Diane Abbott writes:
As more
is revealed about the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), it
is clear that it has little to do with improving trade.
If implemented, corporations will have the power to force governments to put corporate
interests above the needs of their own citizens.
From labour protection to public health, corporations are
using the a rapidly-growing private justice system known as Investor-State
Dispute Settlements, the proposed enforcement mechanism for TTIP, to sue
governments for anticipated lost future profits incurred from the
passage of democratically-decided regulation.
If it sounds dystopian, that’s because it is. Investor-State
Dispute Settlements (ISDS) have been used for multi-million pound lawsuits by
big tobacco firm Philip Morris to sue Uruguay for tightening up on tobacco
advertising; American food giant Cargill to sue Mexico over a sugar tax; and
French water company Veolia to sue Egypt after it increased the minimum wage
for refuse collectors after the Arab Spring.
Secretly
negotiated between the United States and the European Union, TTIP is now being
picked over by the machinery of the European Commission and could be passed
over the next year or two.
But one element of TTIP has been largely ignored – the deal’s
impact on developing countries.
The world came together last year to agree to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which hinge
on ending poverty and hunger by promoting sustainable growth, combating climate
change and making food, water, medicine and energy affordable for all.
It would make sense to be signing trade deals that steered
the world closer to achieving these goals. Instead, these new generation trade
deals will make the SDGs more elusive, particularly for the world’s poorest.
For
example, under the SDGs governments have agreed to ensure medicine is
affordable because one-third of the developing
world’s population cannot afford essential medicines they need.
But these deals extend drug monopolies, which means that cheaper, generic copies cannot immediately be made for the poorest.
But these deals extend drug monopolies, which means that cheaper, generic copies cannot immediately be made for the poorest.
I met last week with Margaret Chan, the director of World
Health Organisation, who shares my concern over the dangers TTIP will have on
the poor.
Last year she said: “If these agreements open
trade yet close access to affordable medicines, we have to ask: Is this really
progress at all?”
The SDGs also commit to increase the exports of developing
countries, including “doubling the least developed countries’ share of
global exports by 2020”.
Yet several studies – including a
DFID-commissioned paper by the University of
Sussex – highlight that developing countries will lose out on exports as a
consequence of the US and EU prioritising trade with each other under
TTIP.
A major German study highlights even bigger
losses for developing countries, with many in Africa losing more than 4 per
cent from per capita income levels.
Research commissioned by a European
Parliament group shows Latin America may suffer a 2.8 per cent GDP loss over
the course of a decade from TTIP.
TTIP also bodes ill for climate change, which affects the
developing world much more than the developed world.
Under TTIP, there will be a predicted increase of 11 million metric tons in C02
emissions, while, in tandem with CETA, the deals’ deregulation agendas are
paving the way for previously banned tar sands oil to enter the EU.
With their
23 per cent higher greenhouse gas emissions, NASA climate scientist Prof James
Hansen warns tar sand exploration means “game over for the climate”.
On top of this, ISDS is being used to prevent transition to
cleaner forms of energy: Germany is being sued for €4.7 billion for ending
nuclear power; Canada faces a $250 million case for banning
fracking; and the US itself has recently been hit by a $15 billion case – although the company building
the pipeline only spent $2 billion - after President Obama vetoed the Keystone
XL tar sands pipeline in order to meet climate change commitments.
This danger has been recognised by UN Independent Experts who
have argued that: “These treaties and
agreements are likely to have a number of retrogressive effects on the
protection and promotion of human rights, including by lowering the threshold
of health protection, food safety, and labour standards, by catering to the
business interests of pharmaceutical monopolies and extending intellectual
property protection.”
While
the European Commission is currently engaged in promoting
a ‘reformed’ ISDS, including the introduction of public appellate
courts, serious, perhaps intractable, problems remain.
The whole point of ISDS-based trade agreements like TTIP is
to increase foreign direct investment.
No research has emerged that this is the
case – citing the lack of evidence, Brazil, South Africa and Indonesia are
repealing ISDS-clauses or are refusing to include them in their bilateral trade
agreements.
I agree with the UN’s Independent Expert Alfred de Zayas, who
has said “ISDS cannot be reformed. It must be abolished.”
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