobacco industry.

“So its final text was not as strong as expected,” he said, also declining to be named.

‘Doesn’t make sense’

At the HCMC conference on August 29, Mark Gillin, chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam (AmCham), said there should have been “detailed discussion” of the consequences of extending maternity leave from four to six months.

By the time the change took effect in May the government had in fact solicited feedback from foreign business groups for three years. Most of them had wanted it kept at four months.

“The maternity leave provision is not likely to determine an investment decision. [But] businesses feel comfortable investing in places where policies make sense and this one doesn’t,” Gillin told Vietweek.

The United Nations saw it differently, saying the law “will…promote breastfeeding and better safeguard the wellbeing of mothers and children” in Vietnam.

UNICEF has warned of a major decline in breastfeeding rates across East Asia, with the rate of Vietnamese mothers exclusively breastfeeding for the first six months declining to less than 20 percent last year.

According to the General Nutrition Survey, one in every three children in Vietnam is stunted and health experts have said one of the major factors responsible is insufficient exclusive breastfeeding.

Many Vietnamese mothers blame their failure to exclusively breastfeed babies on inadequate maternity leave, saying the need to get back to work forces them to wean their babies early.

UNICEF says there is clear evidence that exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months of a baby’s life not only improves their future growth and educational achievements, but also significantly reduces national health costs and helps prevent chronic malnutrition.

“Six months’ maternity leave is very progressive – far more than what we get in the US,” Zachary Abuza, a Washington-based South East Asia analyst, told Vietweek.

“I do not disagree with [the] central premise that economic development does lead to better child’s health overall, but growth has to be sustainable and cannot come at short-term public health costs,” he said.

Legitimate concerns, but whose?

But the analysts also say what Vietnam needs is not more laws but to address its infamously erratic ones. Laws often differ from province to province, paving the way for corruption.

“Vietnam already has enough laws. The bottom line is how we enforce them to ensure transparency and a level playing field [for all investors],” Nguyen Minh Thuyet, an outspoken lawmaker who retired in 2011, said.

At the HCMC conference, Nicola Connolly, deputy chairwoman of the European Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam (EuroCham), said 20 percent of European firms had considered shifting to other Southeast Asian countries, saying they are better business destinations than Vietnam.

She said besides the human resources shortage that bedevils both foreign and local companies, “with the added burden of additional government insurances, trade union fee, and increase in the minimum wage, investors add up all these costs and compare with other countries such as Thailand and Malaysia.

“To invest in Vietnam, companies are weighing up all factors and then deciding if the risk is worth it.”

Other foreign executives had more complaints.

One said businesses were hit this year when the minimum wage was raised. He also slammed new environmental regulations for forcing foreign investors to call off new projects or scale back operations.

Another warned that one more wage hike that is proposed next year could perhaps have the greatest impact on Vietnam’s competitiveness in the near term, adding it needs to be considered “very carefully.”

The Vietnam General Federation of Labor wants the minimum wage hiked by a third next year to cover 75-84 percent of workers’ basic living needs.

The federation expects that to increase next year to VND2.435-4.113 million, and has put two alternative proposals to the National Wage Council – hike the minimum wage by either 24-36 percent or by 21-32 percent.

The minimum wage is now VND1.65-2.35 million (US$78-111.13) a month, depending on the location.

But the average cost of living is estimated to be VND1.928 million for individuals and VND3.278 million for those with children, according to data compiled by the federation.

At the conference, the foreign executives also said new restrictions on overtime are another major concern.

A recent change to the Labor Code reduces the maximum number of hours a worker can do overtime in a year from 400 to 200 – 300.

Foreign investors have demanded that this be increased to 800.

Robert Weissman, president of the Washington-based consumer advocacy nonprofit group Public Citizen, dismisses such claims, saying: “Foreign companies will always argue that more protections for workers, families, or the environment unfairly harm them and threaten to push them to locate investment elsewhere.”

“Vietnam – and all countries – must reject this line of argument, [which] would prevent Vietnam and other countries from ever elevating their living standards,” Weissman says.

At the end of the day, analysts say the corporate sector does not need the Vietnamese government to protect it.

But the other hand, many studies have shown that grassroots people are always ignored in the consultation processes for major projects that take away their lands or damage their environment.

“A lot of preferential polices we roll out for foreign investors have not helped the country or the people much,” Thuyet, the ex-lawmaker, says.

“All corporations try to have laws in their favor, including Vietnamese companies. It is the lawmakers that need to take stock of any laws they are going to vote on.”

Experts warn that Vietnam’s laws could face even more challenges if it becomes a member of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, an ambitious free trade agreement also involving the US, Japan, Canada, Mexico, Chile, Peru, Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia, Singapore, and Brunei. Washington hopes to wrap up the deal by the end of this year.

“As constructed, the TPP would be a corporate rights agreement,” Weissman says.

“It would also empower foreign companies to directly sue the Vietnamese government before international arbitration panels with no accountability to the Vietnamese people on the grounds that Vietnamese law unfairly interferes with the companies’ expected future profits.”

(*) See relevant story here

Council of Canadians protests ‘NAFTA on steroids’

https://i0.wp.com/media.bclocalnews.com/images/NanamioNewsBulletin-2013-Horizontal-Colour-Nameplate.gif

By Chris Bush – Nanaimo News Bulletin
Published: September 10, 2013 3:00 PM

Leaks of draft copies of Trans Pacific Partnership negotiations have sparked consternation among Nanaimo members of the Council of Canadians.

Council of Canadians Mid Island Chapter held a rally last week to protest secrecy surrounding the negotiations and information obtained from leaked draft copies drawn from those negotiations.

The Trans Pacific Partnership trade agreement is currently being hammered out among 12 Pacific Rim countries.

The rally, lead by activist Paul Manly, in front of Nanaimo-Alberni MP James Lunney’s constituency office in north Nanaimo Aug. 29 drew about 25 people.

Manly said that the proposed trade agreement has little do with trade and is primarily an attempt to establish international corporate rights, copyright of intellectual property, patent extension, how the internet is governed, how personal information is shared across borders, and international banking and taxation rules, among other issues.

He said one of the more disturbing aspects of the agreement involves how investors should be compensated when public health and environment policies interfere with projects and profits. For instance, if a proposed mining project is halted over such concerns, the corporation paying for the project could sue the government of the country or province for loss of potential profits.

“The worst chapters in the Trans Pacific Partnership have to do with the corporate rights agreement part of it which allow corporations to sue governments for laws measures and policies that inhibit what corporations can do,” Manly said. “They can sue for loss of potential profit – not real profit, but potential profit.”

Manly cited a chapter in the North American Free Trade Agreement under which a Canadian company is suing the Canadian government, through its branch office in Delaware, because the Quebec government has put a moratorium on fracking in the St. Lawrence region.

“They want to know whether the technology is safe before they destroy the water table in the St. Lawrence,” Manly said. “So we have a $250-million lawsuit. We got almost $5 billion worth of lawsuits on the books now under Chapter 11 in NAFTA and with the Trans Pacific Partnership with CETA – the Comprehensive Economic Trade Agreement – we are going to see a lot more of these law suits from corporations suing for the loss of potential profits.”

Costs of all that litigation will ultimately be footed by taxpayers of nations their governments are trying to protect, he said.

The rally ended up being more of a quiet discussion among those gathered than a loud protest.

One of the key sentiments voiced by several people attending the rally was a desire for action to find ways to prevent what some fear is potential corporate hijacking of their national sovereignty.

“Talk is cheap,” said one woman in the group. “We can stand around and talk at rallies, but how do we organize to actually take action?”

TPP countries to negotiate tariffs in Washington late September

Kyodo News International

The 12 Pacific Rim countries involved in the Trans-Pacific Partnership free trade negotiations are arranging a working group meeting on tariffs from Sept. 20 to 23 in Washington, negotiation sources said Wednesday.

The meeting of the market access working group that deals with tariff cuts and eliminations will likely coincide with the meeting of TPP chief negotiators, set to be held in Washington on Sept. 18-21, as the countries seek to facilitate the talks and conclude a deal by the year-end.

In addition, ministers of the TPP countries are expected to hold their own meetings on Oct. 3, 4 and 6, followed by a summit on Oct. 8, on the fringes of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum meeting in Bali, Indonesia, a government official said.

As the TPP countries agreed in late July to put 95 percent of their respective tariff lines on the negotiation table by Sept. 20, the upcoming working group meeting is likely to start with the presentation of proposed tariff-free items.

Japan exchanged a list of items with Brunei, New Zealand, Malaysia, Mexico, Peru and Singapore during the 19th round of TPP negotiations that ended in Brunei last week, but the percentage of tariff-free items remained relatively low at around 80 percent.

The five TPP countries that Japan has not exchanged the list with are Australia, Canada, Chile, Vietnam and the United States. Japan plans on holding bilateral tariff negotiations separate from the working group meeting as well.

The working group on intellectual property, covering patent terms of medicine, is also set to hold its meeting in Mexico in late September, while some other working groups may also hold their meetings around the time, one negotiation source said.

The Brunei round of TPP negotiations was likely the last full-scale negotiations held, with countries expected to focus on intersessional meetings involving only one or two working groups from now on.

Aiming for a comprehensive free trade agreement, the TPP negotiations cover 21 fields, ranging from government procurement rules for public works projects to environment that involves fishing subsidies.

==Kyodo