Cross-posted from Colorlines.com
This Labor Day, the Pacific Rim will wash into the Midwest’s flagship city, and activists will confront the tides of global commerce with a demand for global economic justice.
At trade talks in Chicago, the Obama administration will work with other officials to develop a trade agreement that will incorporate Vietnam, Brunei, Singapore, Malaysia, New Zealand, Australia, Chile and Peru. Labor, environmental and human rights groups will gather in the city to warn that the structure, and guiding ideology, of the emerging trade deal could expand a model of free-marketeering that has displaced masses of workers across the globe and granted multinationals unprecedented powers to flout national and international laws.
The provisions of the Trans-Pacific Free Trade Agreement or Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) are still under wraps. But the general outline seems to mimic the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and similar pacts that have brought political and economic turmoil to rich and poor countries alike. The new negotiations are also taking place amid political friction over pending trade deals with South Korea and Colombia, which have run into opposition over concerns about labor abuses abroad and offshoring of U.S. jobs. Yet the White House continues to push free trade as a path toward the country’s economic revitalization.
So on Monday, activists with Stand Up! Chicago and other groups hope to get ahead of political deal-making by demanding that any new trade deal give greater priority to environmental, labor, and health concerns. The ongoing trade talks offer a tiny opening for advocates to put forward ideas for making trade less hostile to ordinary people. In a way, they’re taking the Obama administration on its own word, because the TPP has been billed as a “21st century” trade pact that will presumably improve on previous trade agreements.
Of course, that could just be the tepidly liberal spin on a deal that is shaping up to be the “NAFTA of the Pacific,” as activists call it: a pact that coddles corporate interests like sweatshop manufacturers, pharmaceutical makers, and agribusinesses seeking to eliminate any barriers to profit.
Manuel Perez-Rocha, an analyst with the D.C.-based think tank Institute for Policy Studies, says that free trade deals tend to use “investment” and “growth” as a pretext for ruthless exploitation. The agreements “push wages lower and dislocate production with the ensuing loss of jobs,” says Perez-Rocha, adding that “the prospects for the TPP are very bleak and workers everywhere must resist it.”
Some Pacific Trade Partners seem to have no qualms about tying free markets with oppressive political systems. The Vietnamese government, for instance, has complemented U.S.-friendly development policies with measures to quash collective bargaining and independent labor organizing, along with general suppression of political dissent and organizing through Internet censorship, according to research by the International Trade Union Confederation.
The tiny, oil-rich regime of Brunei has faced wide criticism for failing to adhere to international labor rights conventions on unionization and non-discrimination, and for enabling the systematic abuse of foreign laborers, who fill many of Brunei’s lowest-paid low-skill jobs, like domestic work.
The very process of the trade negotiations, though, is structured to prevent basic issues, ranging from union rights to climate change, from even coming up for discussion. The Citizens Trade Campaign explains in its briefing on the TPP:
Executives from hundreds of corporations that have been named as official trade advisors have access to the texts and talks. Members of Congress, journalists and the people whose lives will be most affected, however, have no ability to see what our negotiators are bargaining for—and bargaining away—until a deal is done and it is effectively too late for changes.
What has so far come to public light from the negotiations doesn’t look promising. A recently leaked document on prospective intellectual-property provisions of the TPP suggested, to the outrage of health advocates, that the agreement could tighten patent restrictions and constrain access to critical HIV/AIDS medications in the Pacific region.
Not surprisingly, this general disregard for civil society is reflected in elaborate trade protocols that allow companies to circumvent regulation. Public Citizen has documented many “investor-state” arbitration suits filed under NAFTA and younger cousin the Central America FTA. In one such case, a foreign investor has tried to block action by the Peruvian government over the company’s alleged failure to carry out a clean-up of a heavily polluted metal smelter site in La Oroya. An $800 million investor-state claim argued the government’s action violated the company’s right to “fair and equitable treatment” under the Peru Trade Promotion Agreement.
And what about the administration’s claims that more free trade means more jobs for a stagnant economy? Those promises did not bear out in the years following NAFTA’s implementation, which labor analysts associate with major job losses in key manufacturing sectors (not to mention economic havoc and agricultural devastation in Mexico, which in turn fueled the immigration crisis north of the border).
Even from a business standpoint, activists note that, since the U.S. already does brisk business in the Pacific Rim, the TPP isn’t likely to bring a major boost to exports or multinational investment. Arthur Stamoulis, executive director of Citizens Trade Campaign, speculated that the Pacific free trade plans aim primarily to set a precedent for corporate impunity:
Clearly, Wall Street wants more financial deregulation and sees this agreement as a mechanism to get it. Beyond that though is the obvious interest in big corporations being able to shift jobs around the globe to wherever labor is the most exploited and environmental regulations are the weakest. A free trade agreement with Vietnam and Malaysia and Brunei would make it easier for corporations to do so, driving down wages and benefits for most working people, not only in Chicago or the United States, but everywhere. It’s a cycle that has to stop.
But there’s still time at least to try to turn the Pacific trade dialogue away from the status quo and toward a concept of globalization that actually strengthens protections for economic sovereignty, sustainability and decent work. Some fair-trade groups have campaigned for the TRADE Act, which would set a baseline for labor, human rights, and regulatory protections in future trade deals. Public Citizen, the Institute for Policy Studies and other advocacy groups have published a model framework for protecting the public interest in transnational investment and commerce. At the core is a broad public protection exemption written into trade deals that would keep corporations from taking legal action against a nation’s safeguards for the environment, labor, or health and safety in the name of “free trade.” By shielding essential regulations from arbitrary corporate attacks, the coalition argues, the measure would “[shift] the burden of proof for defending their public interest laws away from governments.”
But currently, that burden of defending the public interest falls on the shoulders of grassroots groups, while officials rush to crack open free markets in the Global South. Perhaps the most activists can do this Labor Day is rally in Chicago’s streets as negotiators meet in virtual secrecy to pen what may be the economic fate of millions across three continents. If the officials inside refuse to listen, then maybe the people outside will.




14 Comments

Short answer: No. Corporatists rule.
MC — thanks for putting this up at FDL. Recommend.
One is wiser to be doubtful of these “free trade agreements” being very much about free trade. Too much known and knowable evidence exists that points and trends towards these FTA’s being about races to bottom for labor,environment and social responsiblity pursuits by global capitalist pools and the corporatists they power and enable.
A Frontier ethos of chopping down cheap labor/lax environment protection/corruptible political regimes for exploitation/plunder then moving on to new still remaining cheap labor/lax environment protection/political corruption zones.
More and more one must understand these capitalists and corporatists have given us modern day Detroit MI and continue to seek to keep doing so across the USA under the guise of being for Free Trade.
What capitalists and corporatists are really for is cheap,expendable labor enslaved with destitution wage levels. They are more about running over/bulldozing vulnerable second/third world poltical/social zones. More about opening up/sustaining free fire zones for environmental degradation,exploitation and contamination. Lets just call it Global Slash,Burn and Move on being done by capitalists and corporatists who leave Detroit,MI and many other such examples in their debris wake and field.
Resistance may seem futile but unless resistance is mounted and ramped up to fierce levels these FTA’s and the plunder/pillage rapine of this planet these FTA’s front for will not cease.
“Resistance may seem futile” Some ones Star Trek fan?
I realize by now I must sound like a broken record, but I can’t help but rage against the obvious! If we are the many and they are the few; if they are not super intelligent and do not have super-mind controlling powers one does not need to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle to realize that the problem must be us! We have traded our citizenship to be consumers. We are happy with being mere spectators in out own political system. We “are” the corporate global killing machine, because without us (the grunts) the machine would come to an abrupt halt! We could stop NAFTA and the WTO in its track, but we won’t? Malcolm X once said that “the key to domination over a people is to get them to acknowledge your legitimacy.” They rule manly by our consent.
Ding.
Nobody in the administration makes decisions based on empirical evidence, be it deregulation, supply-side economics, or free trade. We must also realize that there is a difference between what we consider numbers as relates to power, i.e. one man one vote, and the corporatist class mentality, which is based on shares (or dollars). By this reckoning, one plutocrat is worth several million of us.
Oh stop blaming the victim. The PTB have so much money & so much power, the few have learned how to manipulate the many with both brute force & subtle tactics.
Debt has been one of the great manipulators of the many by the few. If you hadn’t noticed, borrowing contracts are sacrosanct; labor contracts not at all.
Don’t blame U.S. consumers for that.
Duh.
One problem is that the lefties are still under the delusion that voting matters.
Must get much more militant. (Don’t look at me. I’m an analyst not an activist.)
Short of violence? No.
I don’t think vector56 is blaming the victim, rather saying people are not standing up to TPTB and demanding that our government reflect the views of its’ people. Only we can stop our country from starting all these wars against other nations, war against our people and destruction of the environment. We must fight to stop all these trade agreements; they only benefit the large multinational corporations.
Chomsky’s book,The manufacturing of Consent,explained how the corporate state manipulates thinking of the masses.The battle in Seattle was waged against NAFTA and the free trade fiction over 15 years ago.taking issue with an earlier comment,being doubtful about free trade agreements is tantamount to being doubtful about playing with a rattlesnake.Vector56,you are right about every point you made.
I personally have a deep belief that former President Bill Clinton should pay a visit to our current leader and explain to President Obama that ‘globalization’ = ‘fuckyouizalation’. Future leader Hillary could even go with him.
As strong progressives though we need to accept that this is not really about ‘us’. It is about ‘them’. We need to be the change we believe in and just understand that one little thing.
NAFTA?
http://www.wsws.org/articles/1999/nov1999/bank-n01.shtml
We need to remain useful, you see?
Double ding.
Can anybody tell me if there has ever been an example of one of these deals being stopped by progressive, pro-labor forces?
The only time they get delayed or modified is when powerful corporations raise objections. See Ford Motor Co. v KORUS
Oh, you mean Hillary and Bill who negotiated wages in Haiti down by 50% to $0.19 cents per hour?
it’s about them? Yes, it’s about their wallets and we need to remain useful.. lol
What are you selling? magic beans?
I suggest hanging and burning effigies of these people outside their offices during demonstrations, and use of better chants and megaphones.
One reason the Tea-people get attention is their bizarre and extreme demonstrations that do induce some fear of loss of control. In Israel someone put a guillotine in the public square overnight. The point is to turn up the rhetoric. Until the elite start getting nervous, nothing is going to go our way.